Archive for book review

Book Review: Selling Swimsuits in the Arctic

 

I recently finished Adam Hamilton’s book, Selling Swimsuits in the Arctic. It is a church leadership book discussing how to share Christ with others and how to grow a church. If anyone knows about growing a church numerically, it is Hamilton. He is the pastor of a 10,000+ member church in Kansas City. He has a blog that I visit on a regular basis.

Overall, I like the information in the book, though it was very basic. He basically talks about how church growth (or sharing the gospel) is very similar to marketing. We have something (a product) and we want others to have it. So we have to sell it to the person. Throughout the book he uses an example of Bob. Bob is a swimsuit salesman who goes with his wife to the Arctic. He goes with the intent of selling swimsuits only to find out that no one needs them there. So Bob has to adapt to make the sell. Throughout the book we follow Bob’s adventure and learn from him about how to reach the unchurched.

Adam shares with us that we must know our product well and make it intriguing so that others will be interested. He talks about how we live in a culture that is constantly being “sold” something and the church must use that mentality to reach the lost with the gospel. We must advertise well, preach well, sing well, among other things, all with the intent to reach the unchurched. (now obviously this isn’t the only reason we do these with excellence)

In regard to church leadership, I think that Adam’s book is helpful. However, I do have a problem with the whole church marketing idea. I tend to see evangelism as building relationships with people and letting them see Christ in you naturally. I don’t think it’s honest to meet with people, build relationships with them, and spend time with them only for the purpose of a hidden agenda of “selling” them Christ. I don’t look at Christ as a “product” to sell but as a way of life to join.

That said, Adam does make this point in his book. He tries to live in both worlds as he tries to explain this. To the world, we are selling a product. However, the “product” is not a product at all but a way of life that invite people in.

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Book review

 

I plan to occasionally do a review of a book that I have read or am currently reading. 

I’m currently reading Hurt: inside the world of today’s teenagers. It was written by Dr. Chap Clark, professor of youth, family, and culture at Fuller seminary. In researching his book, Dr. Clark took a leave of absence from Fuller to work in a local high school as a substitute teacher. Rather than researching teenagers in a library, he wanted to get on their turf to learn about them.  

This is his thesis (paraphrased): Teenagers feel abandoned by adults. Teenagers seem so foreign to us because they create their own world. (What he calls the world beneath) They create this world because they feel abandoned.

Abandoned? With so much that we have going on for our teenagers, how can they feel abandoned? We have after school programs, sports, dances, school, playstations, computers, etc. etc. etc. How can they feel abandoned when we have so much for them?

Chap Clark argues that they feel abandoned on account of all these activities. Think about it: A teenager gets up in the morning and gets ready for school. She rushes to school so that she can finish up her homework which she couldn’t do the night before because of soccer. She gets to school and stays till 3pm. After school, her mom picks her up and takes her to soccer practice. She stays there until six. When she gets home, she takes a shower, eats, and then does her homework. Meanwhile she has the distraction of the internet, playstation, Ipod, and friends calling her. This is her normal routine.

Clark argues that one reason teens feel abandoned is because parents are allowing others to raise them. My pastor shared an alarming stat this Sunday: On average, a child spends 40 minutes a week of quality time with their parents. In the most important developmental period of their lives, teenagers spend only 40 minutes a week with the person who has the greatest influence on their growth. I leaned over and whispered to Jade, “There’s our problem.” Unfortunately, many parents are relying on the soccer coach, the teachers, the youth pastor, and everyone else to raise their child. Could it be that all of these extra-curricula activities are hurting instead of helping? Maybe this is why they feel abandoned.

I try to be family friendly in my approach to youth ministry. I try not to over-book their summers, spring breaks, and yearly calendar. I’m well aware that real Christian discipleship takes place at its maximum level within the home; within the family. A busy schedule doesn’t equal spiritual growth. An overly-active youth group doesn’t automatically equal a spiritually mature youth group. It may be that spiritual growth takes place better in the quiet. 

 

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