Welcome to Dennis' Pile of Books

If you were to walk into my office, either at the church or at my house, one thing you would most likely notice many, many books. I have piles of books everywhere so it seems. I love books and surround myself with them wherever I am (at work, on vacation, in the bathroom... you get the picture). So welcome to my pile of books!

On one of my other blogs (Immersed in Mystery) I have a running list of books I have recently read, and ones I am currently reading. In the past few months I began writing short comments after each book title, these were sort of like mini-book reviews, really mini. I thought that rather than lose these comments in the future (I only keep 10 titles on the list at any one time) I would create a blog dedicated to the books I have read.

Having this blog dedicated to the books I have read will also allow me to expand on my comments, perhaps even expanding into a full book review on occasion. Each book will have its own entry, and after the initial 10 entries future books will be noted in this blog when I finish them (in other words the date of the blog entry will indicate the date I finished that book). Mostly this blog is for my own benefit (to help remember all I've read), but I also like to share good books with others. Occasionally I feel the need to warn people about a disappointing book - our free time is scarce enough as it is, no use wasting it on a book that isn't worth the time or effort.

I welcome other comments on these books, it is always interesting to hear how others react to a book I've read - so feel free to leave comments on this blog. And I'm always open to book suggestions from others, I've encountered some great books because of other people's suggestions. Enjoy browsing through my pile of books.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

The Boy Who Met Jesus: Segatashya of Kibeho

by Immaculée Ilibagiza (with Steve Erwin)

Not quite sure what to make of this book. The dramatic story of a peasant farmer boy from a remote region of Rwanda who had visions of Jesus. Jesus gives this boy messages to share with the world, similar to some girls from the same region having visions of Mary (a modern equivalent to the Marian apparitions in Lourdes, France - 1858, or Fátima, Portugal - 1917). These visitations happened in 1982 in the small village of Kibeho, Rwanda. The account is fascinating, but I'm not sure why God would use such a method to proclaim a message that is (for the most part) already recorded in the Gospels.  That being said, I still found it hard to put down, and some of the unexplained aspects of the story make me curious - for one thing, how would an illiterate boy from a pagan family, who had never been in school, never set foot in a church, never seen a Bible, how could such a person be able to speak so skillfully about theological matters?  Those who were sent by the Roman Catholic church to investigate the verity of the apparitions concluded that they were real, that the children, including Segatashya, were telling the truth - something miraculous was taking place.

Perhaps the most forceful impact of the book is its cautionary tale of what happens when people do not love others has God has commanded.  In a little more than a decade after Segatashya had his visions and shared Jesus' message with a wide audience (his messages were broadcast on radio and crowds of 30,000 would crowd into Kibeho when the visitations were to occur), the lack of love and understanding led to the genocide for which Rwanda is infamous today.  In the end the message delivered by Segatashya was a simple one, so simple that a child could understand it - we are to love God and each other, to return to living the way God intended, to pray constantly and in this way prepare for the last days.



Saturday, April 21, 2012

Intuitive Leadership: Embracing a Paradigm of Narrative, Metaphor & Chaos

by Tim Keel

I started this book months ago, it was recommended by my brother who read it as part of his Doctor of Ministry studies.  For whatever reason I never got too far into the book, it kept getting set aside as other things took higher priority.  Then a few weeks ago I was able to really dig into this book, and I am very grateful that I did.  It is fill with great insights into what leadership means, and indeed what church means, in the 21st century.  A call to creativity and intuition, and allowing ministry to be shaped by one's context rather than by programs and structures developed elsewhere (in place or time).


Tim Keel leads a church that is part of the "Emerging Church" movement. They have sought to be intentional in shaping their community of faith in an honest and creative manner that does not neglect the past, but is not bound to it.  One of the best things about Keel's book is that he resists the temptation to create a program based on what happens at Jacob's Well (his church in Kansas City, Missouri) that can be transplanted into other churches.  That would defeat the whole premise of his book which is to encourage leaders to respond to their own environments with creativity and intuition (which he says is an important way God's Spirit leads us).

My copy of this book is filled with highlighted passages, and I'm sure I will return to this volume time and again to remind myself of the wisdom and insights Tim Keel has shared, and to reaffirm my commitment to use the gifts of creativity and intuition in my role as a church leader.