Mark's #42 - Next Generation Leader by Andy Stanley (2003)

Andy Stanley excels at communication and leadership - that's a big reason he pastors the second largest church in America.  Next Generation Leader is a book that I read several years ago, but was feeling the need for a refresher to spur on my own leadership abilities. This book focuses on five keys for development and success for up and coming leaders:

  1. Competence - Do Less, Accomplish More.
  2. Courage - Courage Establishes Leadership
  3. Clarity - Uncertainty Demands Clarity
  4. Coaching - Coaching Enables A Leader To Go Farther, Faster
  5. Character - Character Determines the Leader's Legacy

 

As it has been awhile since I first read this book, I realize now how impactful this little book has been on my own leadership approach and philosophy.   This is the book that encouraged me to spend the majority of my time as a pastor focusing on study, preaching, and development of other leaders (strength areas).  Stanley encourages leaders to play to their strengths and delegate their weaknesses.

The other key impact of this book is the necessity for clarity, even in uncertain times - especially in uncertain times.   Stanley is a master of casting vision with clarity.   For example, even in this book, Stanley works hard to make the big idea and key points of each chapter as clear as possible with great illustrations, and concise section summaries.

I would recommend this book to any one who desires to lead people on any level.

Mark's #41 - Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (1931)

Continuing a theme of reading dystopian future novels, I finally got around to reading this classic of the genre.   Once again I realized that many of the books I should have read in high school, but didn't, are actually quite good books (of course there are glaring and violent exceptions to this, such as The Scarlet Letter).  In reading Brave New World, once again I was floored by the prophetic vision of the future, much of which we live out today.  Like Farenheit 451 and 1984, the consequences of the current political, cultural, and technological paths we are on seem to be leading us to some chillingly scary times. In Huxley's portrait of the future, there is a world where people are genetically selected, cultivated, multiplied, nurtured, and manufactured along class lines and predestined futures, abilities, jobs, hopes, and dreams.  Children do not have parents, but are developed by the State and hypnopaedically conditioned to fit the mold of their class structure - Alphas through Deltas.  In the name of stability, the government conditions the people to have no unfulfilled desires.  Rampant promiscuity, government mandated birth-control (sound familiar?), and constant illicit sexual encounters with a multitude of people is the standard way of living.

Though technology has progressed past books and movies, to the 'feelies' (like movies but you also experience all the physical 'feelies' of the action on the screen), cultural depth and any kind of 'free thinking' have been eliminated.  Everything 'old' is done away with, both for the sake of consumerism and fear that the old arts would stir unwanted thinking and emotions which would lead to instability.  "Fordism" (as in Ford, the maker of the Model T) has replaced all other ideologies and religious systems, as sort of a religion of consumerism and assimilation into the whole of civilization.

The great irony in the book occurs through a person known as 'The Savage'.  In the future, there are 'reservations' of people who have not been manufactured by the State, who have not been conditioned for 'civilized' living, and who are born through a mother (disgusting!).  Through the events of the book, one savage is brought from a reservation to interact with the civilized people.  However, while on the reservation, the savage was given an old dusty book by which he learned to read and think - The Collected Works of Shakespeare.  When the savage encounters the base and immoral civilized society, he pleads for the people to 'repent' and think and feel deeply.  But alas, the forces of their conditioning are too strong, the savage is mocked, and consumed as yet another form of entertainment for the masses.

Here's a couple quotes from the savage as he tries to appeal to one of the world leaders to think about God, and pain, and depth of the human experience:

"If you allowed yourselves to think of God, you wouldn't allow yourselves to be degraded by pleasant vices.  You'd have a reason for bearing things patiently, for doing things with courage (242)."

"What you need... is something with tears for a change.  Nothing costs enough here (245)."

Mark's #40 - Prague Winter by Madeleine Albright

While serving as America's first female Secretary of State in the 1990s, Czechlosovakian born Madeleine Albright discovered that she was of Jewish descent.  When Hitler and the Nazi regime rolled in to Prague in 1939, Madeleine and her immediate family fled to London, where her father worked with the Czech government in exile. This is both a personal story as well as a well written and researched national history of Czechloslovakia - focused primarily on the years between 1937-1948.  Madeleleine's research led her to places like Terizin, where many of her Jewish relatives were sent to live in what Hitler called a "prosperous village for Jews".  Sadly, only traces of her relatives remained after the war, as they, along with thousands of other Czechloslovak Jews were sent by train to the gas chambers of Auschwitz and Berkanou.

I have long been interested in WWII history in particular, but this book was absolutely fascinating to me as I have gone to school in Prague, and I hope to one day serve as a missionary in the Czech Republic.  This book gave me a great insight into the particular Czech tragedies of WWII, and some of its shaping influences that persist in the country today.

Mark's #39 - A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole

Ignatius J. Reilly is an overweight 30-year-old deluded eccentric that lives at home with his widowed mother in New Orleans circa 1960.  While that plot beginning doesn't sound like it would make for a great read, this is truly one of the best books I've ever read.  As the title suggests, each character is a fantastic dunce in their own way.  The author weaves together a hilarious and intricate tale of mishaps, plunders, and comic tragedy (winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1981). I've tried to write a plot review of this great book several times now, but each time my review seems unworthy of communicating the genius of Toole's writing, humor and characters.  As such I'll leave you with just a few quotes from the book:

"With the breakdown of the Medieval system, the gods of Chaos, Lunacy, and Bad Taste gained ascendancy."

"You can always tell employees of the government by the total vacancy which occupies the space where most other people have faces."

“I avoid that bleak first hour of the working day during which my still sluggish senses and body make ever chore a penance. I find that in arriving later, the work which I do perform is of a much higher quality.”

“I am at the moment writing a lengthy indictment against our century. When my brain begins to reel from my literary labors, I make an occasional cheese dip.”

I've also read that they are making a movie of this great book, where Zach Galifianakis is slotted to play the protagonist... which sounds about right.  Do yourself a favor and read the book first though.

Mark's #38 - Brothers, We Are Not Professionals by John Piper (2002)

For the past year or so, I have been reading through this book with the Men's leadership team at The Harbor.   Each time we meet, we read one of the thirty chapters written by the preeminent pastor of our time, John Piper.   These chapters comprise Piper's passionate plea to pastors and church leaders addressing a wide variety of pastoral issues and concerns.   The readings have led to great discussions amongst the leadership team and helpful reminders to keep us focused in the right direction as we shepherd the flock God has entrusted us with.  In chapter is typical of pastor Piper's theology; God-centered and Christ exalting. Personally, the most impactful of these chapters were;

4. Brothers, Live and Preach Justification by Faith

8. Brothers, Let us Pray

9. Brothers, Beware of Sacred Substitutes

14. Brothers, Show Your People Why God Inspired Hard Texts

16. Brothers, We Must Feel the Truth of Hell

22. Brothers, Tell Them Copper Will Do

25. Brothers, Give Them God's Passion for Missions

If you are a pastor or lay leader in the church, this should be on your 'must read' list.

 

Mark's #37 - Eating The Dinosaur by Chuck Klosterman (2009)

Analayzing a wide-range of topics, Pop-culture philosopher Chuck Klosterman's prose displays a rare ability to ask interesting and revealing questions about who we are and why we do what we do in today's culture.  Whether he's writing about the evolving nature of football, the 'fight the system' attitude of Nirvana's Kurt Cobain, the debacle that was the U.S. governments handling of David Koresh and his Waco compound, the feasibility of time travel, or the astute technological observations by the Unabomber, Klosterman helps the reader to pause and think in an age of shallow thinking. Some of the articles (which best describes the chapters since there is no overarching theme or connection between chapters), I found a bit boring, particularly the ones relating to musicians and bands.  I realize that pop music, its stars, and its lyrics have a wide-reaching effect on culture, but it's just not my thing.

For a better review of this book, read Ron's - I'm glad Ron will be able to talk with me about the West Coast Offense (if he remembers), and I'll be able to relate to him through his love for ABBA (confession: I skimmed over this chapter, since I have no interest in ABBA).