Inhaltsangabe
It’s time to give pastors permission to read books besides the Bible. Six months into his first senior pastorate, Austin Carty sat in his office reading—not the Bible, not a commentary, not a theological tract, but a novel by Fyodor Dostoevsky. As the minutes turned to hours, while he sat engrossed in this book, he noticed something: he began feeling uneasy. And then anxious. And then guilty. What would someone think if they opened the door and caught him reading fiction? For busy pastors (is there any other kind?), time spent reading feels hard to justify, especially when it’s not for sermon prep. But what if reading felt less like a luxury and more like a vocational responsibility—a spiritual practice that bears fruit in every aspect of ministry, from preaching to pastoral care to church leadership? Austin Carty believes that this is exactly how pastors ought to think about reading. The Pastor’s Bookshelf shows how worthwhile reading is more about formation than information and how, through reading, a pastor becomes a fuller, more enriched human being with a deeper capacity for wisdom and love, better equipped to understand and work for God’s kingdom. Table of Contents Foreword by Thomas G. Long Introduction: Permission to Read Freely Section One: All the Reading We Don’t Remember 1. On Formation 2. Formation versus Information 3. On Information 4. Developing Wisdom 5. Learning to Love Part Two: Not Just a Luxury 6. Reading for Preaching 7. Reading for Pastoral Care 8. Reading for Vision Casting 9. Reading for Leadership Part Three: For Whatever Reason 10. Reading as a Pastoral Visit 11. Reading as a Spiritual Discipline 12. Reading with a Proper Spirit 13. Choosing What to Read 14. How to Mark and File What You’ve Read 15. Reading Scripture as a Pastor-Reader Postscript Notes Index
Über die Autorinnen und Autoren
Austin Carty is pastor of Boulevard Baptist Church in Anderson, South Carolina. He holds an MDiv from Wake Forest University and a DMin from Emory University. He is the author of Some of the Words Are Theirs: The Art of Writing and Living a Sermon, High Points and Lows: Life, Faith, and Figuring It All Out, and The Pastor's Bookshelf: Why Reading Matters for Ministry, which received the 2023 Christianity Today Award of Merit and was named Book of the Year by Preaching magazine.
Thomas G. Long is Bandy Professor of Preaching and coordinator of the Initiative in Religious Practices and Practical Theology at Candler School of Theology, Emory University. His other books include The Witness of Preaching and Accompany Them with Singing -- The Christian Funeral.
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