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Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

How Do You Read a Book?

Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

J.D. Greear

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.9624 Ratings

🗓️ 17 December 2018

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Pastor J.D. explains why it’s important to not only read but also remember what you read with some helpful tips he’s found throughout the years.

A glimpse into this episode:

A guy once told me that in 5 years you’ll be the same person except for the books you read and the people you meet.

First of all, you should be reading.

* John Wesley, “Read or get out of the ministry.”
* “Readers are leaders.”

But assuming you already are a reader… I talk to people all the time who read a lot but are frustrated at how little they seem to retain. They want to know the secret to reading books well.

People always see my library, which is pretty large--over a thousand books, and invariably ask me the same question, “Have you read all of these?”

I believe it really doesn’t matter how many books you’ve read if you can’t remember what’s in any of them. As Proverbs 12:27 says, “Whoever is slothful will not roast his game, but the diligent man will get precious wealth.”

Here are my two action items for you on how to read a book well:

First, take notes.

* If you look into one of my books, you’ll notice that I underline passages, add stars next to others, and scribble short responses in the margins. Sometimes I’m agreeing with the author; sometimes I’m arguing; sometimes I’m making dumb jokes that only future J.D. will find funny. But I’m engaging the words, not simply looking at them.

Second, create a cheat sheet.

* This is the toughest part, and it’s where most dedicated readers fall off. After the book is done, and you’ve been scribbling throughout it, create a 1-2 page cheat sheet that acts as your guide for the book. I like to use the empty pages at the front of the book for this (which, if I’m remembering correctly, is what Mortimer Adler suggested in his classic book, How to Read a Book).
* Now, if you’ve ever seen one of my books, you know that my cheat sheet isn’t comprehensive (or even always legible). That’s okay: it’s not for anyone else but me. But that cheat sheet helps me remember what I liked about a book and where to find it. So at a glance, I can remember, for instance, that Tim Keller has a great evangelism analogy about a doughnut on page 46 (or whatever).
* I also have a filing system by topic and book of the Bible where I catalogue a lot of the helpful things I read. And after 20 years of ministry I’ve created a rich storage of useful things that I can use later for sermons or anything else.

I keep track of all of the books that I read, but it ends up being about 65-70 books a year. I also use a service called Blinkist that gives short summaries of leadership books.

 





What happens when the Bible and humanity collide? Not what you’d expect. Living & Effective, a podcast collaboration between Christianity Today and the Christian Standard Bible, journeys through history, current events, theology, and the human condition to uncover surprising ways the Bible accomplishes God’s plan in the world."

Transcript

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0:00.0

Lifeway Leadership Podcast Network.

0:05.0

You're listening to Ask Me Anything with Pastor J.D. Greer.

0:09.2

Honest questions, quick answers.

0:11.3

I'm your host, Todd Unzicker, and this is where J.D ever had on the Ask Me Anything podcast.

0:37.6

Jady, how do you read a book?

0:39.3

Well, reading is a very important part of my life.

0:41.7

I mean, you probably knew that.

0:42.9

I just, I remember in high school, a guy saying something that's always stuck with me,

0:46.7

he's like, you're going to be this exact same person you are five years from now.

0:50.9

You'll be the same guy except for the people that you meet and the books that you read.

0:55.0

So choosing friends is a very important part of the process of growing, but also just increasing your understanding of reading, not just from one place or one type of author, but just reading very widely.

1:06.4

John Wesley, the famous evangelist in the Great Awakening of the United States, he used to tell young

1:12.4

pastors either read or get out of the ministry. Readers, it's, you know, kind of said, are leaders,

1:17.8

and that's just true. I mean, it grows your mind. It teaches you to think in new ways,

1:22.1

teaches you to be articulate. Writing makes you articulate, but reading, it broadens your mind.

1:27.1

Assuming that those listening are already readers, let me just, let me kind of jump at it from

1:31.5

that angle rather than try to persuade you to be a reader. I talk to people a lot who they read a

1:37.1

lot, but they're frustrated at how little they seem to retain, and they want to know, like,

1:40.9

how do you read a book well? Part of it is in the selection process.

1:44.7

That's where it kind of begins is, I mean, there's no thief like a bad book. So I am constantly,

1:48.6

but we're around each other for 10 minutes. I'll probably ask you what books you're reading,

1:52.2

and I'm just always making little notes. I have these files and Evernote where I'm just always

...

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