Book Tour: Stuff Christians Like by Jonathan Acuff

Stuff Christians Like by Jonathan Acuff Stuff Christians Like made me laugh at myself. It’s not funny in a silly, make-fun-of-us kind of way, it’s funny because it’s true. Jonathan Acuff, blog keeper of the popular blog stuffchristianslike.net, has us pegged. If you have spent any length of time in the Evangelical church, you are sure to recognize yourself in Stuff Christians Like.

Having a spiritual excuse not have a spiritual excuse, trying not to complain around missionaries, being slightly offended that the pastor has a nicer car than you, giving ourselves liberal definitions of the phrase “quiet time.” Yup, me, me, me. If you have a copy of Stuff Christians Like, turn to the following pages to see if you are like me, a long-time member of the club. I’ve included a few quotes from the book that had me laughing out loud.

Developing subtle signals to let people know you are a Christian (page 32)

Being completely terrified to pray for patience or humility (page 62)

Making sure everyone knows your fiance isn’t living with you (page 76)

“I cooked dinner for my fiance last night at my place, but I was out of salt, so he drove to his place, in a car, because the distance is significant.”

Fearing your church will do something wacky the one time you invite a friend (page 90)

Finding typos in the worship music (page 97)

It only takes one hit to become an addict. You want to stop. Deep down inside, you know you’re supposed to be worshiping, to be communing with the Holy Spirit in song and praise, but now it’s too late. After that first typo, you start noticing more. And if the words are spelled correctly, you start picking up on spacing problems.

Feeling guilty for not converting enough people (page 137)

Dominating the “Please turn to. . . ” Bible race during church (page 152)

Sure, reading the Bible is about leaning from God’s Word, but it’s also about beating the person you’re sitting with.

The description of the “Metrosexual” worship leader is hysterical. Maybe because I’m in the ultra-liberal, godless Northeast, or perhaps it’s because our worship leaders are the son and daughter-in-law to the pastor, but on the Metrosexual Worship Leader Scorecard (page 80), my church is a negative 3. My church is not on trend. On the other hand, our youth band . . . those guys are hip.

Ha. Too funny.

As much as I like to laugh, the hidden gem in the book comes from the last few pages – not going to quote it, you should read it for yourself. I never knew Acuff could be so serious. This Christian likes that too.

Disclaimer: This post is part of a Blog Book Tour. The author (blogger) of this post received a free copy of the above book from the publisher in exchange of a written review. The review is the honest opinion of the blogger. This post contains affiliate links that financially benefit the blogger. By making a purchase via an affiliate link, the blogger may receive monetary compensation.

Book Tour: Found Art

Found Art (Discovering Beauty in Foreign Places) by Leeana Tankersley

From Found Art (Discovering Beauty in Foreign Places) by Leeana Tankersley:

During this journey, I discovered it was high time I felt the losses, collected the pieces, and reclaimed myself. That’s the thing about these journeys into foreign places. They have a way of making us different if we will let them.

What I like about Found Art:

  • It’s a memoir. (I’m crazy for memoirs.)
  • It’s a memoir of a woman living overseas. (Hey, I lived overseas!)
  • It’s a memoir of a woman living in the Middle East. (Brilliant! I lived in Indonesia.)
  • The 25 Discussion Prompts in the back of the book. (Conversation is one reason we read books, especially a book like this one. Americans really have little understanding of what it is like to live in a Muslim culture.)

What I didn’t like about Found Art:

  • Lack of pictures. Memoirs lend themselves to photographs, don’t you think. I would’ve loved to see images of the places Tankersley visited and lived.
  • The cover. Lovely colors but those swaths of red, yellow green and blue – while as vibrant as the stories in the book – it doesn’t convey what the book is really about. A trifle complaint, but this is my blog, my opinion.

Read Found Art to discover one young woman’s experience of transformation while living in the Middle East.


Disclaimer: This post is part of a Blog Book Tour. The author (blogger) of this post received a free copy of the above book from the publisher in exchange of a written review. The review is the honest opinion of the blogger. This post contains affiliate links that financially benefit the blogger. By making a purchase via an affiliate link, the blogger may receive monetary compensation.

Book Tour: The Twilight Gospel

The Twilight Gospel by Dave Roberts

The Twilight Gospel (The Spiritual Roots of Stephenie Meyer’s Vampire Saga) by Dave Roberts is a must-read for the parent or young person seeking answers about Meyer’s book series. It would be even better if parent and young reader read Roberts’ book together for discussion.

From The Twilight Gospel:

We have to ask the questions because we believe that while popular fiction or popular film may not “make” anybody do anything, the diet that we consume will have some impact on our emotional health and personal worldview if we have not rigorously examined its assumptions.

Well said.

Roberts continues:

What messages about beauty, self-image and personal contentment is the Twilight Saga giving to the emotionally vulnerable, often insecure, maybe not conventionally beautiful, adolescent audience that forms its core market?

A few other things I like about this book:

The examination of supernatural powers (like psychic power) consumerism and money. The chapter on vampire Alice Cullen is worth the price of the book, in my opinion. Very eye opening (and I missed it when I read the novels. See? Even I learned something new.)

Roberts and I are on the same page when it comes to Twilight. Read it if you have a Twilight fan in your house.

Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this book from the publisher to review.