Crown by Nancy Kaser, A Christian Book Review

Proverbs 12:4 says that “an excellent wife is the crown of her husband,” and as I struggled with how to title this book, I worried you wouldn’t want to read my book simply because of what the name implies… Many women may say (although not out loud in Christian circles), “I don’t want to be the crown – I want to be the one wearing it!” Because we don’t like what being a crown implies, I wrote Crown.

Crown, page 13

Who Is Nancy Kaser?

From the back cover of Crown by Nancy Kaser:

 

“Nancy Kaser is a passionate pastor’s wife and active missionary. For over twenty-five years, she has taught women’s Bible studies, provided biblical counseling, and been a dynamic women’s conference speaker. Based in Southern California, Nancy teaches literature and history classes at The Writtenburg Door. She and her visionary husband also lead short-term mission trips with the Calvary Chapel movement and run a child-sponsorship organization.”

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How Did I Find Crown by Nancy Kaser?

 

I have been following Nancy on Instagram for almost a year now. The sweet and humble delivery in her “Old Wives’ Tales” videos hooked me right away. I always enjoy following women who don’t complain about their husbands and come across as someone who has been in the presence of the Lord a lot – not to mention that I’d love to be friends with!  When her book went on sale for fewer than fifteen dollars, I snagged it to check it out. (Beat my husband to it this time 😉 )  You know how I have a hard time passing up good deals on books.

Crown by Nancy Kaser Full Book Review

Spoiler: I thoroughly enjoyed this book and I have a discount code for you at the bottom of this post!

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Summary

Crown: 30 Wife-Changing Lessons is a Bible-based book written for Christian women (I would say “wives” but any woman could read and enjoy this book). The book is divided into six major sections, each with five short chapters followed by study questions and space to write the answers. The book is intended for personal or group study. The title comes from the proverb which says that an excellent wife is a crown to her husband, a shining glory to him. Nancy tells us to keep in mind that only men of certain positions wear a crown, so it really is a blessing to BE the crown, not just be the one wearing the crown. For what is a king with a crown; how is he recognized? The introduction describes the 6 major sections, making up a foundation with four pillars and a roof, this way:

 

  • Yield – laying a foundation built on the Word of God
  • Help – Understanding and occupying your role as the helper in your marriage
  • Smile – Choosing to live in joy, forgiveness, and friendship with your husband
  • Order – Managing your life according to God’s priorities for a wife
  • Gift – Pursuing and guarding God’s plan for your sexuality in your marriage
  • Increase – Being married with your eyes fixed on your heavenly groom

(Crown by Nancy Kaser, page 10)

 

There are a wide variety of topics covered including God’s design and intention for marriage, the role of wives, how marriage displays the gospel, what is submission and how to do it, homemaking tips, physical intimacy, cases of mistreatment, divorce, and broader spiritual topics such as establishing personal devotion/Bible study time. Individuals newer and older to the faith will find value in this book as it gives a solid Biblical introduction to these topics, and it never hurts to hear it again. 

Best Insight from Crown by Nancy Kaser

 

The best part of Crown by Nancy Kaser is … well, many parts! But if I had to pick one I would say the chapter on disrespect. Nancy does not mince words! In the most encouraging and gentle way possible, she makes it very clear that even small things (even things not said out loud) can be very disrespectful.  We are reminded that poking fun at our husband, sharing private details, and rolling our eyes toward him in front of our children all count – even if he is not present! She has an extensive list of questions called “The Disrespect Test” to help evaluate yourself. I appreciate this chapter because so many things in media, or even laughed at in church (from the pulpit to the lobby), are downright disrespectful – and they are everywhere we turn. It’s always helpful to have a frank reminder of those “little (or big) foxes that nip at the vines” (Song 2:15)

Pros

These have no particular order

  • Very full of scripture, and unapologetic about what it says. There’s no use writing a book for Christain women if it’s lacking the Word, or you’re going to explain it away.

  • Opens with a clear description of the gospel and how to become a Christian. This is so valuable since it’s really no use trying to employ the Bible to help your marriage if you’re not truly born again. A true understanding of the gospel is foundational to your life as a Christian, and your marriage is built upon that.

  • Enjoyed the noun/verb theme – each major section is titled with a word that is both a noun and a verb, something to be but also to do. These would be great to post around the house as a visual reminder. 

  • No concessions to modern destruction of gender roles. This book explains the benefits of being a helper, appropriate application of submission, and traditionally female tasks and personality traits without being dogmatic about hyper specific ways you must live as a wife/woman that don’t genuinely need to apply to everyone.

  • The study questions are well written. I am very picky about these! I become really frustrated by books that have reading sections then questions that you have to extrapolate out of things that weren’t said or clearly laid out. I really want the questions to lead you to the intended conclusion, not let you wander around wherever. On the other hand, the questions are not only reiterating things Nancy says word for word, but instead focus on how to apply the lesson to your own life.

  • Small enough sections for busy readers to pick up and put down when short on time without totally losing the train of thought.

  • The writing style is cheerful, gracious, and fun without compromising on the seriousness of obeying God’s word and working to improve in any and all areas that need it

  • Excellent primer if you are new to Christianity, a new wife, or have been married a long time but haven’t been walking in God’s design for marriage

  • Also great for women that have been walking in biblical marriage since none of us are always doing our best. Older women are also tasked with teaching the younger women so it helps to have a book to help organize your thoughts in guiding the younger if that is not a strength you possess. 

  • Endearing, touching stories and examples from real women help bring many of the points home and give some ideas for application. I always appreciate when books include these as it helps the reader know that they are not alone and it’s not just this one author that holds these beliefs. 

 

Cons

It was hard for me to find anything to critique, so these are not reasons to avoid this book, or even warnings to reject these parts, but more like personal preference or things I would add.

  • I’m unsure whether I followed/got the connection to being a wife for the last of the six major sections. The last 5 chapters are about general Christian living. The first of the five did describe your marriage as a way to display the gospel, but the last four felt disconnected to anything wifely. They covered very important topics such as living sacrificially for Christ, doing all things for His glory, how to get your focus on Him instead of yourself, and a chapter on having oil in your lamp like the 5 faithful virgins. Excellent chapters! But they could have been found in any book on Christian living and weren’t strongly tied back to being a wife. Perhaps it’s my current pregnancy brain begging for someone to tell me what 2+2 is (haha) or maybe I’m grasping at straws here trying to do anything but praise this really great book!

  • I think chapters 5 and 7 somewhat miss some points and/or nuance which I  would have added

 

Chapter 5

  • Chapter 5 focused on your relationship with God, making sure you have a devotional life, Bible reading plan, how to get it done, things like that. Great topics and advice! Spending time with the Lord and reading the Word is extremely important. Yet, I feel sentiments like on page 53 lack nuance: “Most unhappy wives today do not really have a marriage problem. They have a God problem. Your marriage is not as much about what you do as a wife, but who you do it all for.” There are many happy wives, and have been for thousands of years all over the world, that do not know the One True God at all, but have very happy marriages by instinctively living with, instead of against, the nature of men and women (as designed by God, of course).  If you are a nagging wife, memorizing scripture may not actually help if you cannot identify what you do that is naggy.  Many a wife with a head full of scripture and very regular devotion time have not been trained in being a godly woman or wife and feel as though they are banging their head against a wall. I used to be one of these women. They wonder after each argument, “Why me God!? Why is my marriage so hard when I read my Bible daily and memorize scripture?? I am so spiritual! I deserve better.” They completely fail to see what another set of eyes with years of experience could tell them. I don’t know about you, but I haven’t read a Bible verse about why a husband leaves laundry next to the basket. Of course the Bible tells us not to be contentious women, but so many cannot put two and two together to see ultra-pragmatically how to approach the one hundredth sock on the floor.  In my own marriage experience, I will honestly say that our hardest years of marriage so far were times when I was much more consistent in Bible reading, prayer, worship, and church attendance/activity/fellowship, yet the marriage flows so much more easily now in a season where these things are admittedly not the strongest they have ever been. It was as if the pride and sanctimony of going through “good Christian” motions (and they ARE good motions!) blinded me from seeing the practical ways I was tearing down my own marriage. It took another woman telling me “just stop arguing” for all the Proverbs I had memorized to slap me in the face! This was not because the Word is not sufficient, but because the Lord designed Christians to walk together and help one another in teaching, instruction, admonishment, and encouragement to aid us in daily life.  So, while I don’t directly disagree with anything in this chapter I wanted to add my personal experience on this topic. 

 

Chapter 7

  • Chapter 7 looked at spiritual warfare.  I believe the ideas about what spiritual warfare can look like, and where it can come from, are good but not spelled out quite enough. Spiritual warfare gets talked about a lot without enough application and can leave a lot of Christians with the impression that it’s just anything that just feels yucky. Raining on a good hair day? Spiritual warfare. An attractive woman at work starts complimenting your husband? Spiritual warfare. The kids interrupted your devotion time? Spiritual warfare. 

    First,
    examples like these, which can be 100% true, may not be so helpful if they aren’t. It can take any and all responsibility that rightly belongs to the believer out of the equation. Maybe you actually need to teach your kids to not interrupt your Bible time better, or you need to make it at a time when they are asleep or better entertained. Maybe the kids’ behavior is not the spiritual warfare, but your lack of time management or child training is. Believers are wise to approach each situation not just as a vague attack to quote Bible verses at, but also as an opportunity to examine what habits and behaviors they contributed to the situation as well, because you may never know exactly why something is happening. You can always approach from both fronts. I don’t think the latter was really developed.

    Second
    , many things that are satanically influenced are frequently left out of the list.  A beautiful woman talking to your husband at work, or him tempting you to nag him with his dirty socks lying around are fine examples but consider these that are often “too touchy” of subjects: feminism, humanism, the public school system, media (social, mainstream, or otherwise), the feminization of men, broken families, lack of proper discipleship of men and women, fragmented community/hyper-individualism. These are destroying marriages all over the world but it’s such a widespread and broad list that it’s much harder to tackle than “just smile and pick up the sock, sweetie. You’d miss it if you were a widow.” A lot of these topics can be so difficult to draw out of the scripture, let alone what to actually DO about them, that they are glossed over or forgotten completely (if they are not completely disregarded as falsehoods!). But they are in there. The world we currently live in necessitates that we diligently seek what the Word says about these pervasive and dangerous ideologies and make it our personal mission to guard our marriage against them. Laundry laying around may destroy a marriage if you choose to be really rotten about it, but Satan is a lot more clever than that as well. He loves to sneak things into the very fabric of society that are much harder to notice and attack.

 

To reiterate, I don’t think anything was told inaccurately in chapters 5 and 7, just that I would personally approach these two sections a bit differently. Still get this book! You will be blessed!

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Conclusion 

I highly recommend Crown by Nancy Kaser! It is truly a gem for wives younger and more experienced. It’s never too early or too late to read about becoming a better wife. Don’t wait until you are entrenched in deep hurts; don’t think you know it all even after decades of marriage. 

 

Primarily, the highest value of this book is the dependence on scripture, unapologetic of the parts that many authors excuse away. (I mean, how unpopular is it to recommend that wives dress or do their hair how their husband prefers?! Yep, that’s in here! Heck the word “submit” is unpopular, but that’s well covered, too.) While there are many fleshly ways to rationalize God’s design, Nancy keeps this foundation in the forefront: we should live this way because it is in the Word, and the Word is good, unchanging, and directly from God; it’s as simple as that. 

 

Although I read this book already agreeing with the premise of God’s design for women and marriage, I think it’s a good place to start for anyone who is newer to these topics, or even not quite sure if these are true ideas at all. It may be your opportunity to read it, go back to the Word and examine it to see if it lines up. Then look for the fruit: do women who live like this have good fruit in their lives? Yes, they do. I started my marriage on this foot – with MUCH to learn – and it’s been an unmovable foundation. Over time, God has taught me through books like Nancy’s and godly people in my life (even social media) that apply these same Biblical principles how to keep my marriage growing and flourishing.  Read my marriage testimony here.

 

Nancy’s voice comes across with grace and encouragement, yet seriously handles the precious eternal truths of scripture. It is easy to assume that she has learned the lessons she shares through her very own experience in marriage and walking with the Lord – and she sounds crazy about her husband! If you don’t want to also be still crazy about your husband a few decades in, this book isn’t for you.  

 

Finally, as for using it as a study, in my opinion, there are too many chapters to do a one-chapter-per-week study, but a group could easily consume multiple chapters per week and discuss. Many churches would help marriages grow a whole lot more if they used book’s like Crown by Nancy Kaser for women’s groups instead of the latest “feel-good self-help” best seller by a millionaire divorcee. 

Special Offer!

Nancy has offered a code just for you to get $5 off the sale price of Crown: 30 Wife-Changing Lessons on her website. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did and you see abundant fruit in your marriage! Just use code BFB at checkout.
Click this button below:

“Elizabeth Elliot says, “The woman who accepts the limitations of womanhood finds in those very limitations her gifts, her special calling – wings, in fact, which bear her up into perfect freedom, into the will of God.”

Crown, page 100

Happy Reading,

Louise

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2 Comments

  1. Reply

    נערות ליווי בבאר שבע

    April 16, 2023

    I was very pleased to find this site. I wanted to thank you for your time for this particularly wonderful read!! I definitely savored every little bit of it and i also have you book-marked to see new stuff in your site.

  2. Reply

    vorbelutrioperbir

    January 13, 2024

    I love it when people come together and share opinions, great blog, keep it up.

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