I want to make more of my time as far as reading is concerned. A lot of that motivation has come from taking a couple of hours to organise my shelves.
This week is a great time to pay some attention to your books. Whether you have books for ministry or for personal benefit, it doesn’t matter.
Here are 10 quick ideas about books that might be helpful if you get an hour or two to consider your books (and your reading in the coming months!)
You probably know someone with a more impressive library than yours. Great, now get back to saying thank you for what you have!
If we aren’t thankful, then we will tend to take them for granted and whether you have 20 books or 20,000 books, they will most likely sit dormant on your shelf.
It seems like there are fewer and fewer book givers left in the world.
But what a strategic ministry they have! What was the book that helped you most in 2020? Perhaps it was Gentle and Lowly by Dane Ortlund. Why not buy five or ten copies and pray about who to give them to in the next couple of months.
Then do it again with another book that you have appreciated. You might change some lives and you will enjoy the prayer and the process.
It is usually possible to find another cheap bookcase on Facebook Marketplace, but even if you have maxed out your space for adding shelves, that should not stop you adding books. Why not do a purge?
Maybe some books could be sold. Others could be given away. Perhaps some would really be best dedicated to recycling.
If you haven’t touched it in years and can’t imagine touching it in the future, why is it still there?
I have lost count of the number of people who say, “I love the look of this book, but I must not buy it because I have too many I haven’t finished yet.” We need to dismiss this crazy thinking once and for all.
If you aren’t motivated to finish a book you’ve started, you almost certainly won’t. If you are motivated to read something else, you should get hold of it.
My approach is to treat an unfinished book not as a burden, but a book that I was glad to read part of. Perhaps I paid £5 or £10 for chapters 1-3. Chapters 4-8 were free and I might read them later!
Read what you want to read in a book, don’t let the dead weight of unfinished sections hinder your spiritual life, your ministry or your joy!
If you can’t find a book when you need it, why have it?
C.S.Lewis wrote that the test of good literature comes when you pick it up, start reading and realise you’ve read it before.
If it is junk literature, you will feel like putting it down. If it is good literature, then you will want to keep going. That might be helpful.
Some books are reference tools that are worth their weight in gold. Others are one-exposure pieces that, once read, are not worth the investment of shelf space (lots of bestsellers are really disposable!)
Discern the difference. Discard or deliberately shelve accordingly.
We live in a time when the urgent pressures of email, social media, internet news, etc., are all conspiring to get us away from books.
I find an hour with a book is always an investment, even when compared to spending an hour reading the same author online – and the time with a book is always more enriching than frittering time on YouTube or wherever.
If we are going to read, we need to make plans and carve out the time.
If it is an immersive page turner, great, grab a drink and curl up with the book. But if it is not a novel, but rather a book on a specific subject, what should you do? Take a few moments to plan your approach.
Time spent on the table of contents, reading conclusions, etc., will make the rest of your time so much more productive.
Perhaps you really need to jump into section 2, or maybe one chapter is all you need in this visit?
As a preacher I need to read directly related biblical and theological books, but I also need to read for cultural insight (The Madness of Crowds by Douglas Murray has been disturbing but so helpful recently, for instance).
I also benefit from investing indirectly in my ministry by reading someone from church history (Henry Scougal’s The Life of God in the Soul of Man is due another read) or a book about Greek Grammar.
And then there is the purely relaxing (I am enjoying The Body by Bill Bryson at the moment, when I choose to take a few minutes.)
It is great to give a book away, but it is also great to read a book with a friend and meet up to chat about it. I have had some wonderful conversations with a good friend this past year as we read through a John Eldredge book, and then Dane Ortlund’s Gentle & Lowly.
I want to make more of my time as far as reading is concerned. A lot of that motivation has come from taking a couple of hours to organise my shelves. Go for it, while you have the chance!
Peter Mead is mentor at Cor Deo and author of several books. This article first appeared on his blog Biblical Preaching.
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