On Book Clubs
You ought to get involved in a book club or two along the way.
A book club will help you read books properly. Mortimer Adler in his book, “How to Read a Book,” teaches that there is more to reading a book than reading it, much more. Reading, really reading a book, is a very intentional, multi-step process. It is the kind of process that book clubs generally follow.
Your participation in a book club will discipline you to READ books:
- Search out the general direction of the book, author, background, historical situation.
- Read the book. Mark it up liberally—if you own the copy.
- Skim back through it for points worthy of discussion, clarification or criticism.
- Discuss it with others. (This is the book club event.)
- Reflect on its salient points one more time.
There are different kinds of book groups.
Eclectic Group: Choose members from various walks of life. For a number of years, I have been the weaker partner in a group that includes a symphony conductor, a book publisher, a corporate attorney, a hospital president and a lead research scientist. (An architect had to leave the group for a job change.) We do not all hold the same opinions about things. Together we have read through a shelf full of books– most of which I would have never chosen on my own. Reading books with people who think and believe differently than you do will challenge and enrich.
Collegial Group: Choose members from your general area of occupation. For even more years than the first group I mentioned I have been meeting with a group of brother pastors with whom I attended college. Annually we select a book germane to our calling, read it in advance and then discuss it over a period of three days. There might be a little golf and goofing around in there too.
Study Group: One of the Bible studies at church has developed really into a book group. We read a chapter a week in a book that intersects with the Christian faith and get together to discuss it. Appropriate Bible passages are always brought to bear. Discussion seems to flow freer than if we just read chapters of the Bible. A neutral book frees participants to express divergent opinions. This promotes good discussion without creating heretics.
Ad Hoc Group: This kind of “group” is created by simply passing a good book on to someone else and saying, “You might like this. Let me know what you think.” Be careful with this kind of group. That knife can cut both ways. Your friend might return that favor and you will end up with more books to read on your own desk!
Cliff Note Group: I have never been in this kind of a group, but I have often thought it would be good group to start! Each participant would read a different book and write a one page “executive summary.” The group would then gather and discuss the various summaries. This way you would be exposed to more books without having to read them. Ecclesiastes 12:13 reminds us, “Of making many books there is no end, and much study wearies the body.” A Cliff Note group would help to lighten the burden and still broaden the horizon!
Pastors must be lifetime learners! Reading groups of various sorts will continue to enrich your learning at a fraction of the cost and time of additional degrees or frequent conferences. They are a great help on your path toward significance.