Top Books for New Disciples

This was hard, coming up with a short list of top books to read for a fairly new believer who is a reader. This could go in so many directions, but here's what I gave him, including my notations.

  • Basic discipleshipThe Purpose Driven Life by Rick Warren– This book really covers all the major bases for basic discipleship. If you haven’t read it, take 40 days to read it (one chapter per day) and then read it again.
  • EvangelismBecoming a Contagious Christian by Bill Hybels and Mark Mittleberg – I think this is the best one book to read on the subject and it has some really good practical stuff in it.
  • Spiritual DisciplinesThe Life You’ve Always Wanted by John Ortberg – We’re going to offer a six-week seminar on this next year that I would highly recommend – Runner ups in this category are Celebration of Discipline by Richard Foster and Ordering Your Private World by Gordon MacDonald.
  • Bible interpretationHow to Read the Bible for all its Worth by Gordon Fee and Douglas Stuart – This will be like a mini seminary class on biblical interpretation and will impact your reading of the Bible for the rest of your life.
  • ChurchThe Purpose Driven Church by Rick Warren – This is the book that made Warren famous in the pastoral world, years before he ever wrote the Purpose Driven Life. Some concepts and applications are a little outdated, but it’s an encyclopedia of church growth/health principles. Runner-up in this category is 7 Practices of Effective Ministry by Andy Stanley, but Warren should be read first.
  • Theology – The all-time classic is Knowing God by J.I. Packer.

Serving Others Contributes to Spiritual Growth

Here's a short but very interesting article:

Serving Others Contributes to Spiritual Growth
by Eric Swanson (Christianity Today)

I surveyed my church to see if people saw a relationship between ministering to others and spiritual growth.

When asked, "To what extent has your ministry or service to others affected your spiritual growth?," 92 percent answered positively. None responded that ministry had a negative effect on their spiritual growth.

Sixty-three percent indicated that service was equally significant in their spiritual growth compared to other spiritual disciplines, such as Bible study and prayer.

Twenty-four percent responded that ministry or service to others had been "a more significant factor" to their spiritual growth than Bible study or prayer.

Over half (58 percent) of those who were not actively ministering to others felt either "not satisfied" or "somewhat satisfied" with their level of spiritual growth.

—Eric Swanson, What You Get from Giving (Leadership Journal, Spring 2003), p. 37