We are the most effective way to get your press release into the hands of reporters and news producers. Check out our client list.



Suffering from Christianish?
Contact: Audra Jennings, The B&B Media Group, 800-927-0517 ext 104, ajennings@tbbmedia.com; www.davidccook.com
 
DALLAS, Aug. 5 /Christian Newswire/ -- Modern evangelicalism has lost its balance. A lukewarm spirituality, somewhere between cold faith and hot pursuit, has taken hold and found many believers in the median between the wide path and the narrow road of the spiritual walk. The efforts of many have become more centered on how to cope with their own dysfunctional lives, and less concentrated on what it really means to follow Jesus. It's something not quite Christian. It's more like...Christianish.

In his new book, Christianish: What if We're Not Really Following Jesus at All? (David C Cook, August 2009), author Mark Steele tells the story of his own personal journey from living in the "in-between" to a life that's centered on Christ. "Somewhere along the road, I stopped being a 'little Christ' and instead began filling out the application that I had labeled 'Christian.' It was not a definition based on the actual namesake but, rather, on those who frequent the clubhouse. I allowed Jesus to seep into my church world--but not my relational world, my romance world, my business world, my creative world, my habits, my mouth. I had become Christianish."

Christianish may feel like authentic faith. It may even look like the real deal. Yet it's often easy to settle for the souvenir t-shirt--the appearance of a transformed heart--instead of taking the actual trip through true life-change. We find ourselves being content with a personal faith that's been polluted by culture and diluted by other people's take on spirituality.

In Christianish, Mark revisits the words and life of Christ to find just what it means to be a Christian. Through stories and insights that are sometimes profound, often hilarious, and always honest, he delivers a compelling look at what authentic faith is all about. While carefully detailing the tell tale symptoms of being Christianish, Mark encourages readers to ditch the "ish" to become true Christ-followers.

"We have trained ourselves to cope well on a Christianish path, but this is not the approach to Jesus that we were created to take. There is only one way for us to discover the right way to travel the right road. The way is not church. The way is not an ideology. The way is not Christian. The way is Jesus."

www.davidccook.com