Of the Making of Books…

April 5, 2010 · 0 comments

I’ve been read­ing a lot lately. More than usual. Perhaps even more than ever, except per­haps the month or two after I received the canon of James W. Knox.

Notable, though, is that more than ever in the past nine years of faith, I am read­ing books not because I know I’m going to agree with just about every word and sim­ply want to rein­force what I already know.

Rather, I am pour­ing over books which are chal­leng­ing aspects of my faith which at one point I thought were unshak­able, aspects of my faith which I have at times zeal­ously defended against the types of peo­ple who would read the books I’m now devouring.

I guess you could call this per­sonal growth. Perhaps “ref­or­ma­tion” would be a bet­ter word. Some may say “revolution.”

All I know is that my read­ing list keeps grow­ing, and it seems I can’t read some of these things quickly enough.

This past week­end, I fin­ished up Pagan Christianity by Frank Viola & George Barna, a book rec­om­mended to me by Glen. Pagan Christianity is one of sev­eral books I ordered a cou­ple of weeks ago.

It’s the first of that batch which I’ve fin­ished, but that didn’t stop an impromptu trip to a book­store today net­ting me yet another stack of books, and this stack sees me break­ing out a bit fur­ther from my com­fort zone.

For the curi­ous, the books are

  • Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith by Rob Bell, which I started read­ing today. I can already tell that this lit­tle vol­ume will chal­lenge my per­cep­tions of just what Christianity is all about. Well, I hope it does, any­way! Thanks, Lorene, for the suggestion!
  • The Abolition of Man by C. S. Lewis, which the back of the book declares to be “a defense of uni­ver­sal val­ues.” The exis­tence of uni­ver­sal mean­ing & val­ues, per­haps more than any­thing else, is proof to me that God exists; if I were an athe­ist, I would be forced by logic to argue that noth­ing mat­ters, that noth­ing holds intrin­sic value. I’m curi­ous what Lewis can add to my under­stand­ing and approach to this topic.
  • The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical by Shane Claiborne. As a point of fact, I loved Claiborne’s Jesus for President. When I saw The Irresistible Revolution on the store shelf, I knew I had to read it. I’m also curi­ous how one can be an “ordi­nary rad­i­cal”; per­haps it is yet another one of Christianity’s innu­mer­able paradoxes?
  • Finally, and most sur­pris­ingly to me: The Green Bible: Understand the Bible’s Powerful Message for the Earth (in a trans­la­tion I ordi­nar­ily would never give a sec­ond thought to, the NRSV). Essentially, this is lit­tle more than your stan­dard Bible, except instead of high­light­ing the words of Christ in red, verses & pas­sages through­out the book which deal with the earth are high­lighted in green. There’s also a “trail guide” after Revelation to allow read­ers to walk through what the Scriptures teach regard­ing the earth.

I’m unsure what order I’ll end up read­ing these in — I still have plenty from my pre­vi­ous recent pur­chase as well, not to men­tion shelves full of books that I should some­time read.

If you’ve read any of these books, I’d be inter­ested in your com­men­da­tions & con­dem­na­tions thereof; is there one I should give a higher pri­or­ity to than others?

And given the above books, what are some oth­ers that I should look for in the future when I’m ready for more?

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