Saturday, June 27, 2015

Book Review: The 10 Dumbest Things Christians Do







The 10 Dumbest Things Christians Do

by Mark Atteberry.

Thomas Nelson, Inc.

Nashville

2006

210 pp



     The author was generous—“dumb” isn’t strong enough—I would call some of his selections “bad” and even “evil”. Atteberry is thorough in his discussion of each item; we’ll use his own words in the following sampling of his list:—
#1. Slinging Mud on the Bride of Christ. “Consider how it must break His heart when we  thoughtlessly besmirch the one He gave His life for, with unbecoming words and actions.”
#3. Living Below the Level of Our Beliefs. “...at that point in his life [re: Bathsheba/Uriah], David’s worship was nothing but a hollow ritual. He was showing up on time, warmly greeting all of his friends, singing all the most popular new psalms, and no doubt offering the kind of beautiful prayers you would expect from one of history’s greatest poets. Then, when the service was over, he was walking unchanged right back into his pathetic, morally corrupt little life.”
#5. Hopping from Church to Church.  “I believe God is disappointed in all chronic church hoppers. I say that because there are so many critical New Testament commands a church-hopping believer simply cannot fulfill.”
#6. Fighting Among Ourselves.  “Friendly. Fire. Two harmless words until you put them side by side. Then they become unspeakably ugly...forgiveness is important because it makes us more like Jesus.”
#7. Missing Golden Opportunities. ”The single most important thing you can do to prepare yourself to be used by God is study the Scriptures.”
#8. Settling for Mediocrity. “The church needs to be more conscious of the way it presents itself to the lost. It’s true, God never said, “Go ye into all the world and impress people.” But you can’t go anywhere in the world and find a business or organization that is thriving on mediocrity...God loves excellence.”
#10. Accepting the Unacceptable. “So anytime you find yourself in a situation where you feel you need to speak up, ask yourself how you can do it in the least offensive way possible. There just might be someone within earshot who is secretly curious about the Lord they see you serving so passionately. Don’t blow that opportunity by being needlessly mean and hateful.”
“In the process, we must never forget to reflect the heart and character of Christ.”
     Atteberry maintains a light-hearted tone throughout the book but he knows and we know that some of his material and some of his examples are heart-breaking.
     I was personally convicted by every one of Atteberry’s items, so much so that I wished we could share every chapter with the whole local church, much like Ezra did in those days of the restoration of temple worship in Jerusalem (Neh.8:1-8). He read the Scriptures then he explained what he had read and showed how it applied to those faithful believers.
     We need to take the Scriptures to heart in just the same way.
Reviewed by Glenn Wilson          

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