4-MAT Book Review
4-MAT Book Review of Personal Faith, Public Policy
The 4-MAT Book Review system is a way of responding to readings that requires the learner to interact with new ideas on several levels. You must complete a 4-MAT Book Review of Personal Faith, Public Policy. Please use the following format in preparing your 4-MAT Book Review:
Summary: Summarize what you have read as if you were the author boiling down the book into 200 to 250 words. Prove that you comprehend the readings by describing the biblical worldview of the author and text and the central themes communicated in the book.
Concrete Responses: Get vulnerable! In 250 to 300 words, relate a personal life episode that this book connected with in your own life experience. Relate your story in first person, describing action, quoting sentences you remember hearing or saying. In the teaching style of Jesus, this is a do-it-yourself parable, case study, confession. You will remember almost nothing you have read unless you make this critical, personal connection. What video memory began to roll? This is your chance to tell your story and make new ideas found in the book your own.
Reflection: Please consider the content of the reading assignment and include any further questions the material brings to mind. Keep a rough note sheet at hand as you read. Begin with questions like, “What would I like further information on?” Where do I not agree/strongly agree with the author?” or “What bothers me/excites me about this content?” This section should be at least 250 to 300 words.
Application: How does information book influence how you are going to continue your own personal growth process? What actions or changes are you going to make in your life as a result of your learning? Your response here is a matter of obedience first, questions later. Be precise in summarizing your action steps (limit these comments to about 150 to 200 words).
APA format
Avoid first person
Must include intro and conclusion
201907100556204_mat_book_review_instructions
Solution Preview
Personal Faith, Public Policy: Book Review
Summary
Harry R. Jackson and Tony Perkins in their 256-page 2008 publication, Personal Faith, Public Policy, present the audience with an opportunity to think about the interaction between faith and public policy. In particular, Jackson is a Christian bishop and engages in a conversation on issues related to public policy, ultimately presenting the audience with a religious view of social issues,
(1,014 words)