February 2010
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Growth and Changes to our Blog

Since we first created this blog to support Energion Publications in August, 2006, many things have changed.  In 2006 this business was part time for one person, with a few tasks contracted out to others.  At that point we had less than 10 books in our catalog.  We now have 26 and counting.  It is also now proper, when speaking for the company, to use the word “we!”

This year we plan substantial changes in blog content.  Up to now we have posted announcements of new Energion products and related news, along with links to reviews and on rare occasions links to news from the publishing world.  This year we’re going to change all of that.

Yes, we’ll be continuing to keep you up to date with company news, but we’ll be adding additional information.  We’re planning to release more books this year than in any previous year, and we already have several new authors signed with their books in production.  We will announce several of these this week.

In addition, we’re going to change the focus of our marketing efforts.  Each of our authors received a document detailing our marketing plans for 2010.  One key section read:

We’re going to change our focus from just selling your book or books that we publish to selling you. That will include trying to find opportunities for you to speak and teach, connecting you to those who use your book(s), and building more community amongst our authors.

We have a variety of authors, but I am confident that all of our authors want to build the kingdom of God. I believe that we can aid one another in that task.

In discussing how we will implement that goal we included this bullet point:

Making our company blog (http://blog.energionpubs.com) a central hub of information and not just a company announcement center. This is not intended to replace individual blogs or web sites, but rather to provide a single place where people can go and expect to get all current news about our books and authors as well as good information about writing and publishing.

So how are we going to do that?

You can begin to expect new content on this blog, largely related to our authors.  These items will include:

  1. Announcements related to our authors even when those events are not directly related to the books we publish.
  2. Information about other books by our authors.
  3. Events in our authors’ faith communities.  We’d like you to see what these folks are doing.
  4. Links to interesting web content, whether on blogs or other sites, related to topics of our various books.

Blog entries may be written by a variety of people, and many will carry the byline “Energion Publications Staff.”

We hope you enjoy the new blog content and find it useful.  Contact information for Energion Publications can be found here.  If you would like to get in touch with one of our authors, use this contact form.

Living so Others ask Questions

Anthony at A Little Light posts on 1 Peter 3:15 – in context.  He suggests we need to lead lives that cause people to ask positive questions about the gospel.

This reminded me of an experience I had when I was delivering newspapers.  This was not a paper route as a boy, but one I did in later life because it gave me extra income earned in the early morning hours and thus let me get back to business and to the phone during the day.  My district sales manager was a dedicated Christian.  He didn’t talk about it much, but he was the type of person you would ask, “What makes you so even tempered?”  When things were going crazy, he could remain calm.

We were discussing it one morning, and he said that he liked to live in such a way that those who saw him would ask.  It was then, he said, that he could effectively talk to them about Jesus.

I was also reminded of Elgin Hushbeck, Jr. (yes, there’s a commercial hook!) one of my authors.  I already knew the context of the verse, because every time I’ve invited him somewhere or accompanied him when he teaches about apologetics, he emphasizes the context, especially 1 Peter 3:16.

Elgin is the author of Energion Publications titles Evidence for the Bible and Christianity and Secularism along with their study guides.  He is also available to teach.  Contact.

HT:  Dave Black Online.

Press Release: Bible Study Path Award to Honor Effective Bible Teachers

February 6, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Gonzalez, Florida

Bible Study Path Award

Bible Study Path Award

Bible Study Paths WebZine, sponsored by Energion Publications is pleased to announce the new, annual Bible Study Path award. This award will honor teachers in the church who encourage Bible study both through their living and their teaching and will be granted by vote of the readers of Bible Study Paths WebZine. Nominations are open until March 28, 2010, voting will begin April 1, 2010, and the award recipient will be announced in the May issue.

The recipient of the award will receive a $100 Amazon.com gift certificate and an award custom designed by CFosters of Pensacola, Florida.

According to the award standards, who is a Bible Path Award winner?

  • God intended that His Word would teach us. (Psalm 23:3, 27:11) The Bible Path Award winner has sought the Word and allowed it to direct their life.
  • God’s Word is to be a light on our path. (Psalm 119:105, Luke 1:76-79) We are to follow the path given to us with the Holy Spirit’s guidance. The Bible Path Award winner has followed their God-given path through valleys and up mountains that required sacrifice and humility.
  • God’s Word is to enlighten and empower His People. The Bible Path Award winner has freely given what they have learned to others. They have actively sought to encourage and empower other to find and fulfill God’s call on their life.

Nominations may be submitted at the Bible Study Paths Award page. You are encouraged to write a substantial nomination e-mail and also to support your nominee through your own blog and through other social media.

Besides our presence on the internet, Energion Publications has a generous program of review and advance reader copies of any of our books for interested individuals with established publications or blogs. We reserve final judgment on who is eligible to receive free books.

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For more information on Energion Publications, reviewers, book stores, authors, and the general public may contact us at (850) 525-3916, by e-mail at pubs@energion.com, or by mail at P. O. Box 841, Gonzalez, FL, 32560.

PDF Version

Ted Gossard Reviews Christian Archy

Ted M. Gossard writes the review at Jesus Community. His conclusion:

I believe the thrust and heart of this book are needed and crucial for the faith, life and witness of the church today. It is short, concise and affordable, one of those books one may want to work on, and good for reference. So I highly recommend at least getting your hands on it and working through it. These are thoughts that I believe are at the heart of our daily existence as God’s people in the mission of God in Jesus for the world.



Kindness: All the Way to the End

That’s the title of today’s devotional from Jody’s DevotionalsJody Neufeld is Energion Publications partner and author of Daily Devotions of Ordinary People – Extraordinary God, 52 Weeks of Ordinary People – Extraordinary God, and Grief: Finding the Candle of Light.  (While this devotional was written by her husband Henry, she selected and edited it for her devotional list.)

UMC and NBC

Circuit RiderShane Raynor has written a post on the Wesley Report comparing the situation in the United Methodist Church with the problems NBC has had changing programming.  He concludes:

In the world of TV, people don’t care as much about NBC as much as they care about good content. And in the world of faith, substance trumps denominational loyalty and brand names every time. To thrive, the United Methodist Church needs to forget about surviving and go back to its Gospel foundation. By majoring on the majors, keeping the minors in “late night”, and diversifying our distribution channels, our church could once again become a potent force on the spiritual landscape. Time will tell.

While I’m not sure about “distribution channels” I think there is much here that is of importance both to the United Methodist Church and to other denominations and local fellowships.  Gospel without action and action without gospel are both failures of Christian witness.

We need both a Christian identity, which can come only from Jesus of Nazareth, the Word become flesh, and also a life that reflects that identify.  The name on the church sign will mean nothing if the same name is not reflected in the lives of the church members.

My concern about distribution channels is simple.  I have been in too many church committee meetings where the topic of debate was the color of the carpet or the aging chandeliers, obviously in immediate need of replacement.  Any suggestion that maybe we could live with an older carpet was met with dismay and hostility.  “We need to reflect well on the gospel!” people said.  But I wonder just how well Jesus himself, the one who had “no beauty that we should desire him” reflected on the gospel, if the standard was the color of the carpet or the quality of the chandeliers!

Some of my best times with the Lord have come in places where the church had no carpet, often because there was no church.  Some of my best times in worship came where we had no equipment, no musical instruments, and we just began to sing from our hearts.

I think Dave Black expressed it very well in The Jesus Paradigm:

What might this kingdom-focused church of the twenty-first century look like? It will be a serving church. Its organizational structure will be simple, unencumbered by bureaucrats and bureaucracies. Its financial priorities will reflect a commitment to missions, local and global. Capital expenditures will be reduced and the savings earmarked for discipleship. Most jobs that are currently salaried positions will be filled by volunteer help or eliminated. Denominations will make drastic reductions in funds spent on publications that are a waste of the church’s money (bulletins, glossy magazines, and Sunday School quarterlies – the Bible will be used instead). Church buildings will be used for primary and secondary Christian education. Believers will gladly work transdenominationally and cooperatively, especially at the local level. The church will proclaim the Good News of the Gospel as its first priority while not neglecting the cultural mandate. A full-fledged lay ministry will replace clericalism. Individual believers will be expected to assume specialized ministries according to their giftedness. Churches will provide regular lay training and build voluntary programs of education into their structures. Worship will no longer be confined to a single time or place. Preoccupation with church buildings will be seen for what it is – idolatry. The church will no longer cling to its prerogatives but take the form of a servant. It will refuse any longer to shun the secular. Trained pastors will become humble assistants to the “ministers” – every member. Disciples will take the going forth as seriously as they do the gathering. New believers will be asked to specify a regular community involvement (neighborhood council, PTA, volunteer library staff, nursing home visitation, etc.) in addition to their commitment to a ministry in the church. (p. 3)

I’m not against doing things to reach people for the gospel and attract them to church.  But if the attraction is comfort, I have to ask whether we’re attracting them to the right identity–the one given by the gospel portrayed by the crucified Christ.

This may seem strange as a post for a business blog.  Indeed, you could read some of this as suggesting that you don’t buy what I publish but go to your Bible instead!  But I wouldn’t be in business as a publisher if I did not regard it also as a ministry.  As a ministry, my business should also reflect the One who is Savior and Lord.

If my publications will help you be a better disciple, I hope you buy them.  If you’re choosing between buying my materials and following God’s call for you in mission, please follow God’s call.

Henry Neufeld

(Henry Neufeld is the owner of Energion Publications and author of a number of books, including Not Ashamed of the Gospel: Confessions of a Liberal Charismatic.  He reflected on this same topic in fictional form in The Organ and the Tramp.)

Macmillan Dispute with Amazon over eBook Prices

Read the story at the LA Times.  The issue is price structure.

Energion Publications already is in compliance with the Amazon.com pricing scheme, though we are not in favor of strong arm tactics in pricing.  Authors and publishers are due their earnings.

A Personal Connection to Haiti Ministry

Wyatts going to minister in Haiti

Wyatts Departing to Serve in Haiti - Photo courtesy of Harvey Brown

I have known Dr. Harvey Brown for a number of years, heard him speak many times, and worked with him in ministry on a few occasions.  He is the head of Impact Ministries located in Pigeon Forge, TN.  I normally associate Harvey with teaching and preaching ministry, but his organization has become involved in direct action in Haiti through Mike and Karen Wyatt, members of his board of directors.

Mike is a retired Army Medical Service Corps officer who once helped lead a MASH unit during the first gulf war.  (Do you know how odd it feels for veterans of that war, such as myself, to call it the “first” gulf war?)  As such he is unusually well qualified to work under current conditions in Haiti.  He and his wife Karen, a chaplain, traveled to the Dominican Republic and then drove into Haiti.  They are now working in Port-au-Prince.

For more detailed information on their work and background, let me direct you an editorial from The Mountain Press, Editorial: Doing their part — Wyatts feel led to travel to Haiti to assist in relief efforts and to an earlier news article, Helping in Haiti: Sevier County couple aiding quake victims.

But to get a feel for what’s going on, look at one of Mike’s updates via iPhone.  He has to be very careful of his battery because it is hard to recharge due to irregular power supply.  I received this by e-mail from Harvey, and I think it gives the flavor wonderfully:

”One of the team members became dehydrated today and had to be treated. Still have great need for med supplies. Karen prayed over injured baby has she Rocked her and sang to her. Team saw mother and new born. Some one was needing a midwife. Nurses tried for 20 min to start an IV on infant – I was taking pictures- could not see to take pictures for tears in my eyes. Haitian are very greatful. They wait fir hours in the sun to be seen. We are starting to see old infected wounds. Cast legs and armes if suspect fracture. Lots of surgery needed but no one or facilties to do it. We are trying to make contact with us forces for medevcac to hosptial ship. Good place for forward surgicial team and a MASH unit. Phone batt dying agAin can’t charge we keep losing power. We are next to the airfield- notice not as much traffic tonight.”

I encourage you to support any local people that you know who are engaged in service projects.  If you would like to support the Wyatts, send checks, with the word “Haiti” in the check memo line, to Impact Ministries, P.O. Box 39, Pigeon Forge 37868.

Could the Church Learn from the Cruise Industry?

Kevin at Shooting the Breeze has an interesting post as he returns from a four day cruise.  He cites two things that the church could learn from the cruise line industry.  Check it out and join the discussion.

A commenter included the following video, which I’m embedding here as well.


Do you think the church could learn from the cruise line industry?

Did you see some things in the video that remind you of your own church?

How much is spreading the gospel like marketing a product?

And speaking of marketing, this topic made me think of two of our books.  The first is Disciples: Jesus With Us, about becoming a disciple, and The Jesus Paradigm.  The latter book makes me ask one more question:  What type of hospitality and what focus fits with the Jesus paradigm?

Advice for Authors and Editors

… from Nick Harrison.  (HT: Adrian Warnock)

Let me start by saying that good author/editor relationships are very, very important. …

Read! Enjoy! Learn!