Skip to main content

Moan or Longing? ... Read and decide for yourself!

I love reading! Everything from books and magazines to competitions and recipes on the side of cereal packets if I am desperate.

I see this as a good thing, and being in this role - I find that people are always passing articles and books to me with the recommendation 'You should read this!'

Now I read quite widely, but want to focus these thoughts on the nature of Christian books that I have been encouraged to read recently. (I should clarify that these have mostly been in the devotional genre.)

These books have been both contemporary and classic - and it is this that I want to reflect on. Most of the contemporary books I have stopped reading after one, perhaps two chapters. This has been for two reasons, both of which increasingly irk me.

1/ The author has said everything they want to say in the first chapter and the rest of the book seems to be restating the same thing in different ways ... Ie - there is a lack of spiritual depth ... Instead we get sound bites!

2/ These books also seem to me to be very formulaic ... If you want this, then do this ... And God will answer all your prayers. However the doing never seems to 'cost' anything, as if somehow our Father's world is centred on us, and He is just waiting to answer our prayers, and make our lives 'nice'. Spiritual life coaching for those who want to improve their lives ...

I'm afraid I don't see that this message is reflected greatly in either Church history, or in the world in which I live (ie my messy reality) nor, more importantly, in the pages of the Bible - despite valiant efforts by authors to make it appear so!

Contrast this with the classics which seem to expound and exhort us to Biblical and, dare I say, deeper spiritual realities, such as humility (utter dependence on God in ALL things), consecration (giving over of all that I am, and have, to His Lordship) etc. etc.

Is this a moan or a longing for something deeper in contemporary, western, Christian faith?

Perhaps what I now consider classics were themselves surrounded by books such like those I have been reading recently ... But which have long been forgotten. My fear is, however, that in this 'modern world' anything contemporary has value simply because it is contemporary ... What is the latest must read? What is shaping Christian thought today?

Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device

Comments

  1. Hi John. Just read this blog - I know it is rather belatedly. Have you ever read any of Larry Crabb's more recent stuff? I think he goes deep and doesn't have trite answers to life's difficulties, problems and tragedies. I like his 'Finding God' and I am currently reading his '66 Love letters'. Not for the faint hearted.
    Jackie

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Feel free to add comments or ask questions:

Popular posts from this blog

Does God really lead us?

  Often as evangelical believers we talk about the concept of ‘calling’ explaining it along the lines of God speaking to his people, sometimes this is narrowed even to the experience of a special, select ‘few’ and limited in scope to those who are engaging in full-time Christian ministry. The following are some notes I prepared for a talk: Firstly, I would like to say that most Christians would believe that God communicates with his people, and that this may happen in many different ways. What is of utmost importance is that it does happen. We are in relationship with a Living God, who we call Father, and who communicates with us His creation and covenant people.   God communicates in a number of ways and one special way in which He leads and guides his people might be termed a vocation or calling and it’s this particular aspect of His communication I want to focus on.   So what is the calling? Who is called? And what are we called to? The whole i...

Thoughts from a previous incumbent ...

In reference to 2 Tim 1:7 "For God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but a spirit of p o wer, of love a nd of sel f-discipli ne."   Norman Grubb decl are d that; "We are set in our day and generation to be overcomers, not to sail through calm seas but to walk on storms, to replace need with supply, to transform aspiration into realization. The language of defeatism, fear, lack and weakness is not to be in our vocabulary. "Let us go up at once and possess it, for we are well able to overcome it. As for these giants, they are bread for us," we say with sturdy Caleb.  We are to act as the men of faith of old; we are to visualize our goal in clear outline; we are to take it for granted that we shall reach it, for we have both the commission and anointing of God?   We lay our plans ,build our organisations, produce our written and verbal pronouncements,  prayer our prayers, do our work, not as those who will fail and fall by the way, but...

Homes I have lived in #3

This year I am celebrating my silver wedding anniversary ... Just for something to do I have begun to sketch all the houses we have lived in during that time. So here is house number #3 On our return to the UK we were faced with the question that faces all people in transition, what next? For us, we were encouraged by our friends to investigate further training and opted to spend a year with Kerygma ministries. We joined with a group of some 20 other people from various different cultures and backgrounds to join the ministry led by Dr Bob Gordon, based at Drayton Hall near Norwich. We spent one year here, between September 1993 and July 1994.   Significant events that took place here included: Suffered reverse culture shock, as I grappled with the transition from life in a mudhut in Africa to life in the UK in a Manor House! (Struggled with the amount of money being spent on a sign that was being placed outside ...