Category Archives: Reading

WAVE YOUR WAND 1.0

I am asking a number of friends to answer the following question: If you could wave a magical wand which caused all Christians to read five books, what works would you pick?

We begin with Dr. Dave McCoy.  I met Dave over twenty years ago at the church I served as a pastor.  Dave is a gifted Bible teacher and artist.

Here are Dave’s picks:

Here’s a unique selection for you geared more for the common reader:
The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth by Fee and Stuart
The Problem of Pain by C. S. Lewis
Decision Making and the Will of God by Garry Friesen
Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis

BEST BOOKS OF 2014

I like reading these kinds of lists.  My own list does not mean these books were published during this year, though some were.  My list also includes a few rereads that keep on giving gold.

It was fun to see that three of my books were on Christianity Today’s Best Book List.  So, in no particular order here they are:

Surprised by Hope by NT Wright

Kingdom Conspiracy by Scot McKnight

Confessions by Augustine (reread)

Life is a Miracle by Wendell Berry

Echoes of Eden by Jerram Barrs

First We Read, Then We Write by Robert Richardson (reread)

Redeemer: The Life of Jimmy Carter by Randall Balmer

God, Locke, and Liberty by Joseph Loconte

A Change of Heart: a Personal and Theological Memoir by Thomas Oden

Pious Nietzsche by Bruce Ellis Benson

How (Not) to be Secular by James K.A. Smith

 

WHY KINDLE CAN’T REPLACE BOOKS

photo 2

Above is a picture out of my copy of Augustine’s Confessions.

I am listening in parts to a long interview with Maria Popova, curator of Brain Pickings (recommended yesterday).  During the interview, Popova and Tim Ferris, the interviewer, bemoan the fact that publishers limit how many quotes you can easily access on Kindle.  The number is high, but there is a limit and the only way around it is time-consuming.  

So I will continue to read books the old fashioned way!

 

POPULAR CHRISTIAN STUFF=GOOD?

Years ago, I did a review of the selling sensation, The Prayer of Jabez.  At the end of the review, I included these six principles for reading any book, especially the trendy stuff:
  1. Does the book convey (explicitly or implicitly) that it is the “key” to living the victorious Christian life?
  1. Does the author present more of a formulaic approach to the Christian life rather than the need to grow in the “grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ?”  (II Peter 3:18)
  1. Does the book present a simplistic approach (read “cookie cutter”) to the Christian growth or does it value the wide variety of ways that God sanctifies His people?
  1. Does the author tend to universalize or make normative his own experiences?
  1. Does the author ask the reader to trust his interpretation of his experiences rather than backing those up with the word of God?
  1. Most importantly, does the book focus on the person and work of Christ?  In other words, is it a Christ-centered approach to the Christian life or is it a mechanical, moralistic, and behavioral approach?

PANCAKE PEOPLE

I come from a tradition of Western culture in which the ideal (my ideal) was the complex, dense and “cathedral-like” structure of the highly educated and articulate personality—a man or woman who carried inside themselves a personally constructed and unique version of the entire heritage of the West…

But today, I see within us all (myself included) the replacement of complex inner density with a new kind of self-evolving under the pressure of information overload and the technology of the “instantly available”. A new self that needs to contain less and less of an inner repertory of dense cultural inheritance—as we all become “pancake people”—spread wide and thin as we connect with that vast network of information accessed by the mere touch of a button.

Richard Foreman

http://edge.org/3rd_culture/foreman05/foreman05_index.html

HT: www.bensonian.org

BOOKS(TORE): GOING THE WAY OF THE DODO BIRD?

“We still don’t know the long-term effects of reading e-books vs. traditional hard copy books. Some studies show that people read slower on dedicated e-readers, and those who use tablets or computers or iPhones have a different reading experience, being constantly distracted by text messages, emails, Facebook, and other interruptions. Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains explores the changes in brain function that may result. Hyperlinked, multi-tasking readers do not have the same “deep reading” experience, and are less likely to store what they read in long-term memory.

In short, we face a revolution in reading not unlike the one Gutenberg introduced almost 700 years ago. Nowadays authors are coached on “building your brand” more than on improving their writing. Publishers care more about website stats and Twitter followers than the quality of an author’s work.

Frankly, I’m glad I’m as old as I am. It’s been fun living through publishing’s golden age. I’ll happily stick with the “deep reading” experience. Nothing gives me more satisfaction than browsing through the books in my office. They’re my friends—marked up, dog-eared, highlighted, a kind of spiritual and intellectual journal—in a way that my Kindle reader will never be.”

Read the rest here: http://www.booksandculture.com/articles/webexclusives/2014/july/farewell-to-golden-age.html?paging=off