Wow! That's a Lot of Reading!

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bookslover

Puritan Board Doctor
According to the November, 2009 issue of The Banner of Truth (see page 15, "Up for a reading challenge?"), the (unnamed) pastor of Heritage Baptist Church in (an unnamed location in) Tennessee has challenged the men in his church with what would be a monumental reading assignment: buying and reading all 14 volumes of Martyn Lloyd-Jones's sermons on Romans.

They plan to start in January, 2010 and will read the whole thing in 14 months - to February, 2011 (14 books, 14 months).

Several thousand pages in a little under a year-and-a-half. Now, that's a reading challenge!

Maybe I should move there and set up a Vizine concession...
 
It is not that bad last year I read somewhere between 10000 and 15000 pages of theological reading.
 
Last year I read 11,606 pages. This year (or I guess the last 9 1/2 months anyway) I've read over 10,000 pages. (Not counting on-line or print articles of course.) :book2:
 
Don't know how many pages I've read, but I've read Lloyd-Jones' Romans and Ephesians, the former in less than a year and the latter in about eight to nine months.
 
Yeah, but still

Yeah, I mean, I do 500-1,000 pages a week, but I'm a full time academic. For people with "real jobs," that's a big load, especially if you're reading your Bible every day. Really, though, I'm not sure that reading sermons is the most "time-effective" way to get Scripture content. Also, it seems unbalanced. Why should I spend a full 14 months of my life reading one guy on Romans when there are lots of other good works on Romans and 65 other books of the Bible?
 
I want to know how you all keep up with how many pages you've read? I might be able to remember what books I've read (might) but even then, I don't want to go back and track down every book to look up how many pages it has.

You all probably could have gotten in another 2000 pages if you didn't waste time counting your pages. :lol:
 
I want to know how you all keep up with how many pages you've read? I might be able to remember what books I've read (might) but even then, I don't want to go back and track down every book to look up how many pages it has.

You all probably could have gotten in another 2000 pages if you didn't waste time counting your pages. :lol:

It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.
 
I want to know how you all keep up with how many pages you've read? I might be able to remember what books I've read (might) but even then, I don't want to go back and track down every book to look up how many pages it has.

You all probably could have gotten in another 2000 pages if you didn't waste time counting your pages. :lol:

It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.

That's an excellent idea.
 
I want to know how you all keep up with how many pages you've read? I might be able to remember what books I've read (might) but even then, I don't want to go back and track down every book to look up how many pages it has.

You all probably could have gotten in another 2000 pages if you didn't waste time counting your pages. :lol:

It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.

I do the exact same thing :)
 
It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.

Very organized. I moved to a slightly less organized approach that I think is more helpful to me. I have 2 Word documents. One is a running list of all the books I've read in this six-month period. I'm more flexible now than I used to be; I don't have to read every single page (although I often do) to put a book on this list. Once I've extracted all the main ideas from the book, or if I've consciously decided not to read a certain chapter, or decided that I've read enough to know that the book is junk and not worth continued reading, it goes on the list. That way I'm not wasting my time with sub-optimal reading just so I can list it and feel good about myself.

My second document is the same lists, but collected topically. It's my Master Bibliography, and I asterisk or annotate the titles that I found particularly helpful.
 
I want to know how you all keep up with how many pages you've read? I might be able to remember what books I've read (might) but even then, I don't want to go back and track down every book to look up how many pages it has.

You all probably could have gotten in another 2000 pages if you didn't waste time counting your pages. :lol:

It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.

I do the exact same thing :)

Well I'm glad to hear that I'm not the only one! (And here I thought I was neurotic or something...:D)
 
I want to know how you all keep up with how many pages you've read? I might be able to remember what books I've read (might) but even then, I don't want to go back and track down every book to look up how many pages it has.

You all probably could have gotten in another 2000 pages if you didn't waste time counting your pages. :lol:

It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.

I think that is really cool.
 
I just keep the books I've read on a different shelf from the books I have not read.

Ditto.

I associate Excel with unpleasant things (like budgeting and expenditure sheets at work). I am not about to taint the lovely experience of reading by mingling it with a spreadsheet. :lol:
 
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Really, though, I'm not sure that reading sermons is the most "time-effective" way to get Scripture content. Also, it seems unbalanced. Why should I spend a full 14 months of my life reading one guy on Romans when there are lots of other good works on Romans and 65 other books of the Bible?

I see your point.

However, I feel pretty confident that I know the "Heritage Baptist Church" in "Tennessee" mentioned in the BoT article. It's about 30 minutes from where I am. It's a fairly large SBC church.

I left the SBC for the PCA a few years back. There are dozens of SBC churches within a 30 minute radius of where I live. We searched for two years to find one with doctrinal depth and consistency-- two painful, frustrating, heart-breaking years. I have friends at this "Heritage Baptist" church. It is not as Reformed as I would like, but compared to what I've seen in other SBC churches, I like very much what God is doing there. Hopefully. men will take the pastor's challenge and grow and then move on toward more well-rounded things. But for now, it's a start. I call it a very good start.

BTW, if this is the right church, the pastor's recommended reading list ain't too shabby either--

Sr Pastor Recommended Reading | Heritage Baptist Church
 
Yeah, I mean, I do 500-1,000 pages a week, but I'm a full time academic. For people with "real jobs," that's a big load, especially if you're reading your Bible every day. Really, though, I'm not sure that reading sermons is the most "time-effective" way to get Scripture content. Also, it seems unbalanced. Why should I spend a full 14 months of my life reading one guy on Romans when there are lots of other good works on Romans and 65 other books of the Bible?

Since it's a local pastor giving a challenge to the men in his local church, it might be due to his knowledge of their particular needs as the men in his church and the thought that Lloyd-Jone's sermons over the next 14 months might in a particular way meet that need (in various ways). Many times the particular form of a charge or challenge (i.e. Read all of Lloyd-Jones on Romans, or Spurgeon's sermons, etc.) isn't the main aim of the pastoral intent.
 
It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.

I do the exact same thing :)

Well I'm glad to hear that I'm not the only one! (And here I thought I was neurotic or something...:D)

I saved all of that information on my Blackberry calendar for about two years. When I moved to a newer model Blackberry earlier this year and did the transfer of information I lost most of it for some reason. It wouldn't copy it, and I wasn't about to retype all of it on that little keypad, so it's lost.

I think I'll start keeping track the way that you described by just using a spread sheet. Maybe that's a good resolution for 2010.
 
It's a fair question. Here's what I do: I have an excel sheet where I keep track of the title, author, publication date, number of pages, and starting and finishing date for every book I read for every year. I started this in 2007 so I can tell you all that info about every book I've read over the past few years.

That's an excellent idea.

Why?

Because it helps retain what is read.

Of course, I guess a down side might be that this seems like a lot of work if we are reading for fun or for stress relief.
 
That's an excellent idea.

Why?

Because it helps retain what is read.

Of course, I guess a down side might be that this seems like a lot of work if we are reading for fun or for stress relief.

I can't see it. Of course making notes is good (I use Zotero myself) but I can't see the point of recording the number of pages and dates of reading unless I wanted to measure the speed of my reading.
 

Because it helps retain what is read.

Of course, I guess a down side might be that this seems like a lot of work if we are reading for fun or for stress relief.

I can't see it. Of course making notes is good (I use Zotero myself) but I can't see the point of recording the number of pages and dates of reading unless I wanted to measure the speed of my reading.

I'm with Dr Parsley in I don't really see the point of keeping track of how many pages I've read. But I am not knocking anyone because I am sure that I do many more things that others would say they don't see the point of. As for excel spreadsheets - absolutely love 'em! I use them for all kinds of things, keeping track of my book reading just happens to not be one of them. Everyone keep up with the reading though! I know that's a great idea!
:book2::book2::book2::graduate:
 

Because it helps retain what is read.

Of course, I guess a down side might be that this seems like a lot of work if we are reading for fun or for stress relief.

I can't see it. Of course making notes is good (I use Zotero myself) but I can't see the point of recording the number of pages and dates of reading unless I wanted to measure the speed of my reading.

Then by all means, don't do it. :)
 
And whose says the geeks won't inherit the earth?

-----Added 10/26/2009 at 12:52:17 EST-----

That's only 5,078 pages. Which in 14 months you would just need to read about 12.09048 pages a day based on a 30 day calandar.
 
Thats a great challenge. People would actually be smart if they spent less time eating, watching tv, and worshipping their sports gods. Im glad their is a call to action being said! Thanks foe the info, that was neat :)
 
It's amazing what you can accomplish once you get rid of the vainities of life.


I agree. Thanks by the way."Entertainment is the devil's substitute for joy, and sports is her sister" — Leonard Ravenhill ;)

Its amazing how much more family time you can incorporate. I know I used to be "oh God, why cant I be closer to you" yet, 10 minutes later Id be watching tv or practicing for my ungodly band. I was strongly convicted by James 4:8, "Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you. Cleanse your hands, ye sinners; and purify your hearts, ye double minded."

Music in itself was a hard idol for me to push out of my life, until I studied Exclusive Psalmody. (not trying to push that belief on anyone)But i often would get away from the secular music, then I would try to cross over to the Christian metal. which to me really didnt look much different, didnt sound different....just maybe added a few good morals to it.So i always slid back into music like britney spears,lady gaga,etc..... Until I learned of exclusive Psalmody.

*quick note* I am not trying to slam any Christian labels or music, that is a personal decision, all thus that has been said, is only said on my very own account and experience.
 
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