How Do I Know I’m
Saved was my first published book, but I actually wrote A Sense of Belonging before I wrote How Do I Know I’m Saved. In 1982, I became aware of what has become
known as the “Church Growth Movement.”
The “Church Growth Movement” flowered in the eighties, but is pretty
much passé today. I was, however,
attracted to one emphasis in the movement.
The emphasis is on what they call, “The Fruit That Remains.” Church Growth advocates aren’t impressed with
the number of people we claim to have converted. They ask, “Where are the new members six
months, a year, two years, and five years later?” To them church growth can only be measured in
these terms – hence the phrase, “the fruit that remains.”
One strategy they work on is “incorporating” new members
into the life of the church. The whole
concept fascinated me. It was one that I
thought we had neglected, so I sat about studying it. In time I was invited to conduct workshops on
the subject, wrote articles for periodicals, and decided to put my thoughts
into a book.
During the process of conducting workshops at various
localities around the country I came to realize the undeniable fact that it’s
not just the new members who sometimes have trouble fitting in. Many of our people have been attending our
assemblies for many years, and don’t feel like they belong. We still need to work on correcting that
oversight.
With the demands of full time church work, I was having a
hard time getting the manuscript completed, so I asked for a week off in
1985. Some friends allowed me to use
their lake cottage in Sturgis, Michigan to complete the writing of the
book. Computers were relatively new, and
I didn’t have one, but a friend offered to loan me his. I declined.
I didn’t want to spend half the week learning how to use the
computer. I took an IBM Selectric
typewriter to Michigan with me. Instead
of retyping pages with mistakes, I retyped the sections where the mistakes
occurred, then pasted them over the paragraphs where the error occurred. After I completed the manuscript, I copied
everything on a copying machine. Plain
paper copies were in general usage by this time. They came out looking great, and I wasn’t
ashamed to submit the manuscript.
Twentieth Century
Christian (now Twenty-first Century Christian) had shown some interest in
publishing the book. I submitted it the
week after I left Michigan.
Unfortunately Twentieth Century Christian had other projects they were
working on, so it was not until late 1989 that the book actually came out. Both of my first two books were published in
1989 – one near the beginning of the year, and the other at the very end of the
year.
Sales weren’t great, but it was critically well
received. Favorable reviews were
published. I know of one college that
actually used it as a textbook in ministry classes.
Of course all my books are now out of print. The copyright for A Sense of Belonging has been returned to me, and I’m looking into
the possibility of updating and revising it and putting it out in an electronic
format.
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