Categories
Christian Living

Goals for a New Year

If you go all the way back to the beginning of 2014, you will find that one of my goals for the year was to read one Christian book a month. Though I didn’t succeed in all my 2014 goals, I did accomplish my reading goal, including the completion of another reading through of the Bible (though that took 18 months, instead of 12).
Old books on a library shelf representing reading goals for the year
I tell you this to remind you that I believe it is very important to have a plan for your Christian growth. I had a plan to read 12 books. I surpassed my goal. But if my plan had been more vague, such as if I had just said to myself, “This year I’ll read more,” how would I measure if I really met the goal? We set goals in almost every other area of life. We should do the same with this most important thing called: our relationship with God! So as you think through your Christian life, it is important that you make specific goals and plans. Write them down.

I write mine down as a yearly Personal Worship Plan, and then stick that plan in the front of my Bible so I can review it throughout the year. Here is a copy of a blank plan if you’d like to use it too:
Personal Worship Plan Booklet Link (Just click on this pdf image link to open or download the file.)

And regarding the reading I did, one of my brothers recently asked me what I’d recommend for reading. So now that I’ve finished my 2014 reading, let me tell you which ones I read last year that I would recommend you to check out (and also which ones to avoid!)


Highly Recommended:
The Jesus I Never Knew, Philip Yancey
The Hiding Place, Corrie ten Boom
These are my top two from the year. They are both well-worth your time. In fact, because I enjoyed it so much, I read The Hiding Place twice. Once on my own, and then a second time with Paige.

Also, I re-read two books with my men’s small group that I would highly recommend:
Life of a God-Made Man, Dan Doriani – excellent for all men (though women would benefit from it too), but now it is only available for purchase as an e-book;
Radical, David Platt – a great reminder of what life is really all about, and a challenge for us to live with radical devotion for Jesus.


Recommended:
These next three are also worth reading, though they are not as highly recommended as the ones listed above.

The Pursuit of God, A. W. Tozer – this book is free at The Gutenberg Project. Just search for “The Pursuit of God” or A. W. Tozer.

Embracing Obscurity, anonymous – My favorite chapter was the one on suffering. It was a useful reminder of how we too often desire the spotlight, when the proper place for the spotlight is on Jesus and the good news He brings.

The Imitation of Christ, Thomas à Kempis
Excellent, but due to the out-dated use of English, I would only say “recommended” for most people. It is just too laborious for most people to wade through. But very good insights if you are willing to work through it. In case you didn’t know, The Imitation of Christ became, and remained for several hundred years, the second-most widely read book in the world, surpassed only by the Bible. This book is also free to download or read from The Gutenberg Project. Just search for The Imitation of Christ.


Recommended for specific situations:
Out of the Saltshaker and into the World, Rebecca Pippert (a good book on basic evangelism)

Darwin on Trial, Philip Johnson (if you enjoy apologetics, this is a very good read.)

The Wounded Healer, Henri Nouwen (written primarily for those who work in hands-on church ministry. If that is you, then this is a good read, and others would benefit from it as well.)

Prayer: Conversing with God, Rosalind Rinker (this is primarily about how to engage in a new prayer style in small groups. So if you are a leader of a small group, this could be beneficial if you want to try a new prayer direction)


Not Recommended:
These are the books I read last year that I would tell you to not worry with…
Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola
The Seven Storey Mountain, Thomas Merton
The Diary of Anne Frank (yes, this is a classic, and while it is an interesting read into the life of a teenage girl in hiding during WW2, it is not a tremendous help in Christian living. So for history and classic reading…sure. But if you are looking for a book to read for Christian growth…not recommended.
Why I Am A Christian, Norman Geisler, ed. – too academic.


And finally, let me also give you some other books that I would recommend if you have not read them. These are books that I have read before 2014, but which I think are excellent for everyone:

Celebration of Discipline, Richard Foster
How to Develop a Powerful Prayer Life, Gregory Frizzell
Returning to Holiness, Gregory Frizzell
Knowing God, J. I. Packer
Mere Christianity, C. S. Lewis
Can Man Live Without God, Ravi Zacharias
The Ragamuffin Gospel, Brennan Manning
Every Man’s Battle, Arterburn & Yoeker
More than a Carpenter, Josh McDowell


Are there other books you read in 2014 that you would recommend? 

Categories
Christian Living

What I Have Been and Will Be Reading

This year I am taking a cue my friend and co-worker, Jonathan McDuffie, and I am creating a reading plan by selecting twelve books to read for the year… the plan being to read at least one book a month for my spiritual growth and development. The list of my twelve is at the bottom of the post.

As I mentioned before, some of the books I read are “new” while some of them are a bit older. For example, John Huss’ work “On the Church” was written in 1413. (And then he was executed by fire two years later for holding to the Bible over man-made religious beliefs.)

artist depiction of the burning execution of jan hus (john huss)

Here is most of what I read over the past two years:

Personal Spiritual Growth
Knowing God – J.I. Packer
How to Develop a Powerful Prayer Life – Gregory Frizzell
Returning to Holiness – Gregory Frizzell
Releasing the Revival Flood – Gregory Frizzell
The Cost of Discipleship – Deitrich Bonhoeffer
Christ at Work Opening Doors – Kent Humphreys
Every Man’s Battle – Stephen Arteburn & Fred Stoeker

Missions Strategy Books
The Great Omission – Steve Saint
Serving as Senders – Neal Pirolo
When Helping Hurts – Steve Corbett & Brian Fikkert

Other Stuff to Help Me As a Pastor
Dangerous Calling – Paul Tripp
I Am a Church Member – Thom Rainer
Creature of the Word – Matt Chandler, et. al.
Transformational Church –Ed Stetzer & Thom Rainer
Building below the Waterline – Gordon MacDonald

And the Old Stuff (written over 100 years ago)
Orthodoxy – G.K.Chesterton
Pilgrim’s Progress, parts 1 & 2 – John Bunyan
In Praise of Folly – Desiderius Erasmus
A German Theology – Martin Luther, translator
Address to the Christian Nobility – Martin Luther
Augsburg Confession – Phillipp Melancthon
On Christian Freedom – Martin Luther
Treatise on the Church – John Huss
The Babylonian Captivity – Martin Luther
On Christian Liberty – Martin Luther

The twelve books I have selected to read for this year are:
1. The Jesus I Never Knew, Philip Yancey
2. The Imitation of Christ, Thomas a Kempis
3. The Spiritual Exercises, Ignatius of Loyola
4. The Seven Storey Mountain, Thomas Merton
5. Darwin on Trial, Phillip E. Johnson
6. The Pursuit of God, A. W. Tozer
7. Out of the Saltshaker and into the World, Rebecca Pippert
8. The Diary of Anne Frank, Anne Frank
9. The Hiding Place, Corrie ten Boom
10. The Wounded Healer, Henri J. M. Nouwen
11. Prayer: Conversing With God, Rosalind Rinker
12. Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger, Ronald J. Sider

What about you? Earlier in the week you shared what your favorites were. What are you going to read to help you grow in Christ this year? Do you have a plan? Do you have any you are presently working on? Have you read any that are on my list?

Categories
Christian Living

Recommended Reading Lists

Today I’ll let you in on a little secret – I’m weird.
You’re probably thinking – “but that isn’t a secret at all.”
Point taken.

Today’s topic of discussion on my weirdness is my “Reading List.”photo of my library bookshelf to show some of the books I am reading

What I post about often comes from what I have been reading. So how do I choose what to read? Many people choose their “next book” on what is the latest bestseller. My list doesn’t come from the hottest books out there today, but rather from respected sources who share with me the best stuff they have read — People (and authors) I trust who share with me the books that have influenced them most.

I don’t necessarily want to know what is the newest book on a subject, but what is the best book on the subject… especially one that has lasted the test of time. Some of my favorite authors have warned their readers to avoid “Chronological Snobbery” — something I definitely had when I was younger. Back then, I believed that “new” meant best, while “old” was dated and less important. But what I have learned is that there are books that have stood the test of time as being extremely important for Christian growth. And with the limited amount of time that I have to read, I want to choose not just “good” books, but those that have been deemed the best.

Two lists that have helped me select books are both from Christianity Today:
(you can click on the links if you are interested in knowing their choices)

The Top 50 Books that Have Shaped Evangelicals

The Top 100 Books of the 20th Century

Though I’m sure there could be some disagreement about the lists, the books they suggest are certainly a good place to start. They aren’t the newest books on the shelves. And some of the choices may seem a bit weird to you.

Over the next few days, I’ll share with you some of what I have been reading and give you some of my own recommendations. But until then, what are your suggestions? What would be on your list as your very favorite Christian books… the ones that have been instrumental in shaping your Christian development that you recommend everyone should read?

I’d love to know, as I might want to add one of your recommendations to my weird reading list!