Wednesday, February 17, 2010

why I am not writing another book

I sometimes get asked if I am writing another book, usually by someone who has read one of the 5 I wrote. Sometimes I have been told that I am "wasting talents" since I am not writing books. That is not how I feel. I believe I am faithfully following the path Jesus has led me down. Here are some milestones on that path:

1. During my Ph.D. studies, I was struck by the New Testament and early church identification of false apostles and teachers as those who "peddled the word of God." It occurred to me too slowly--being overeducated but not all that bright sometimes--that perhaps the Christian publishing industry was a source of darkness rather than light.

2. Several years ago, I was invited to speak at Expolito, the Spanish Christian Booksellers annual meeting in Miami, Florida, at the release of a Spanish translation of my book on ministry in the Spirit according to Paul. Since I could not keep up with the speed of the conversation over several days, I was forced to pay attention to what I was seeing. For the most part, the convention wasn't even bothering to "peddle the word of God"--they were peddling everything but. (They learned from their English language version's bad example). Hmmmm, I thought, this is NOT good. Not good at all. I think during that time the penny dropped for me that I needed to stop writing books and put the emphasis elsewhere.

3. I became more and more aware in homes that I visited and conversations with Christians that we were full of books, but not people of One Book. People talked about what their pastor had preached or favorite author had written, but NOT about what God had told them to obey. We are a church and nation of spiritual prurience, ever spectating from the bunker, rarely in the game or on the front line. I began to connect the dots: we are what we eat, and we have been feeding on the chaff of human doctrine, not the meat of God's Word. There is an old principle that applies: if the horse you are riding on is dead, for God's sake, dismount.

4. Jesus' parting charge to us kept coming to my mind: "teach them to obey all that I have commanded to you." We have distorted that into left-brain rationalism without action, rock-star conference culture of hero worship and heads full of knowledge but lacking wisdom, tough-mindedness ("wise as a serpent") and a cutting edge to the mission of our lives. The salt has lost its saltiness, and our little lights no longer shine. The words we overlook in Jesus' charge are crucial: OBEY and ALL. He didn't put a big premium on understanding and analyzing. The emphasis was on standing-under and actualizing His word. We need to be people of one book--in compliance to its wisdom we become an arrow shot from and to heaven.

5. One day I was pondering why church-as-we-know-it is not the scary threat to hell's doors that Jesus said he would build ("I will build my church, and the gates of hell will not prevail against it"). And, it is not even mildly effective at evangelizing not-yet Christians in our culture. It finally dawned on me. This is NOT the church Jesus built. This is a straw house on sandy foundation built on mere human wisdom and celebrity or tradition. This is the church WE built--that is why it is so pathetic. Jesus never told us to build churches. He told us to train them to comply and practice everything he imparted to us. If we do that, He does his part--builds a church whose advance hell can't stop. I see it now here, now there. When the rains come down and the storm crashes in, all that will stand is such houses built on the rock of obedience to Jesus as Lord.

So here is the "book" that I am supposed to write. Paul's self-understanding in 2 Corinthians 3:2-4 is my example to emulate: "You yourselves are our letter, written on our hearts, known and read by everybody. You show that you are a letter from Christ, the result of our ministry, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts. Such confidence as this is ours through Christ before God."

The book I am to write is pages on others' lives as I seek to obey all Jesus taught, and teach them to do the same. I am not to write a book on paper between covers but on souls with skin. Here are some of the best books and articles I am writing that you may have never read: Ingrid, Julia, Jeff, Kirstie, Carlo, Elizabeth. I hope you get a chance to read them some day.

Whose lives are you writing the kingdom of God upon?

(Oh yeah, one other milestone. AJ, Julia and Jeff Rogers kept pressing me to write something on the internet--Julia got me to blog. I see this as more of a journal than publishing. More a soap box of what I would shout across the nation to Alaska and Hawaii, than what anyone else would ever want to "publish." Since only about two and half people ever read it, it has no danger of supplanting my life-writing mission).

6 comments:

  1. Brian,

    Working for the Christian publishing industry for the last 11 years, I have seen much of what you have blogged about here. I have found that many Christian books are books I would never buy, read or recommend.

    That being said, I am very cautious to "throw the baby out with the bathwater". Just because some books are "peddled the word of God", that doesn't mean every book is. Many of the books I enjoy reading are books written on various topics, both fiction and non-fiction, where the author(s) are sharing what the Holy Spirit has been saying to them. It's really neat to find books from people who are total strangers and find that they are are hearing the same thing the from the Holy Spirit that I am. And with the new social networking tools, I have been able to contact many of these authors and connect with them to become friends and co-laborers for the Kingdom. I have learned to "take the meat and toss the bones" as I read any books.

    Many of the books I recommend could have been simply a series of blog post, but I would much rather hold a good book in my hand than read it online. With the new technology one day your blog posts may become a published book without you even knowing it with tools like this: http://blog2print.com/

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  2. Thanks Brian for writing this. Definitely a word that needs to be upon the church today!
    Shawn

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  3. Brian
    what you say is so true, we have reached a point that is questionable, are we following the Word of God or the author of some well written book. truly the writing of books there is no end.
    I think if we went through the NT and listed all the things Jesus commanded us to do and compared them to the things we are doing, we would cast a shadow of doubt on the reality and sincerity of our committment to Jesus as Lord.
    I am surprised how much we are following certain books as though they are on equal footing on scripture.
    We have traded life for methods... the bible is full of Life.

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  4. Sandy sent this. Much more crisp and concise: "Men would understand; they do not care to obey. They try to understand where it is impossible they should understand except by obeying … It is on them that do his will that the day dawns. To them the day star arises in their hearts. Obedience is the soul of knowledge … Obedience is the opener of eyes." --George MacDonald

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  5. Thanks Brian for posting your thoughts. I hope you continue to enjoy writing between covers on souls with skin. As far as I am concerned that is the most important. May the spiritual blessings of Jesus continue to pour over you and your family. David

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  6. I love that quote from MacDonald. As Willard says, we are educated beyond our obedience. Good prophetic critique of how books and knowledge can be come idolatrous.

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