Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Religion > Christian Hypocrisy > The Best Books ...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 664 of 697
Post > Topic >>

The Best Books You've Ever Read?

by **Rowland Croucher** <rccroucher@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 20, 2008 at 11:25 AM

I've just tossed off this little list... Anyone else want to try/comment?

THE BEST BOOKS I’VE EVER READ

My journey as a Christian, lover/husband, father, and pastor/teacher/ 
evangelist has covered different terrains during threescore and ten 
years.  Here’s a rough chronological journey listing books that 
influenced me ‘at the time’. Remember, I’m not ‘back there’, stuck 
where-I-was. I was brought up in a ‘gentle fundamentalist’ church (Open 
or Plymouth Brethren) and I’m still ‘evangelical’ but now also somewhat 
‘progressive’ and ‘catholic’, conservative about a few things but also 
radical, encouraging individual initiative but also committed to social 
justice, compassion and community. As Richard Rohr says in his latest 
book (Things Hidden: Scripture as Spirituality) we must incor****ate - 
not reject - Torah/tradition, Prophetic/dissenting perspectives and 
Wisdom/mysticism – all of these - into a full and complete life of 
faith, hope and love...

Another caveat: My calling is to minister mainly to practising pastors 
and to ex-pastors, so this list is slanted towards ‘pastoral theology’ 
rather than, say, academic theology, or missiology etc. Other gaps in 
this list include social issues like homo***uality, cor****ate wor****p, 
counselling, pastoral leader****p/management - im****tant areas but which 
would require many more words/titles. I’ve also majored on recommending 
authors who were pastors for a substantial period of their lives as well 
as being well-read scholars (Sangster, Claypool, Peterson,  Rohr, 
McLaren, Barbara Brown Taylor etc.). A longer list compiled half a 
decade ago can be found here: http://jmm.aaa.net.au/articles/8073.htm
.

1. THE BIBLE. As a youngster I was captivated by the wonderful stories 
of God’s grace in the Bible (KJV), and also its magnificent poetry (eg. 
  Isaiah 40, which as a teenager I learned off by heart). I knew more 
about ‘dispensational prophecy’ than the apostles did, and read the 
Bible through several times. (The most readable recent translation: 
Eugene Peterson’s The Message. The best for study and cor****ate wor****p: 
the NRSV.)

2.  ADVENTURE STORIES – especially R M Ballantyne’s; and the William, 
Biggles and Deerfoot books - gave me as a child a love of reading for 
pleasure.

3. THE KNEELING CHRISTIAN (by ‘An Unknown Christian’) instilled in me 
the conviction that genuine Christian commitment is nothing if not 
fervent. BIOGRAPHIES – of people like George Muller, William Carey, 
Hudson Taylor, C H Spurgeon and the Ecuador Martyrs – inspired me in my 
formative years to ‘be the best I can be’ for God and others.

4. C S LEWIS (especially Mere Christianity) and JOHN STOTT (Basic 
Christianity) were helpful in my accepting orthodox Christian tenets as 
‘believable’.

6. MILLAR’S SCM COMMENTARY ON LUKE and (later) WALTER BRUEGGEMANN’S ON 
THE PSALMS (among others, eg, Abraham Heschel) encouraged me to believe 
that expounding the Scriptures can be instructive, and interesting and 
challenging.

7.  W E SANGSTER’S sermons, books on homiletics, and magnum opus The 
Pure in Heart (on spirituality) were wonderful ‘integrative’ elements in 
my formation as a young pastor. Two decades later Richard Foster’s 
Celebration of Discipline and later again his Streams of Living Water 
helped in the quest for an overview of historical/e***enical spirituality.

7.  I got JOHN CLAYPOOL’S  sermons once a month by mail for many years, 
and stopped everything to read them: he’s still the best ‘writing 
preacher’ in the English language, I reckon. His Tracks of a Fellow 
Struggler – sermons on Job while his 9 year old daughter Laura Lue was 
dying of leukemia – has comforted many in their grief. Following 
Claypool, I think Barbara Brown Taylor’s sermons delight me the most.

8. Three Catholic authors who have enriched/inspired: THOMAS MERTON (his 
best -  New Seeds of Contemplation), DOM HELDER CAMARA (especially A 
Thousand Reasons for Living), and HENRI NOUWEN (start with either The 
Wounded Healer or Creative Ministry).

9. My favourite contem****ary author is RICHARD ROHR. Start (slowly) with 
his latest book Things Hidden: Scripture as Spirituality, then 
Everything Belongs: the Gift of Contemplative Prayer.

10. For young/new Christians no one beats BRIAN McLAREN. His best, I 
think, is A Generous Orthodoxy. For those enquiring about Christianity 
give them Finding Faith: A Search for What is Real.

11. Interfaith? Remember the dictum ascribed to Zwi Werblowsky: ‘There 
are some things about a given religion which can only be understood from 
inside and some things about the same religion which can only be 
understood from outside.’ Now here’s a surprise choice perhaps: begin 
with KHALED HOSSEINI’S The Kite Runner. It gives us brilliant insights 
into the lives of Muslim families in Afghanistan (and should help soften 
some of our bigotry about Islam).

12. The number one issue in western theology is the current ‘Jesus 
Quest’. Conservatives will like CRAIG EVANS’ Fabricating Jesus (2007) 
or BEN WITHERINGTON’S What Have they done With Jesus? (2006), but I 
would suggest that a wider stance should be explored – most easily with 
the dialogues TOM WRIGHT had with MARCUS BORG on The Meaning of Jesus 
(2000) and JOHN DOMINIC CROSSAN on The Resurrection of Jesus (2006).

13. Christianity and Social Justice? Start with JIM WALLIS’S Seven Ways 
to Change the World (2008).

14. Finally, anything by EUGENE PETERSON is excellent (though there’s 
quite a bit of repetition in his various writings). His Take and Read: 
Spiritual Reading, an Annotated List is a good guide, and his recent 
books on Spiritual Theology – Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places (2005) 
and The Jesus Way (2007) – are an excellent summary/miscellany of his
ideas.

Ponder: ‘Beware of the man of one book’ (Thomas Aquinas). ‘The failure 
to read good books both enfeebles the vision and strengthens our most 
fatal tendency - the belief that the here and now is all there is.’ 
(Allan Bloom ).

In another article I’ll look at best/favourite blogs and websites.

Rowland Croucher

April 2008

-- 

Shalom/Salaam/Pax!                         Rowland Croucher

http://jmm.aaa.net.au/
  (20,000 articles 4000 humor)

Blogs - http://rowlandsblogs.blogspot.com/

Justice for Dawn Rowan - http://dawnrowansaga.blogspot.com/

Funny Jokes and Pics - http://funnyjokesnpics.blogspot.com/
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
The Best Books You've Ever Read?
**Rowland Croucher** <  2008-04-20 11:25:59 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan13V112 Fri Jul 25 10:22:52 CDT 2008.