After finishing the helpful, and highly acclaimed, "Jesus and John Wayne" by @kkdumez, I'm thinking about the style of the book from a publishing perspective—what has made this book so successful?
- It is brief and dense so it is efficient. That is, readers get a feeling that they are learning quickly. It has been diligently edited to be concise. It keeps the attention of the reader used to reading Twitter or watching YouTube or The Crown or listening to podcasts.
- There is less analysis in the sense of "on the one hand, on the other hand." Instead of telling, there is showing—with example after example, and quote after quote. The effect is the takeaway that this Christian masculinity was not just one person but an ideological movement.
- The reader learns the gist of each story. Details are in the endnotes. If adjectives are used, they evoke the point being made.
- The scope is mostly limited to 100 years: 1925 Scopes Trial to 2020.
- It is, as Du Mez says, dependent on the work of journalists.
- It is particularly credible because of Du Mez's training in history and her position at an historically evangelical university.
- It has very little prescription of what should be done. The moral lessons are obvious as they are in the books of 1-2 Samuel and 1-2 Kings: Beware of their errors! (History is the most effective genre for shaping morally good leaders in my opinion).
- I'm thankful for Du Mez's many tweets and posts pointing to the work of others (see patheos.com/blogs/anxiousb…) because I too thought often, "If people liked that, they should also read ..." Seeking truth is a team effort.
For any of us interested in the health of Christianity in America, it is great to see well-researched, courageous books like "Jesus and John Wayne," (and last year and earlier in this summer, The Color of Compromise by @JemarTisby), hit a nerve and reach a broad audience.
Many professors will research specific issues in more detail, which is crucial for the pursuit of truth. (If you are intrigued by or bothered by one paragraph in Jesus and John Wayne, research that)!
But it is also useful to have these synthetic, more accessible works, that are able to bring much information to a broader audience. One huge problem we have in the USA is people operating with totally different settled facts in their minds.
Thank you to @kkdumez for this fantastic book. And thank you to others who write great books that don't quite sell like hers but do influence some! And thanks to journalists, those who research, those who tweet, and truth-tellers everywhere who contribute to truth being revealed.
Here is my blog post of this thread:
"Why Jesus and John Wayne by Kristin Kobes Du Mez is such a hit" andyrowell.net/andy_rowell/20…
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1. Ryan Burge argues that evangelical leaders have little influence on the political beliefs of the masses of evangelicals. I disagree. But evangelical leaders have generally not spoken out about politics, which has led to a vacuum that Fox News filled.
2. I love the work of Ryan Burge but I am not convinced that evangelical leaders do not influence the rank and file. 3. From the 2004-2020 exit polls, about 16-24% of white evangelicals voted for the Democratic presidential candidate. 74-81% voted for the Republican.
4. Some leaders of some evangelical organizations voted for the Democrat. 5. It does not follow that these evangelical leaders who voted for the Democrat are not influential on the politics of the white evangelicals who voted Republican.
- Eric Metaxas is deceived and is deceiving others.
- He has cut off relationship with those who have tried to talk to him.
- At what point does this make Franklin Graham and Cissie Graham Lynch cringe?
- Surely publishers notice.
Today President Trump was talking with Pennsylvania state senator Doug Mastriano who put him on the phone with Eric Metaxas. Yesterday Mastriano tested positive for covid while meeting with Trump. @JohnFea1
Doug Mastriano and Eric Metaxas are using extreme, militant, blood-thirsty language. Mastriano wrote an inaccurate book about a war hero. Metaxas wrote an inaccurate book about a martyr. They are who Trump talked to today.
Thread of notes comparing the 990 tax forms of
- Samaritan's Purse (2019). CEO: Franklin Graham.
- World Vision (2018). CEO: Edgar Sandoval Sr., previously Rich Stearns.
- Compassion International (2018). CEO: Santiago "Jim" Mellado.
👇
Number of employees / total revenue / profit / net assets:
Samaritan's Purse: 3,305* / $734,112,873 / $44,985,504* / $701,956,825*
World Vision: 1,049 / $1,135,591,490* / $-13,516,839 / 193,274,099
Compassion: 1,196. / $953,223,395 / $20,603,361 / 268,592,542
* designates high.
Number of independent members of the board:
Samaritan's Purse: 12 out of 18.
World Vision: 14 out of 15.
Compassion: 10 out of 11.
Board members: Franklin Graham (father), Roy Graham (son), Cissie Jane Austin Graham Lynch (daughter) are in Schedule O. Others in Schedule L.
Mike Pence, Mike Huckabee, James Dobson, Eric Metaxas, Al Mohler, Tony Perkins, Gary Bauer, Hugh Hewitt, and Jay Sekulow were or are radio talk radio hosts. Is there a corrosive effect on humility and reflection when you talk for an hour everyday and try to entertain an audience?
Dave Ramsey, John MacArthur, James MacDonald, Ravi Zacharias, K. P. Yohannan, Greg Laurie, Robert Jeffress, Jack Hibbs, and Skip Heitzig also have shows on Christian radio.
This is a Marshall McLuhan or Neil Postman question: "What if the media and technology we think we are utilizing (like a radio or a YouTube show or a podcast) to broadcast our message to others also changes *us*?"
@phillipmholmes@drantbradley@Fikkert - Kanye West accurately pointed out the three states with the highest proportion of black abortions (MS, GA, AL). Mississippi has the most black people per population so that is not surprising (GA is #3 and AL #6).
@phillipmholmes@drantbradley@Fikkert To reduce the number of abortions, people would need to (a) abstain or (b) utilize contraceptives or (c) be supported sufficiently to have the baby.
a. I argue that hoping for abstention is not a sufficient public health strategy.
My pastor friend was thinking about teaching his people how to vote in his Sunday sermon without being partisan.
But I have already voted and am thinking about what happens next! I also told him I am praying the Psalms to get through these stressful days (and weeks and months!)