{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Wrap Up: Day 7 – For Work, Rest, or Play

Rachel leads Erin and Sarah through a discussion of Joel Biermann’s Day 7: For Work, Rest, or Play. 

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Young Lutheran Ladies: Kitty, My Rib Book Club Wrap Up

Inspired by the LCMS National Youth Gathering, the Ladies embark on a three-part summer series celebrating young Lutheran ladies. It’s “bring a teen to Book Club” day in the Lounge! 

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Wrap Up: The Anxious Generation

Sarah, Erin, and Rachel talk through one of the most talked-about nonfiction books of the year: Jonathan Haidt’s “The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness.”

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Wrap Up: Jane Eyre

Rachel leads Sarah and Erin in a lively romp through their latest Lutheran Ladies’ Book Club selection, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre.  

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Bonus: Pastor Matthew Harrison & Johann Gerhard

Pastor Matthew Harrison tells the stories behind Johann Gerhard’s ‘Meditations on Divine Mercy’ — both Gerhard’s story as author and his own as translator.

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Wrap Up: Johann Gerhard’s ‘Meditations on Divine Mercy’

The Ladies “close the book” on their latest Book Club discussion on Johann Gerhard’s Meditations on Divine Mercy, translated by the Rev. Dr. Matthew C. Harrison.  

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Wrap Up: The Saints of Whistle Grove

Author and fellow Lutheran lady Katie Schuermann joins Rachel, Sarah, and Erin in a recap discussion of the latest Lutheran Ladies’ Book Club selection, The Saints of Whistle Grove.  

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Wrap Up: Little Women

Rachel leads Sarah and Erin in a highly anticipated conversation on Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women.   

{The Lutheran Ladies’ Lounge} Book Club Wrap Up: George Herbert’s ‘The Temple’ with Dr. Erik Ankerberg

Dr. Erik Ankerberg discusses George Herbert’s The Temple. Who was George Herbert? To what extent was his Anglican faith influenced by Lutheran theology? What makes his poetry feel so fresh and relevant for Christians today?