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Jan 31, 2010
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Hi,

I was wondering what books I can read to further my knowledge of following Christ. I really loved Basic Christianity by John Stott and this is pretty much the only book I've read that really helped me (I don't read much).

Thank you.

The Bible, specifically the New Testament :p

In all seriousness, I'd probably read the Bible before anything else, man. Get a study Bible, NIV, ESV, etc. When you read someone's book over the Bible, they may have a different "interpretation" over certain scriptures that may not be accurate. So, just get a Bible and begin with Matthew, then John and then read through Acts and Romans. The stuff is pretty eye-opening.
 
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Johnnz

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Browse a good Christian book store. Often I find something that looks interesting, or is on a topic that interests me at that time for whatever reason. I read widely and as well as I can. Books are an extension of the teaching ministry and have been the mainstay of much of my growth as a Christian. I read well beyond what I mostly get from the pulpit.

PM me if you want some suggestions on specific topics or issues.

John
NZ
 
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T

Thankful For Grace

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Greetings, Chaowdur,

Without a doubt, the most important book to read is the Bible--and I encourage you to read several chapters, minimum, daily, of the NT; however, as you study the Bible, it can also be helpful to read the teachings of fellow Christians. I have read hundreds of Christian books over the years--some excellent ones and some appallingly unscriptural.

For the most part, I have found many of the older books to be extremely helpful. I would, as a beginning place for you, recommend some of the books by Andrew Murray.

Three of his books that you might find foundational and very helpful are, "Abide in Christ", "Absolute Surrender", and "Humility". These books are not difficult to read, although they were written in the 1800s and may contain an occasional word that we do not commonly use, now. Here are some online links to get you started:

"Abide in Christ"

Andrew Murray:Abide in Christ.Table of Contents

Humility:
http://www.worldinvisible.com/library/murray/5f00.0565/5f00.0565.c.htm

Absolute Surrender and other addresses:

Absolute Surrender and Other Addresses by Andrew Murray

Hope you find them helpful.

Blessings to you.
 
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sbbqb7n16

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__________________ <- insert name of any book you learned something from here


If you learn something from it, it can help you follow Christ better.

Whether that is a book on the miracles of Jesus, a book on the philosophy of Budha, a book on Christian ethics, or a book on calculus. It doesn't matter. The thing that matters is that you learn.

Even a book on the "goodness of satan" can help you follow God better if you read it to learn what delusions people convince themselves of, or how one could believe such a thing, or to point out a faulty argument you've never seen before that strengthens your faith in God. My point is, you don't have to even agree with the book in order to learn from it.

Plus these posts are like mini-books. :)
 
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TheDag

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Hi,

I was wondering what books I can read to further my knowledge of following Christ. I really loved Basic Christianity by John Stott and this is pretty much the only book I've read that really helped me (I don't read much).

Thank you.
I find bools by Max Lucado are good. They are more inspirational books than teaching but he does have a very clear way of saying things so it is very difficult to misunderstand.
Tony Campolo is an oldy but a goody and if you can follow some of the examples in his books then you could naturally develop a servant heart. One example in particular was instead of receiving presents ask people to give a donation to charity with the money they would have spent on presents and give you the receipt. This means they can't claim it off tax which cheapens the donation in my opinion.
 
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capnator

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BigNorsk

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Hi,

I was wondering what books I can read to further my knowledge of following Christ. I really loved Basic Christianity by John Stott and this is pretty much the only book I've read that really helped me (I don't read much).

Thank you.

The answer I would give depends a bit on what level you can read at, not really how much you read.

Now one thing I find is that there is an idea of dumbing down everything for people in general and that only someone planning on graduating from seminary needs to take on the more difficult books. I find that not necessarily to be true and it wasn't until I moved up so to speak to more difficult books that I really understood things. The rather incomplete simplistic answers of many books left me very unsatisfied.

Now one thing that I have found very useful is the Dogmatics books from Concordia Publishing. The wonderful thing is they focus on the fundamental doctrines (they even define that in a way that makes sense) fundamental doctrines are those things which scripture links to salvation.

Once I worked through them and only then did things really snap into place and make sense to me, maybe it's different for you.

Now a good general book used for many adult classes would be Edward Koehlers "A Summary of Christian Doctrine". Very good, quite understandable, logically arranged.

The book though that really brought things home to me is Francis Pieper's 4 volume "Christian Dogmatics". That intimidates a lot of people and he uses a lot of Latin phrases and such so that's where the question of your reading level really comes into play.

John Muellers single volume "Christian Dogmatics" is a one volume condensation of Pieper's and is quite good, the thing is, he doesn't go into the background and such as much.

It was that background that I found so valuable. When Pieper spends page upon page laying out the foundations of how things work that was something missing from other works and was actually what I needed, the basic doctrine and some bible passages giving it I actually already had. Some people hate Pieper because they don't like his condemnation of errors and those who make them. In short his style isn't what they like.

If you are still kind of beginning and don't feel like taking on too much, Robert Kolb's "The Christian Faith: A Lutheran Exposition" would be a good choice.

If you like reading electronic books they are all available in Libronix format at cph.org - Concordia Electronic Theological Library Complete Collection

You can just buy which ever collection you want too. Collection 5 The Basic Theological Collection would give you three of the volumes I've mentioned. All the books in the collection represent a very good look at many different aspects of our faith.

If you get into wondering about history and what exactly is historical Christianity, then Martin Chemnitz would be the guy you want to read. Either his sytematics "Loci Theologici" or his "Examination of the Council of Trent" are full of references to why the reformers and what they taught was the true historic faith.

There, that should keep you busy for a year or two. Sorry if it seems to much, I just thought you could go through and personalize it to your situation and go from there.
 
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