Best reads 2012, mine and others

In case you have some spare time at the end of this holiday season, I thought I’d give you some recommended online reading.

Before those – perhaps you could give me some help. I’ve really enjoyed the opportunities for conversation this first year of blogging has afforded. You can help me do that better by telling me something about you. Send me an e-mail or comment at bottom (anonymous is fine) to tell me:

  1. Which of my particular posts, or topics, have been most helpful or thought-provoking for you this year?
  2. What particular issues would you like to see more about next year?

Looking forward to more conversation in 2013. If you haven’t already, why don’t you subscribe for e-mail updates.

First, my 10 favorite articles this year – based on when I found them, not necessarily when they were posted. This is an eclectic assortment. I’ll try to break into a few categories.

Ministry

Theology

  • Love Wins – An insightful video comparing the Orthodox view of salvation with the mainstream substitutionary atonement views.
  • Temper, Temper by John Meunier. I picked something representative from John Meunier’s blog. You should read them all. This is one of many posts highlighting John Wesley’s (and thus Meunier’s) focus on holiness.
  • Why Biblical Studies? by J. R. Daniel Kirk. A great defense of biblical studies as a discipline.

Something Else 

FROM MY BLOG

Most popular

These 10 posts received the most pageviews and shares. If you shared any of them with others, thanks for your help!

  1. Jesus and Politics – I wonder if my questions – “Republican or Democrat?” “Capitalism or Socialism?” “Big government or Small government?” – were the wrong questions all these years.
  2. How Sunday School created a theologically illiterate American Church
  3. Christians, Capitalism, and Ayn Rand – Why I came to believe Christianity is incompatible with capitalism – and socialism.
  4. 10 Tips for New Seminary Students
  5. Christians and Pornography – Made worse by the recent article that said 50 Shades of Grey held three places in the top-10 selling books for 2012.
  6. Why Weekly Eucharist? 
  7. What does ordination mean? – Or, “The biggest lie told at Annual Conference each year.”
  8. Pastors’ Salaries and Church Buildings – Learning from the early Methodists about how to spend (and not spend) money.
  9. School shootings, a world with devils filled, Advent, and Revelation 20 – Interpreting the Newtown shootings through the church calendar and the Bible.
  10. The coming church budget crunch – It’s nearly inevitable at this point. You should at least be aware.

Personal favorites

These 5 didn’t make the above list, but they’re among my favorites.

Again, many thanks! Talk to you again in 2013.

Top 5 for November – porn, capitalism, the stuck UMC, and more

top 5As usual, thanks for your comments and for sharing these posts with others. In the past month, nearly half of my pageviews originated from you sharing these pieces in social media.

Here were November’s top 5 posts:

1. Christians and Pornography – Pleading with professing Christians to stop viewing/reading porn. And defining “porn” perhaps a bit differently than normal.

2. When “Missional Church” gets too outwardly focused – What happens when we take the church’s sole purpose as outreach and witness? A tragic misunderstanding of the nature of the church.

3. Christians, Capitalism, and Ayn Rand – I initially posted this in August, but it’s still in the top 5, perhaps because of some big event that took place in November. My premise: the Christian and capitalist worldviews are incompatible.

4. The Stuck State of the UMC and Some Therapy – November brought more bad news for anyone hoping the UMC will be able to change its unwieldy behemoth of a structure before it collapses. I try to offer some therapy.

5. “What does it take to become a member?” (pt. I, beliefs) – What beliefs should we require anyone to have if they are going to join the church? Which beliefs is it okay to be different on?

Top 5 August Posts

top 5

top 5Once again, thanks for all of your shares, tweets, comments, and e-mails this month. Here are August’s top 5…

1 – Jesus and Politics – Thanks to the Christian Left Facebook page for sharing this post with their nearly 100,000 followers. I got more pageviews in a day than in all of July. A bit unusual since what I’m suggesting is that Christians shouldn’t be aligned with the right or the left, but I’ll take it…

2 – Why I am (Still) a Methodist – With so many different (non)-denominations out there, I’ve been asked a number of times why I’m a Methodist. Here are my best reasons.

3 – Christians, Capitalism, and Ayn Rand – How I realized most of the assumptions behind capitalism (and socialism) contradict a Christian worldview.

4 – 10 Tips for New Seminary Students – Be sure to also read the comments for many others’ added tips.

5 – Why Weekly Eucharist? – I make my case here for weekly communion in Sunday morning worship. I’ve been excited to hear of at least one church that is making the transition now.

Top 5 for July

Again, thanks for all of your shares, comments, and e-mails this month. I’m enjoying the number of conversations that some of these posts have led to. Two top 5 lists…

Top 5 Posts for July
1. The coming church budget crunch
2. Re-evangelizing America with changes in our ministry roles
3. How Sunday School created a theologically illiterate American Church
4. John Wesley never heard of a traveling pastor
5. How is it with your soul?

And one that I thought might generate some discussion but didn’t, so I’ll link it again… Stealing

Top 5 Commenters for July
1. John Leek – John writes good things about ministry and the UMC at johnleek.com. Check it out.
2. Aaron Mansfield – Aaron no longer blogs (or Facebooks, or tweets – he pretty much just visits and shares the gospel now), but you can find his old blog here: weeklywesley.blogspot.com. And he wrote a guest post for me a while back: How to Become an Evangelist.
3. Lauren Wilson – Lauren doesn’t blog, but she asks good questions.
4. Shannon Blosser – Shannon is a journalist-turned-pastor and soon-to-be dad. You’ll get a mix of those things at shannonblosser.com
5. John Meunier – John writes like a scholar about ministry, theology and the UMC at johnmeunier.wordpress.com, but he has never been to seminary. Sadly, it sounds like he plans to shut down shop for a while when he starts seminary classes this fall.

Thanks to all of you for adding to the discussion.