Welcome to the online home of Tim Challies, blogger, author and web designer. My first book, "The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment," is now available everywhere.

Read about the blog or about the author.

Saturday November 14, 2009

No Day Without Its Line

A little while ago I read Warren Wiersbe’s book 50 People Every Christian Should Know. Just the other day I was tidying up my bookcases and noticed a toothpick sticking out of the book. I opened it to the page marked by the toothpick and found a quote I guess I must have been hoping to come back to. Turns out it’s a good one. It comes from a chapter devoted to Alexander Whyte. Here it is:

*****

The sales manager of a successful Christian publishing house tells me that pastors are not buying books. “Most of the books sold in Christian bookstores are sold to and read by women,” he said. If our pastors are not using their valuable time for study, what are they using it for? Perhaps Whyte had the answer: “We shroud our indolence under the pretext of a difficulty. The truth is, it is lack of real love for our work.”

Alexander Whyte loved books, and he read them to his dying day. The Puritans in general and Thomas Goodwin in particular were his main diet. But he also thrived on the mystics and the princes of the Scottish church, such as Samuel Rutherford. Whyte constantly ordered books for himself and his friends in the ministry. However, he cautioned young pastors against becoming book-buyers instead of book-readers. “Don’t hunger for books,” he wrote a minister friend. “Get a few of the very best, such as you already have, and read them and your own heart continually.” Whyte often contrasted two kinds of reading—“reading on a sofa and reading with a pencil in hand.” He urged students to keep notebooks and to make entries in an interleaved Bible for future reference. “No day without its line” was his motto. He wrote to Hubert Simpson: “for more than forty years, I think I can say, never a week, scarcely a day, has passed, that I have not entered some note or notes into my Bible: and, then, I never read a book without taking notes for preservation one way or another.”

Comments (11) »


1. marko
November 14, 2009
12:12 PM

so good - there’s nothing like savoring the Truth


2. JR
November 14, 2009
1:27 PM

No pastor trying to be a good steward of his or his church’s funds would buy books from a Christian bookstore.

I know that’s not the point, but I had to point it out.


3. DBMusic
November 14, 2009
2:01 PM

I was going to mention something similar to JR. A major reason for the lack of attention pastors pay to the Christian bookstores is that the sort of drivel being pushed by the major “Christian” publishers isn’t worth pursuit. This should be an indictment on the bookstore; not the pastor! Again, I understand this wasn’t the intent of the post, but I am saddened that I can’t recall my last Christian bookstore purchase. A growing trend seems to be church resource centers in which pastors put forth biblically sound worthwhile books for their congregation to purchase. Thank the Lord for gifting many for evaluating resources en masse; see Tim’s website (discerningreader.com) and Albert Mohler’s blog (albertmohler.com) among others. Thanks Tim for your diligence and commitment to provide this information.


4. jstainer
November 14, 2009
2:01 PM

Reading with a pencil in hand and a Bible beside me is something I need to be reminded to do more. It’s often after I have read a book that I wish I was more active in the reading process rather than passive.

I’d be somewhat concerned if pastors were the top buyer’s of books from a Christian bookstore though. It’s somewhat reassuring to me that it’s actually the opposite.


5. Larry
November 14, 2009
4:16 PM

As others have said, most of what’s in a “Christian” bookstore today would be worthless to a man of God who’s trying to preach the Word from a Biblically sound standpoint.


6. Deborah
November 14, 2009
4:33 PM

Love the title and the context - “no day without its line”


7. Chris
November 14, 2009
5:35 PM

“…becoming book-buyers instead of book-readers”—that’s a convicting insight for a age like ours where books are so prevalent, but careful readers so scarce. (What would Whyte say if he lived to see Amazon?)


8. Robert
November 14, 2009
10:15 PM

Maybe you could enlighten us on how you take notes while reading. I really struggle with it. I guess I have never been taught how nor seen it done.


9. Tamara Slack
November 15, 2009
9:02 AM

I read with pen and highlighter in hand, but then tend to not go back to the books I’ve read.

I’ve wanted to have a journal next to me as I’m reading, but not sure how to keep it all together so that I can refer back to a topic. For instance, I’m reading Chris Brauns’ book, “Unpacking Forgiveness” right now and am highlighting lots of things that the Lord is helping me with as He is tearing apart false teachings I’ve held onto for years about forgiveness and bitterness and replacing them with truth. Great! But… I would love to go back and read over notes I’ve taken without sorting through many pages all about the house.

I’d be interested to see how Tim or anyone takes notes and organizes them to grab quotes for help later.


10. Ted
November 15, 2009
4:08 PM

I have used a program called Journlr for Mac. It used to be free, but I think they want to charge for it now. Even so, it is well worth it. There may be something better our there, but I have not come across anything that is as flexible and easy to use. You can simply create as many folders and sub-folders as you want to and add entries on whatever you want. You can even paste in pictures, video, and audio. Everything is taggable and can be searched. Whenever I find something I want to save, even whole sermons, ebooks, or just a reference to a book on my shelf where I found some good instruction on a topic, I make an entry, and a new category folder if need be, and save it. If you are diligent to file everything away in your virtual filing cabinet, when you are ready to do some research on a topic you will have plenty of good resources at your fingertips and easily accessible. Obviously, this type of thing could be implemented on paper as well (in fact, I have heard that Pastor Alistair Begg has done such a thing for years). Hope this is of some use to you.


11. Wendy
November 16, 2009
2:16 PM

That’s a good reminder to actually read books worth taking notes on.