We
live in an age of brittle celebrity. You can become famous for, well, being
famous. Some of the most popular shows on television are aimed at catapulting
unknowns into stardom, and while these shows may be about the people we see on
the stage, we know it’s really about us. You don’t publish a book, a play or a
song without a pre-existing platform, and in the circular reasoning of book
publishing, you gain a platform by first being famous. And what is the
evolution of prayer books and rosary beads to smart phones if nothing else but
a search for personal meaning? We have all become journalists and photographers
and our subjects are ourselves.
The
Christian community is marginally in a better place but not immune, although
one could argue we should be. Mega-church pastors become Christian celebrities;
some Christian authors sell books simply by putting their names on the covers.
And we buy and consume according to Christian fads, trends and what’s hot at
the moment, much like our secular cohorts do. And perhaps we wonder if only
Christian celebrities are the ones who can accomplish the big things for God.
And
then comes along a book, a small book, a book about the small things, the
little things, the small steps, the people whose names will never be plastered
across a mega-church marquee, a book that says what we Christians know to be
true: it’s not about who you are, or how big your following, or how big your
platform, or how recognizable your name is in George Barna’s polls. It’s about
your willingness to serve right where you are, because God doesn’t care how
famous you are.
“Most
of us will make a difference in this world,” writes Deidra Riggs in Every
Little Thing: Making a World of Difference Right Where You Are, “but
not because of some grand or large-scale initiative. No, most of us will change
our corner of the world and make an impact that stands the test of time through
the small and seemingly insignificant (to us) interactions and decisions and
conversations of our average days. We
make a difference where we live, and incrementally, that place begins to shift
(emphasis added).”
Deidra Riggs |
The
lady knows of what she speaks. She writes from life experiences – jumping from
an airplane, the chopping down of a beloved cherry tree, fear of the water (as
in ocean), moving from a comfortable Philadelphia suburb to what looks like the
end of the earth (flyover country, aka Nebraska), a baby daughter rushed to the
hospital. She ties each life experience to Scripture, and she does it in a conversational
way, a real way, like you’re sitting with her at the kitchen table and she is
telling you her story and it turns out to be your story at the same time.
Riggs
is a writer and editor, and she’s also the wife of a pastor. That move to
Nebraska? Her husband accepted a position at a church in Lincoln. Initially,
things didn’t go well, whether it was the mice in the pantry or parishioners leaving
the church with no explanation. She will tell you, and she does: she was
miserable, and kept questioning herself, her husband, and God. Seven years
passed before she reached the point she did when riding her bike one day: “This
is good.” And she could see what God had seen – the difference she and her
husband would be making.
Every Little Thing is more than a
good book. It’s something that even many Christian books aren’t: it is a true book. It is the experience and
wisdom of one woman speaking our common language of the heart, our common
language of faith.
2 comments:
Glynn, thank you for this kind and generous review. I'm humbled. Truly. Thank you for reading this little book, and thank you for treating the words and stories with so much care. All good things to you, friend. All good things.
You're beautiful review brought tears to my eyes, Glynn. Deidra is a special friend, and I loved her book, too. Thank you for doing what you do so well, putting us in touch with what's good to read, good to see, good to do. Do you know what kind of a ministry you have here? It truly is remarkable. Thank you
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