The Most Influential Books in My Early Christian Life
I did not become a Christ follower until I was 20 years old. My spiritual growth trajectory grew at a steep incline following that event. I was asked once during a Q&A session what was most strategic in my early discipleship. Three things quickly came to mind.
First, there were the people who led me to Christ. I was reached through a campus ministry – InterVarsity Christian Fellowship – and the men and women involved in leading that ministry were nothing less than pivotal. They met with me, prayed with me, invested in me, opened doors for me, invited me… I am a life that was changed.
Second, there was an exceptional local church I quickly aligned with that took me under its wing.
Finally, there were the books. I had always been an avid reader, but after coming to Christ my early reading proved significant. Some things I read were not particularly helpful; other books were what I can only describe as anointed. Particularly those that helped me begin to knit together what it meant to live life following Christ, both in practice and in thought.
After addressing this question, I was asked to share some of those book titles with the audience. I said: “I’ll give you a few for now, but I promise I’ll blog the top 10. I may not offer much commentary on them because I wouldn’t know where to stop, but I promise I’ll put them out there for whatever it might be worth. And for me, they were worth a lot.”
So here are the top 10 books in no particular order:
The Fight by John White
Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis
Improving Your Serve by Charles Swindoll
Knowing God by J.I. Packer
Ordering Your Private World by Gordon MacDonald
Loving God by Charles Colson
The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom
How Should We Then Live by Francis Schaeffer
Basic Christianity by John R.W. Stott
The Kingdom of the Cults by Walter Martin
To be sure, there were many, many more. If I were to make a list of “honorable mentions” it would number in the scores. But if you were to read these 10 as I did, I can make you one very confident promise:
You would be profoundly transformed.
James Emery White
Editor’s Note
This blog was originally published in 2018. The Church & Culture Team thought that you would enjoy reading it again.