Wednesday, December 27, 2017

The Dangers of Incessantly Reading Books

Christmas has now passed and the New Year is quickly approaching. This means that many of you are putting together your 2018 reading list. In your effort to do this, you are perusing other people’s top 10 book lists of 2017 in order to compile a beneficial reading list for 2018 (while you’re at it, take a look at mine). And undoubtedly, many of you may have already started ordering your books for January and February so you can get a bit of a head start (no shame in that)!

But in the midst of compiling a reading list and ordering books, I want to give you some helpful counsel from two prominent Christians that were avid readers. The reason I want to do this is because these two men were very aware of the numerous dangers of the incessant reading of books. And these are dangers that we too need to be aware of so that we will not fall prey to our flesh or the evil one as we take up and read in 2018. 

Counsel from Spurgeon

So, let’s begin with a look at a quote from Charles Spurgeon:

A student will find that his mental constitution is more affected by one book thoroughly mastered than by twenty books he has merely skimmed. Little learning and much pride comes from hasty reading. Some men are disabled from thinking by their putting meditation away for the sake of much reading. In reading let your motto be ‘much not many.’
Here, Spurgeon identifies two dangers of the incessant reading of books:
  1. Produces little learning
    1. While one flies through numerous books, they develop a thought process that a book read means wisdom attained. This, however, is far from the truth. One can plow through a book and not gain a bit of wisdom. In all actuality, flying through numerous books actually inhibits our learning and disables our thinking. It inhibits our learning because we are not set on mastering the subject of the book, but simply finishing the book. And it disables our thinking because we end up spending little time thinking about what the author has said, why the author said it, and if what the author said is right. This is not profitable at all, which is exactly why Spurgeon said that our mind is more affected by mastering one book than by skimming twenty.
  2. Produces much pride
    1. Like I said above, flying through books somehow produces a thought process that a book read means wisdom attained. So, we navigate numerous books thinking that we are growing in wisdom, when, in all actuality, rather than cultivating wisdom and knowledge, we are cultivating pride. With the skimming of books, we haven’t mastered a single subject, though, in some strange way, we pridefully think that we have.

Counsel from Bunyan


Alright, now let’s look at a quote from John Bunyan:

It is far from my intention to depreciate the value or deny the usefulness of books, without exception: a few well-chosen treatises, carefully perused and thoroughly digested, will deserve and reward our pains; but a multiplicity of reading is seldom attended with a good effect. Besides the confusion it often brings upon the judgment and memory, it occasions a vast expense of time, indisposes for close thinking, and keeps us poor, in the midst of seeming plenty, by reducing us to live upon a foreign supply, instead of laboring to improve and increase the stock of our own reflections.
Here, Bunyan list numerous dangers to the incessant reading of books:

  1. Confusion upon judgment and memory
    1. I am not entirely sure what Bunyan is getting at here, but I will try to make sense of it. The incessant reader’s judgment is confused because he does not spend much time meditating on what is being said. Since he does not spend time meditating on what is being said, he is not thinking critically. And where one does not think critically, his judgment is confused. This is a dangerous place to be when reading books written by fallible men!
    2. He also mentions that there is confusion brought to the memory. This makes perfect since. The incessant reader spends his hours skimming and flying through sentences, paragraphs, chapters, and books on a broad range of topics. Therefore, he is not able to remember what he has read (which actually does not benefit anybody)!
  2. Takes up a great deal of time
    1. Reading books takes time, and time is incredibly valuable. If we dedicate our seconds, minutes, hours, and days to the incessant reading of books then we will not be abounding in other good works for the Lord. So, while reading books is a good use of time, it should not be the only way we use our time. There are other works that we need to be doing to the glory of God!
  3. Keeps us from close thinking
    1. We touched on this when we looked at Spurgeon’s quote.
  4. Deceives us into thinking we have plenty when we are poor
    1. We touched on this in Spurgeon’s quote as well, but I love the way Bunyan says it. The incessant reader seemingly has plenty, but in all actuality, he is poor. And that which he has is not even his own, it is a somebody else’s. Since he has not meditated and thought much about what he has read, he simply becomes a parrot of the thoughts of others!

Concluding Thoughts 

So, these are the dangers of the incessant reading of books. Now, the last thing I want you to do after you read this blog is to cease from reading books. That would be a travesty! And I am confident that both Charles Spurgeon and John Bunyan would not want you to cease from reading books. Both of these men were avid readers. John Bunyan often talked about certain books that he was reading and also recommended numerous books to people he was writing letters to. Also, Charles Spurgeon is known to have read six books a week (that's kind of impressive isn't it)!

So, do not cease from reading books in 2018! Rather, take time to master certain books. Take Spurgeon’s counsel when he says, “Master those books you have. Read them thoroughly. Bathe in them until they saturate you. Read and reread them…digest them. Let them go into your very self. Peruse a good book several times and make notes and analyses of it.” I am sure that if you do this it will prove to be very beneficial.

Also, glean wisdom from Bunyan. I think Bunyan’s greatest fear was that people would consistently read other books to the detriment of reading the Bible. And it is apparent that this was not only a problem in Bunyan’s day, but it is also a problem in our day. There are many Christians that read many books throughout the year, but that neglect the very Word of God. This ought not be! So, in 2018 don’t neglect the Bible. Keep this quote from Bunyan in mind:
And books that have a savor and unction may likewise be helpful, provided we read them with caution, compare them with the scripture, and do not give ourselves implicitly to the rules or decisions of any man or set of men, but remember that one is our Master and infallible Teacher, even Christ. But the chief and grand means of edification, without which all other helps will disappoint us, and prove like clouds without water, are the Bible and prayer, the word of grace and the throne of grace.
So read other books often, think deeply about what they are saying, meditate on their meaning, and remain humble all the while persistently reading the Bible to learn from our blessed Savior. This will keep you from the dangers of incessantly reading books.

Friday, December 22, 2017

My Top 10 Books of 2017

The end of 2017 is quickly approaching. This means that many of my favorite people within the Christian community are posting their top books of 2017. Some of these lists specifically focus on Christian books that were published in 2017. I always love looking at these lists to get an idea of some books that I would like to read in the coming year! Here they are:

And some of these lists specifically focus on people's favorite books out of all the books they read in 2017. I enjoy these lists because they focus on both old and new books, they give you insight into what some of your favorite theologians have been studying this year, and they often let you peer into their interests (Russell Moore read a book on Johnny Cash, Jimmy Buffet, and a live action comic on batman)! Here they are:

My Top 10

And here are my favorite books that I have read throughout 2017:

The Sermon on the Mount by Martyn Lloyd Jones
Wise Counsel by John Newton
Through Gates of Splendor by Elizabeth Elliot
Steal Away Home by Matt Carter
Tactics by Gregory Koukl
Habits of Grace by David Mathis
Revitalize by Andrew Davis

Wise Words From John Stott 


John Stott, when he was 88 years old, wrote this in the post script of The Radical Disciple:

For there is something unique about books. Our favorite books become very precious to us and we even develop with them an almost living and affectionate relationship. Is it an altogether fanciful fact that we handle, stroke and even smell them as tokens of our esteem and affection? I am not referring only to an author's feeling for what he has written, but to all readers and their library. I have made it a rule not to quote from any book unless I have first handled it. So let me urge you to keep reading, and encourage your relatives and friends to do the same. For this is a much neglected means of grace.


He went on to be with the Lord years ago, but this was what he ended with in the last book that he authored. I find that fascinating. So with this in mind, make a reading list for 2018, order some books, begin reading, and find nourishment for your soul.

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

How to Glorify God on Christmas Break

Christmas break presents some spiritual dangers for all age groups. Nobody is exempt from the spiritual warfare that comes with Christmas break. Young Christians are prone to become more and more greedy as they eagerly expect to see what lies under the tree. Christian teens are prone to playing the role of a sluggard as they take a break from all their school work and recreational activities. Christian college students are liable to fall into a world of temptation as they go back home to unhealthy friendships/relationships. Christian parents are tempted to focus less on hospitality and Christ centered time with family due to being busy-bodied with a myriad of amoral things. And this is only a sampling of the spiritual dangers that are so prevalent during the Christmas break!

And with the abounding spiritual dangers, we need to be mindful of ways to have a God honoring Christmas break that will bring much glory to Christ. With that said, here are some ideas that may help you in this endeavor.

Prioritize Spiritual Disciplines

Maintain your prayer life. We are citizens of the kingdom of heaven. We are to be constant in prayer, abounding in thanksgiving, and interceding for other Christians (Rom. 12:12; 1 Thess. 5:18; Eph. 6:18). Christmas break is not a time to neglect this discipline, but to do it all the more!

Maintain your Bible reading. Persevere in your yearly reading. Memorize some Scripture. Make sure you are meditating on the word of the Lord consistently so that the word of Christ will be dwelling in you richly!

Maintain your family worship. This is difficult to do in the midst of the busyness of Christmas, but what better way to celebrate Christmas than to gather with your family regularly and briefly in order to worship the Lord.

Maintain faithfully attending Church. Both Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve will be on Sunday this year. Don’t let this deter you from attending church. Rather, get your family/friends excited about attending church and listening to the word of God being preached.

Maintain giving generously. Christmas time tends to make us money pinchers because we have gifts to buy, places to travel, and family to host. Do not let this be the case though. Maintain tithing during the break and look for opportunities to give generously to other people.

Meet with People

If you are young, ask your parents if you can have a friend over for dinner one evening. And when they come over, make the most of it. Share a meal with them, watch a movie, and then have them participate in family worship.

If you are a college student, meet with a friend that you have not seen in a while for the purposes of having a conversation about spiritual things. Tell them what the Lord has been doing in your life throughout this past semester.

If you are a parent, ask another couple to go shopping with you. Make it exciting. Buy their meal, go get a coffee, and then do some Christmas shopping with them all the while waiting for an opportunity to speak with them about heavenly things.

Read a Good book

Pick up a book that will help you live a little more faithfully throughout 2018.

Write Spiritual Resolutions for 2018

Take time on your Christmas break to think about some spiritual goals. For example:
  • Resolve to read the whole Bible in 2018
  • Resolve to memorize a book of the Bible in 2018
  • Resolve to develop a good relationship with a neighbor for the sake of evangelizing them.
  • Resolve to serve in a particular ministry within the church.
  • Resolve to spend 2 hours of your week discipling younger people.
  • Resolve to become well informed in a particular area of Christian thought
    • The atonement
    • The life of Christ
    • The death of Christ
    • The resurrection of Christ
    • Justification by faith alone
    • The resurrection of the body

In Conclusion 


So, these are just some ideas about how we can wage spiritual warfare over Christmas break in a manner that is pleasing to the Lord. And as you can tell, a bulk of what I listed are just good works for the Lord. I am quite confident that continuously devoting ourselves to good works allows us to know Christ more fully (Jn. 14:21). And it is in knowing Christ more fully that we will be able to resist the myriad of temptations that arise over Christmas break.