Books of substance rare in Christian stores

This article first appeared in ChristianWeek on January 15, 2009.

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To my knowledge, Kirk Wellum has never written a book. He has read plenty of books – good books, and he regularly encourages others to do the same. Kirk, an experienced church planter and pastor who now serves as Principal and Professor of Biblical Studies & Systematic Theology at Toronto Baptist Seminary, recently blogged about the challenge of finding books of “theological and biblical substance”. He makes several important observations that can help us to cultivate wise reading habits.

In a post titled Everything Must Go (December 12th), Kirk expresses dismay at the selection of books he found when visiting a Christian bookstore in the final days of its bankruptcy sale. Perusing the bargain-priced books, he found scores of prophecy books, Christian political commentary, issue-oriented works, and the requisite treatments of Christian celebrities. Conspicuous by their absence were books of substance – biblical commentaries, theological studies, language tools and serious works of history and apologetics. Kirk believes the transcendent value of these kinds of books ensures that they will be first to go in a sale.

Reflecting on this, he writes: “Trends and fads come and go, but those works that wrestle with the truth of God’s word live on and continue to bless and instruct people long after the authors have gone to be with the Lord…There are many books looking for readers, but only a few valuable ones that will be read over and over again.”

I concur with his assessment, but feel Kirk may be a bit generous in believing that the more substantial works were “the first to go.” One of his blog readers agrees: “I would really love to believe that solid books on theology, study tools, and language support were the first to go because people value the transcendental values they can bring, but from my experience, most Christian bookstores don’t carry books like that in the first place.”

I know the family of stores Kirk visited, and while their flagship store certainly carried those books of transcendent value, it would be reasonable to say that they held a relatively minor spot in a fairly large store. And as far as the branch stores are concerned, those I personally visited carried very little in the way of substantial theological and biblical material.

While bookstore shelves sag under the weight of Christian pulp, Kirk reminds us in Striving to Make the Complex Simple (December 15th) that “we live in a day when we have access to a wide variety of top-notch Christian books. The problem…is that too many Christians either do not know about such books or do not care to read them.”

As for bringing good books to the attention of readers, Kirk suggests utilizing book reviews, book excerpts to go along with sermons, and mentioning authors and books in Bible classes. He also addressed the need for authors to write with “clarity as well as theological precision.” I agree. We need a generation of writers who write with biblical precision, but do so in a way that reaches the common person. Biblical and historical scholars must write books that “common people can understand while at the same time moving them deeper into the riches of God’s revelation” (Writing to be Understood (December 18th)

But what is to be done after a good book is written? As Christian bookstores disappear, the route from author to reader becomes ever more obscure. As I discussed in a previous column (Ask for substantial Christian writing, April 25, 2008), retailers are extremely reluctant to stock their shelves with anything but the big name authors and cash-generating best sellers. And far too often this means that the books that most deserve readers will languish in warehouses or not get published at all.

It is time for a new generation of entrepreneurs who see marketing the best in Christian writing as a ministry more than a money-maker. While business acumen is critical to surviving, we need authors publishers and sellers who are driven by a passion to get the best in Christian writing before the Christian reading public. The author, publisher and retailer are laborers worthy of their hire, but we must never forget that all forms of ministry – Christian literature included – must guard itself against merchandising the gospel.

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3 Responses to Books of substance rare in Christian stores

  1. Fred says:

    Mitchel’s had it coming to them.

  2. Hey! Are you the Fred I know? Emmanuel Pentecostal?

    Why do you think Mitchell’s “had it coming”?

  3. Lucien says:

    On March 14th, 2009 we celebrated the life of Bob Shaker (No worry he is still alive!) and one of the theme that came over and over again through the testimonies was Bob’s commitment to good and solid theological books. In the Reformation Book Store on Avenue Road (Toronto) where Bob serve for many years selling books as well as serving the Kingdom of God, there was no “fluff”.
    it is sad to say that the biggest city in Canada does not have a Christian book store that we could rely on. Obviously I can buy any book I want through the online branches (you name them). But walking in a good Christian book store, touching the book, smelling them, opening them and most importantly talking to other Christians there is what I miss. And for that matter I miss Bob book store too.
    I was blogging just few days ago on the danger of forsaking the reading of the bible for the books about the bible. We are constantly overwhelmed by “how to do this and that” so much that to stay in business even Christians yield to the pressure and trade their orthodoxy. Your article is very good in a sense that reading good solid biblical books will just give a push to our maturity. I don’t think the “how to” books are what we needed in this shifting culture. Moreover a good book does not have to be too “scholarly” to be good. Scholars must also do well to come down on people’s level with their knowledge. Indeed we must “guard ourselves to the merchandise Gospel.

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