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Unchurching from Churchianity

By Jeremy Myers
52 Comments

Unchurching from Churchianity

I first got to know Richard Jacobson through his interaction with me on Twitter, Facebook, and his comments on this blog. I liked what I saw and started reading his blog, where he creates insightful and humorous cartoons and videos about the church and following Jesus.

So when he asked me to read and review his book, I said “Yes!” as quickly as possible.

(By the way, if you are an aspiring author, THAT is how you do it. I get a couple emails a day from people who want me to read and review their book, but who have never read my blog or one of my own books, have never left a comment on my blog, and who have never interacted me on Twitter or Facebook. Publishing, like everything else in life, begins with relationships. Richard’s book is proof. It debuted at #1 on Amazon in his category.)

The book that Richard wrote is called Unchurching. I have written several books about church myself, but this one is better than any of the ones I have written. At least … I like the way he organized his material and presented his ideas.

UnchurchingThe book chapters are all quite short. This means that even if you only have five minutes here or there to read the book, you can likely finish a chapter in that amount of time. This is a smart way to write a book for today’s busy readers.

Best of all, even though Unchurching is a critical look at the church and contains a call for people to follow Jesus away from the four walls of Christendom, the book is incredibly gracious and kind. I could find no judgmental language, no finger pointing, and no condemnation.

I loved how he said that asking someone “What church do you go to?” is like asking someone “What family do you go to?” The second question makes no sense. We do not go to a family; we are in a family and we operate as a family. This is helpful as well, because the church is like a family, and when we think about it as a family, a lot of the questions that trip us up about how to “do church” fade away. Very rarely, for example, will a family ever have questions about “What day of the week should we meet?” or “Who gets to talk when we are together?”

Based on this idea of the church as a family, Richard Jacobson goes on to talk about church elders as facilitators, on how to carry out conflict resolution within the family of God, and a whole host of other related topics.

All in all, this is a great book about the church. If you have questions about what the church is, how it is to function, and why so many Christians today can confidently claim that they are better able to follow Jesus and be the church in the community now that they have stopped attending a Sunday morning meeting, this book is for you.

In a month or so, I plan on interviewing Richard Jacobson on my Theology.fm podcast, so make sure you tune in for that. Until then, buy a few copies of his book … one for yourself and a couple more to give away. Go here to get your copies of Unchurching today.

Unchurching on Amazon

God is Redeeming Books Bible & Theology Topics: be the church, Books I'm Reading, family of God, go to church, unchurching

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Look what happened to my book on Amazon!

By Jeremy Myers
5 Comments

Look what happened to my book on Amazon!
http://media.blubrry.com/one_verse/traffic.libsyn.com/redeeminggod/Announcement.mp3

Atonement of GodMy newest book, The Atonement of God, has gone on a HUGE sale for Amazon Prime Day (July 12). The normal price of this book is $14.99, but the Amazon Prime price is only $6.99! That’s 53% off!

This price is less than I can buy them myself from the printer (after they add shipping costs), so I just bought 10 copies to have on hand so that I can give them out to people I meet with.

If you have already read this book and have been encouraged by it, this is your chance to buy several copies to give away to others.

If you have not yet read this book, don’t wait any longer. I don’t know how long this sale will last, but now is the time to buy a copy because it is on such a huge sale.

Better still, if you are an Amazon Prime member, you get free shipping as well. If you are not a Prime Member, you can join for 30 days for free by going here: Try Amazon Prime for free for 30 days.

So here is what you should do:

  1. (#AmazonAdLink) Join Amazon Prime for free for 30 days (to get free shipping on my book)
  2. Buy several copies of the paperback version of my book. One for yourself and a few others to give away to friends and family.
  3. Use the Facebook and Twitter share buttons below to let others know about this sale.

[easy-social-share]

Buy your copies today because I don’t know if the price for this book will ever be this low again.

God is Redeeming Books Bible & Theology Topics: Amazon, book sale, The Atonement of God

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How to get your Christian book Published in 10 simple steps

By Jeremy Myers
5 Comments

How to get your Christian book Published in 10 simple steps

Do you want to get your Christian book published? I know the secret to doing so, and it only takes 10 simple steps. Here they are, in order:

Get-Book-Published

10 Simple Steps to Getting Your Christian Book Published

1. Have some HUGE sins in your past. The worse the better. Like a devil-worshipping, drug addict, psycho-killer porn star.

2. Plant a mega church. You probably need a minimum of 4000 people attending your 17 weekend services.

3. Become best friends with Rick Warren, Joel Osteen, and Oprah.

4. Write a blog that gets about 2 million pageviews a day.

5. Get 5,000,000 of your best friends to “Like” your page on Facebook.

6. Ask 10,000,000 of your friends to follow you on Twitter.

7. Get interviewed on a couple Morning News shows and Late Night Comedy shows.

8. Write a book that is absolute crap. It should say nothing, mean nothing, and challenge nothing. Just make sure it has a bunch of tear-jerking stories with a few funny stories mixed in for good measure. To make the book “Christian” through in some remarks about Jesus, a few Bible quotations, and a crap-load of Christian platitudes and clichés (How about some of these?)

9. Send a query letter to an agency or publisher talking about #1-8.

10. Get published and enjoy the glory of being a Christian author. Seriously. People will think you’re Jesus.

Does all that sound impossible?

Well, publishing these days is not quite as hard as that. I have recently started seeing books get published by authors who skip steps 1-7 and just focus their hardest on Step 8. They’re quite successful at it too. Then they get published and people think they’re Jesus … and they think it too.

Christan book published in 10 steps

Ok, ok.

I’m just having a little fun with the Christian publishing industry. There are lots of really great books out there, and you can’t fault the publishing industry for only publishing books that sell in a day when people are reading only 2 or 3 books a year.

Having said that, I still sometimes scratch my head when I see what they are publishing. I occasionally read a book that “sells,” and I think, “Why does this book sell?”

Of course, now I’m a bit worked up.

So let me rant a little bit…

While I am on the subject of the publishing industry, let me make one little tiny suggestion to publishers and book agents: Please, out of respect and courtesy to the authors who submit books to you, don’t you think it would be wise to create a little form letter that you send to authors whose books you reject? These authors slave over their books, and then put them out there with fear and trembling hoping they picked for publishing, and when you reject their manuscript, you don’t even have the courtesy to send them a letter which says,

Thanks for sending in your book. We looked it over and have decided that it does not fit our publishing needs at this time. Best of luck in your future publishing efforts!

No, that would be too hard and too kind. Instead, on your websites you say, “If you don’t hear back from us in 8 weeks, just assume that we don’t want to publish your book.”

WHAT? Really? That is how you treat authors?

No wonder so many of us are deciding to just self-publish. It would not be that hard to send out a simple form letter to all authors whose books you reject. It’s the least you could do for the, rather than leaving them in rejection limbo land.

And they wonder why the publishing industry is in trouble … between crap books and publishers who just don’t give a crap, it’s a wonder they’ve survived this long.

End rant.

But not the end of my attempt at humor…

Now that I’ve trashed the publishing industry, let me show you that I know what I’m talking about. Here are my own writing credentials:

Jeremy Myers is an internationally unrecognized Bible scholar, the leading theology expert in his own family, author of many #1 best-selling books (in the category of “Books by Jeremy Myers), and his podcast was recently voted the best Bible teaching podcast of 2016 by his wife and three daughters. Rick Warren recently said absolutely nothing about Jeremy Myers, and N. T. Wright has never consulted Jeremy about anything. Jeremy also writes a blog, along with every other person on planet earth.

(N. T. Wright, by the way, writes very, very good books. There is never any crap in his books. I doubt he has ever even written the word “crap.” I’ve written it 6 times in this one post. So I guess that just goes to show that I also write crap. There’s 7.)

As a side note, you might have noticed that my personal blog post quality has slipped over the past couple months. The post above is a perfect example. Ha! This is because I am working on something very big, quite exciting, and extremely time-consuming. It is something I have wanted to do for a very long time, and am finally taking the plunge. I will share more in the weeks ahead. Stay tuned!

(Oh… by the way, if you want to self-publish your book, I lay out exactly how I do it in my Book Publishing Instructions. I published this book for me so I don’t forget how. Seriously. I have a copy next to my desk which I work through every time I publish a book. But you are welcome to get a copy for yourself as well. There are more than 10 steps though…)

God is Redeeming Books Bible & Theology Topics: book publishing instructions, get published, humor, laugh a little

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One of the Best Commentaries on the Psalms

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

One of the Best Commentaries on the Psalms

Commentary on the Psalms

It is extremely difficult to write a good commentary on the Psalms, partly because there are 150 of them, and if all you do is say the barest minimum about each Psalm you will easily end up with a commentary over 300 pages long.

The main reason that is difficult to write a commentary on the Psalms, however, is that they deal with the full range of human emotions. How does one go about analyzing and dissecting emotional poetry without killing it? In some ways, emotions are like jokes: you kill them if you have to explain them.

Both of these difficulties were masterfully solved by the leading Hebrew scholar, Allen Ross. He solved the first problem (that of length) by not even trying to fit a commentary on the Psalms into one volume, but published it as three volumes instead.

commentary on the Psalms - Allen RossVolume 1 covers chapters 1-41,Volume 2 covers 42-89, and Volume 3 covers 90-150. All 3 can be purchased from Amazon.

Regarding the problem of how to analyze emotional poetry, Allen Ross accomplishes this in three ways. First, he makes sure his commentary on the Psalms is not overly technical. Though he does frequently refer to Hebrew words, his language is not academic or full of theological jargon. He write plainly and simply, which is a sign of true genius. Also, there are relatively few footnotes for an academic commentary of this size.

Second, Allen Ross keeps from destroying the emotions in the text by providing the context in which the Psalm was written. By helping the student see what the author was going through, we can better identify with the emotions that were being felt. Though there is not much which is known about most of the Psalms, Allen Ross provides what is known.

For example, on Psalm 52, which is an imprecatory Psalm where David calls down curses upon his foes, Allen Ross indicates that this Psalm was probably written in connection to the incident with Doeg (1 Sam 22:17-23). This is helpful in understanding this Psalm, because all of us have felt this way at one time or another about our foes.

Finally, Allen Ross avoids killing the emotions in the text by providing commentary “In Expository Form.” In other words, the text of the commentary often reads more like the text of a sermon. It is still commentary, but it doesn’t read like a technical commentary, but more like an exhortation.

In the end, these are great commentaries on the Psalms. If you are looking to preach, teach, or study the Psalms, or simply want an aid for your summer devotional reading of the Psalms, I highly recommend Allen P. Ross’ Commentaries on the Psalms.

God is Redeeming Books Bible & Theology Topics: Bible commentary, Books I'm Reading, Psalms

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If you have been curious about my new book… The Atonement of God

By Jeremy Myers
27 Comments

If you have been curious about my new book… The Atonement of God

My newest book has been out for a couple months now. If you have been thinking of buying a copy to read, this post will help you learn more about my book, The Atonement of God.

There are quite a few places on the internet that have posted excerpts and reviews of the book, and there are also several locations which are selling it.

Reviews and Excerpts from The Atonement of God

the atonement of God

  • “Victory over Death” at Teaching Non-Violent Atonement
  • “Victory over the Devil” at Zach Hoag’s Blog
  • “Atonement of God” Excerpt at Clarion Journal
  • “Atonement of God” Excerpt at Christianity Without Religion
  • Interview with Chuck McKnight
  • Wesley Rostoll Review
  • Wayne Jacobsen Review
  • Michael Wilson Review
  • Dr. Kevin Ruffcord Review
  • Reviews on Amazon

If you write a review or publish an excerpt of the book and want it listed here, please let me know!

Places to Buy The Atonement of God

  • Amazon (for the Kindle and for Paperback books)
  • Barnes & Noble (for the Nook)
  • Google Play Books (for Android devices)
  • iTunes Bookstore (for Apple devices)
  • Kobo (for a Kobo eReader)

Buy the Paperback in Bulk

The atonement of God BulkIf you have read the book and want to buy paperback copies in bulk to give away or to study with friends, you can do that right here:

God is Redeeming Books Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, Books I'm Writing, buy books, christus victor, The Atonement of God, violence of Scripture

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