Stuff Christians Like
Stuff Christians Like book cover

Stuff Christians Like

Paperback – March 5, 2010

Price
$6.43
Format
Paperback
Pages
208
Publisher
Zondervan
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0310319948
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.52 x 8.5 inches
Weight
7.3 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly After creating his answer to the blog "Stuff White People Like," Christian blogger Acuff saw his satirical Web site become a popular Internet destination. His best essays, accompanied by childlike illustrations, comprise this book, which maintains the structure of his short posts. From sexual purity to crock pots to clapping during worship, Acuff uses a standup comedy style to laugh with Christians at their private conventions. Readers will learn the unspoken rules of Christian living, including the (in)appropriate use of God's name to avoid a speeding ticket and obligations to "think about going into full-time ministry at least once every three years." Entries such as the diagram of a metrosexual worship leader mimic the truth-telling wit of the Web site ChurchMarketingSucks.com and will appeal most to young Christian hipsters. Sarcasm masks a deeper layer of commentary that exposes hypocrisies and faith flaws, and readers may want to amend these behaviors to avoid becoming the subject of Acuff's newest jokes on his blog. Acuff's ability to point out unbecoming idiosyncrasies while inducing a knee slap is stuff readers will like. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. After creating his answer to the blog 'Stuff White People Like,' Christian blogger Acuff saw his satirical Web site become a popular Internet destination. His best essays, accompanied by childlike illustrations, comprise this book, which maintains the structure of his short posts. From sexual purity to crock pots to clapping during worship, Acuff uses a standup comedy style to laugh with Christians at their private conventions. Readers will learn the unspoken rules of Christian living, including the (in)appropriate use of God's name to avoid a speeding ticket and obligations to 'think about going into full-time ministry at least once every three years.' Entries such as the diagram of a metrosexual worship leader mimic the truth-telling wit of the Web site ChurchMarketingSucks.com and will appeal most to young Christian hipsters. Sarcasm masks a deeper layer of commentary that exposes hypocrisies and faith flaws, and readers may want to amend these behaviors to avoid becoming the subject of Acuff's newest jokes on his blog. Acuff's ability to point out unbecoming idiosyncrasies while inducing a knee slap is stuff readers will like. (Apr.) -- Publishers WeeklyYes, the popular blog-turned-paperback Stuff Christians Like is a direct rip-off of the even more popular blog-turned-paperback Stuff White People Like. And yes, one of the things Christians like is making their own versions of “secular” intellectual property. Acuff’s is not the first book of insider evangelical observational humor (see Patricia Klein, Joel Kilpatrick, Matthew Paul Turner), but his background as a trend hunter at an advertising company makes it sharper than most. It’s also far more accurate sociology than all the sour-faced “explaining evangelicalism” books that came out after Bush’s reelection. -- Christianity Today Sometimes, we fall in love on mission trips even though we know we'll break up when we get back. Sometimes, you have to shot block a friend's prayer because she's asking God to bless an obviously bad dating relationship. Sometimes, you think, “I wish I had a t-shirt that said ‘I direct deposit my tithe' so people wouldn't judge me.” Sometimes, the stuff that comes with faith is funny. This is that stuff. Jonathan Acuff's Stuff Christians Like is your field guide to all things Christian. In it you'll learn the culinary magic of the crock-pot. Think you've got a Metro worship leader--Use Acuff's checklist. Want to avoid a prayer handholding faux pas? Acuff has you covered. Like a satirical grenade, Acuff brings us the humor and honesty that galvanized 450,000 online readers from 199 countries in a new portable version. Welcome to the funny side of faith. For the last ten years, Jonathan Acuff has written advertising for clients ranging from the Home Depot to Chick-fil-A. In addition to his many day jobs, he also writes a blog called www.stuffchristianslike.net. He and his wife live with their two daughters outside of Atlanta, Georgia. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Stuff Christians Like By Jonathan Acuff Zondervan Copyright © 2010 Jonathan AcuffAll right reserved. ISBN: 978-0-310-31994-8 Contents Introduction.......................................7My Bad.............................................17Prayer.............................................47Love On............................................71Church.............................................79God................................................123Witnessing.........................................136The Bible..........................................149Parents............................................162Missional Postmodern Relevance.....................170Saturday Night Cryfest.............................187Conclusion.........................................204Acknowledgments....................................205 Chapter One MY BAD One time I went to an R-rated movie with a friend who works at a church. On the way out he noticed two people who knew him. He grabbed me before they recognized us and we hid out until we thought they were gone. Turns out they waited for us in the hall. I didn't work at a church, so all I had done was commit a regular sin. My friend had broken some sort of church employee, "Never see the movie Desperado starring Latin sensation Antonio Banderas" covenant, so I immediately threw him under the bus and said, "It's embarrassing, really, seeing pastors behave like this. The three of us are all just normal Christians; this guy is a professional. He should be ashamed of himself." Then I swore for emphasis, but it was one of the okay swears, so it wasn't that big of a deal. COMPLAINING ABOUT NOT BEING "FED" AT CHURCH If you want to become a professional church grumbler, not just some amateur occasionally throwing rocks at the worship service, minister, or other attributes of the church, there's one key phrase you need to know: "I'm not being fed." This simple complaint-the teaching is lacking, the sermons are thin, the worship music is not uplifting enough, or a million other things that people find inadequate-is the official complaint of church grumblers the world over. If we could figure out a way to monetize it, we could permanently end world poverty. Forget cold fusion; if we could generate energy every time someone says this phrase, we'd be able to break our dependence on foreign oil in about four minutes. It's such a perfect thing to say because it deflects any attention away from me, while at the same time creating false humility and making me seem spiritually mature and advanced. "It's not you, it's me. I just want to learn. I'm admitting that I am incomplete. I'm hungry for deep, real spiritual teaching. I'm humbly confessing that I'm not getting enough out of church. Please help me get the rich faith-building experiences that I so desperately need." Just be careful who you say this to. Pastors are starting to get wily. When people tell my friend, "I'm not being fed," he replies, "I'm perfectly happy to spoon feed my one-year-old. But if I'm still spoon-feeding him when he's five, we've got a problem. Here's a fork. Feed yourself." WATCHING R-RATED MOVIES ... BUT ONLY IF THEY'RE VIOLENT For Christians, it's completely okay to watch R-rated movies, but only if they got that rating because of violence. If they're rated R because someone is getting their head cut off or there's a battle scene that's so gory, blood splashes on the camera lens, don't worry. God's cool with that. However, if the movie is rated R because of sexuality ... well, I hope you enjoy your fold-out couch bed in hell. It's gonna be a hot one, my friend. A hot one, indeed. I'm not sure where this rule came from, but it's true. Not only do Christians watch violent R-rated movies, we'll quote them from the pulpit, build sermon series around them-even show clips from them during service. I call it The Braveheart Rule, and my theory is that it's because of the Old Testament. Have you ever read any of the Old Testament? It's hardcore. Samson smashes people in the head with a donkey jawbone. A priest runs a spear through two people having sex. David carries Goliath's head around like a bowling ball. It's violent. I think that Christians read that and assume, "Cool. God's down with some wanton violence. R-rated movies, here we come!" But if there's any nudity, if a single nipple makes a cameo at any point, forget it. Throw that piece of nonsense in the trash. That is horrible. We'll have to wait until they show the edited version on TBS. JUDGING FUNDAMENTALISTS FOR BEING JUDGMENTAL You know what I don't like about fundamentalist Christians? They're so judgmental. I really don't like when people do that. Don't they know we're supposed to be about love and not judgment? Jesus called us to love him with all our heart and all our mind and all our soul. And to love others! Don't they get that? It's about love! I'm just so sick of their negative attitudes. They hate dancing too. Did you know that? I'm not making that up or perpetuating a stereotype. They all hate dancing. They even made a documentary about it one time starring John Lithgow and Hollywood's Kevin Bacon. Gripping stuff really, but I doubt any fundamentalists saw it because they hate popular culture. Ugh, I can barely stand how judgmental they are. You know they don't drink alcohol, right? Oh no, don't ever offer them a glass of wine or a pint of beer. They'll throw that right back in your face. That's kind of a litmus test I use to determine whether you're a fundamentalist or not. If I suggest we have a glass of red wine and you refuse, then I know. I know exactly what you're all about and I can read the depths of your spiritual walk just by that simple refusal. You're a fundamentalist and you're judgmental. Sure, I don't know many fundamentalists personally, because I can't stand being around people who are judgmental, but I caught a few seconds of a church service on television once. I think it was a church in Texas. Most fundamentalists either live in Texas or are planning to move to Texas at some point in their lives. But even though I haven't been to a fundamentalist church in, I don't know, ever, you don't need to go to one to know what they're all about. Fire, brimstone, and above all, being judgmental. Don't you just hate how judgmental fundamentalists are? I wish they were more open-minded. BREAKING UP WITH YOUR SMALL GROUP Many Christians reach a point in their small group relationship where they realize, "This isn't working for me anymore. I need to see other small groups." It's a tricky situation, fraught with unique challenges. Do you take the passive-aggressive route-just stop showing up? Make excuses until eventually they stop calling? Can you skip group without looking like you're skipping God, because you still love him , right? Do you organize a mutiny and try to take other couples with you? "I can't keep studying the book of Job. I'm making a break for it; we're starting a new group and heading to the border of the New Testament. I think we've got room for two other people in our car. Three if someone will sit in the way back, but Hank and Stacy aren't going to be able to make it. Don't look back. Just run. Run!" Do you work hard to make them want to dump you ? When you host it at your house, do you serve the most disgusting dessert possible, kidney strawberry pie or blackberry beet pudding? Do you start oversharing at group until eventually they ask you to leave out of awkwardness? "I want to talk about some bowel issues I'm having. Anyone else know what I'm talking about? Bowel issues? Here are some detailed observations I had in the bathroom this morning. I took pictures." Do you bring your own poetry and tell people, "God laid this fourteen-page poem about the death of my cat on my heart; I'd really like to read it to you tonight. It's written in Klingon, so it might be a little hard to understand the first time around." Do you start seeing other groups on the side? And do you keep your broken group going because you like talking about football with one of the guys and your wife likes the recipes one of the girls gives her? You can find substance elsewhere. Just start small grouping all over town until you find one you like, and once you do, you can dump the old one. If all else fails, I guess you could just be honest. But that's only if you don't know a good recipe for pork pineapple white chocolate chip cookies. People hate those things. Serve a warm plate of those to your small group and it will be over by bite two. SENDING MORE HATE MAIL THAN SATANISTS I'm not going to lie to you. I don't know the exact numbers on this study. There were no Bunsen burners or beakers or statistical flow models plotting percentage of hate mail sent by satanists vs. percentage of hate mail sent by Christians. But I can say without a doubt that when it comes to the hate mail I've had emailed or posted online about things I've written, 100 percent of it has not come from satanists and the majority has come from fellow Christians. That feels backwards. I don't have any friends who vocally worship satan, to whom I give the middle finger of grammar with a lowercase s, but I assume that there's a lot of hate involved. I have to imagine that when you serve the father of lies there's a lot of lying and criticism and outright nastiness in all forms. Hate for satanists is kind of like Frisbee for Christians. It's just something you do when you sign up. And yet the most frustrated, hope-you-fall-in-a-deep-hole-full-of-cougars-on-crystal-meth hate mail I get is from other Christians. Which makes no sense. After all, love is right there in our bylaws. We're supposed to love God, love our neighbor, and love ourselves. Pretty simple, but maybe that's too hard to try all at once. What if this year we set our sights on something reasonable, like, "Let's send less hate mail than devil worshippers"? I admit, that might not be the kind of goal you can slap on the bottom of a Thomas Kinkade poster and sell at craft fairs, but at least it's attainable. I hope. BOYCOTTING YOU UNLESS YOU MAKE BUTTERY-SOFT T-SHIRTS Dang you, American Apparel! Ten years ago we would have boycotted you back to the Stone Age. Ask Kmart. We would have risen up against your suggestive advertising and probably had a good old-fashioned product bonfire. There would have been billboards and picketing and yelling, but when it comes to you, we can't muster up a boycott. Your shirts are just so soft and comfortable! And it's not like you're shy about what you do. We know about how you've used Penthouse magazine covers as dcor in your stores. We know that when you realized your anti-sweatshop messaging wasn't increasing revenue, you made a deliberate decision to sell using sex. In Fast Company magazine your CEO, Dov Charney, was honest enough to say, "That's the problem with the anti-sweatshop movement. You're not going to get customers walking into stores by asking for mercy and gratitude. If you want to sell something, ethical or otherwise, ... appeal to people's self-interest." We tried to dismiss that last part; you can define "self-interest" a lot of different ways, but then the author of that article confirmed our fears: "Sure, he [the CEO of American Apparel] hoped quality or social consciousness or a distaste for logos would each attract some consumers. But he also hoped that selling a sexed-up version of youth culture to young people would attract others, and hopefully in greater numbers." Dang you, American Apparel! I was ready for the boycott, I was, but then the last six T-shirts I got from Christian ministries were printed on American Apparel merchandise, and each one was more comfortable than the last. Can you at least let us pretend that, when we place an order via cafePress or another printing press, the owner calls you and lets you know that we're reaching out to you in love and that our purchase is actually kind of a witnessing tactic? Will you give us that? If not, please know that when I put on an American Apparel T-shirt I don't think about the financial support I'm giving a sex-based marketing machine. I think to myself, "I am being in this T-shirt, but not of this T-shirt." And dang, it is buttery soft! FEELING SAD FOR CHURCHES THAT AREN'T MEGA Christians sometimes like to feel small, quiet waves of pity for any church that doesn't have skyrocketing attendance numbers. That's why every time my wife and I drive by the small Baptist church near my neighborhood on Sunday mornings on the way to the megachurch we attend, I think: Shouldn't the camera crew or the guy who runs the laser show be at church by now? The parking lot is empty at 8:00. Granted it only holds about forty cars, but shouldn't the host team be there already to get the traffic cones set up? Who is going to turn on all the flat screen televisions or get the crane they use for simulcasting the service to other campuses in the right position? Then I remember, that's right, they don't have a crane or other campuses. And then I feel sad for them. If God were really happy with what they were doing, wouldn't they have a building as big as the one I go to church in? Wouldn't they have 15,000 on an average Sunday? Wouldn't they have a staff of 400 instead of 4? Wouldn't God bless that church and make it mega if he were pleased with what they were doing? He would, and that's pretty much what the Bible teaches. In Luke 15:10 it says, "I tell you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents." I know what you're thinking, "Oh, one person is mega to God." But maybe that "one person" is God math, just like some people will argue that six days of creation could equal the human equivalent of 6,000 days. Maybe we're supposed to interpret "one person" as "one greater metro area." It can all be very confusing. And I'd love to get some wise counsel on it from my small neighborhood church, but I don't even think they have a New Testament specialist on staff. I'm actually pretty convinced that the pastor is also the guy who mows the lawn. Which is so small you couldn't even hold a night out at the movies event on it. How sad. HATING ON MEGACHURCHES I attend a megachurch, which means that occasionally, Christians who like to discount the validity of a large church will debate with me why megachurches suck. People don't ever come out and say, "Megachurches suck," but sometimes I wish they did, because it would be a much shorter monologue than this: Here's the thing. If a caravan of school buses came to our church one Sunday, thousands of visitors just showed up out of the blue, I'd turn them away. Right then and there, I'd say, "No thanks, we don't want to be a megachurch. Go on, get out of here." I'd probably have to turn on the hose to chase off the stubborn ones, but the last thing I want to do is attend a megachurch. I am pretty sure God is not happy with those churches. The music is too loud and the service feels like a concert. Without any hymns I'm not really even sure that counts as a time of worship. You can't form real relationships with people when you're surrounded on a Sunday morning by four thousand other members. And they use lasers. God hates lasers. And in the great commission, in Matthew 28:19 where it says, "Therefore go and make disciples of all nations," Jesus didn't mean "all" as in everyone. He meant all as in "all the people that can fit in an appropriately sized building." What's an appropriately sized building? The one my church is currently in, and don't go getting any ideas about attending. I've got a hose and I'm not afraid to use it. OCCASIONALLY SWEARING Christians occasionally swear. They don't do it a lot. I'm not talking about thirty-second tirades laced with profanity. I just mean that every few days they'll say a swear in the middle of a conversation. Why do we do it? I think we want you to know that we know those words exist. We want you to be aware that we are aware they are out there and we know what they mean. Plus, everyone knows that swears are nineteen times more powerful coming out of the mouth of a Christian. That's a scientific fact right there. If you're a nonbeliever and swear a ton, it's just not that big of a deal. If you're a Christian though and you swear, birds fall out of the sky. Trees shake to their roots. Magma gets fourteen degrees cooler under the crust of the earth. Wielding that kind of power is too tempting to ignore. (Continues...) Excerpted from Stuff Christians Like by Jonathan Acuff Copyright © 2010 by Jonathan Acuff. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Sometimes, we fall in love on mission trips even though we know we’ll break up when we get back. Sometimes, you have to shot block a friend’s prayer because she’s asking God to bless an obviously bad dating relationship. Sometimes, you think, “I wish I had a t-shirt that said ‘I direct deposit my tithe’ so people wouldn’t judge me.” Sometimes, the stuff that comes with faith is funny. This is that stuff. Jonathan Acuff’s Stuff Christians Like is your field guide to all things Christian. In it you’ll learn the culinary magic of the crock-pot. Think you’ve got a Metro worship leader—Use Acuff’s checklist. Want to avoid a prayer handholding faux pas? Acuff has you covered. Like a satirical grenade, Acuff brings us the humor and honesty that galvanized more than a million online readers from more than 200 countries in a new portable version. Welcome to the funny side of faith.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(320)
★★★★
25%
(133)
★★★
15%
(80)
★★
7%
(37)
-7%
(-37)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

I'm a Christian, so this is Part of that Stuff I Like

But, if you're not a Christian you'll love it as well. Jonathan Acuff blends delightful wit and a vast, if unfortunate, knowledge of the Christian mainstream to produce something that is lacking. No, not lacking. Probably hated in Religion today: Satire.

He opens the book with a short set of essays that poke at that very point. If you can't figure it out he spells it out for you. We're suppose to laugh. And we're suppose to laugh at ourselves. Don't take this book seriously. And seriously consider what you take seriously as well. If you're offended by the subject matter (or Christian satire in general), well...we'll pray for you. (That's Christianese for "you're a big jerk).

Sure, this book is mix and match of articles found on his hilarious blog, [...] (which is itself a satire of the more famous [...]), but this is in a brand new medium not understood by most of generation Y: Paper. That's right, these articles have been printed (with ink, black ink) on a wood byproduct called paper. That means it's a lot more portable than the internet where all the blogs have previously been "printed" (or "posted" or "logged" or whatever Al Gore wanted us to call it). It's easier to read on a bus, in a church pew hidden behind a bible, or in the restroom of your favorite book store (BTW, if you take a book into a bookstore restroom...we'll pray for you).

Buy the book. Take it with you everywhere you go. And be prepared to explain what a side hug is to your heathen friends who engage in the completely unbiblical model of full-frontal hugs.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Funny Book with a Serious Purpose

Stuff Christians Like satirizes some of the beliefs and behaviors of American evangelicals. Jonathan Acuff admits the title pays homage to Christian Lander's Stuff White People Like. Like Lander's book, Acuff's book is smartly written, on-target with its sarcasm, and laugh-out-loud funny.

The book originated with blog posts on [...]. My favorite posts are "Using `Faith Like a Child' As an Escape Pod from Difficult Theological Discussions" (13-15), "Secret Christian Bands" (40-41), "The Seven People You Meet in a Prayer Circle" (53-56), "The Metrosexual Worship Leader" (80-84), "Telling Testimonies that Are Exciting Right Up Until the Moment You Became a Christian" (125-126), "Being Voluntold" (180-181), "Thinking You're Naked" (190-192), and "Trying Harder" (200-203).

Acuff doesn't moralize in this book. He impressively maintains a snarky tone throughout. And yet, a serious point lies under the satire, namely, that some evangelical beliefs and behaviors--the "folk religion" side, so to speak--get in the way of experiencing God's grace and loving others as a result.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Based on the StuffChristiansLike.net Blog

I found Jon Acuff to be very funny and spot-on when it came to his satirical look at modern Christian culture. Although I have been familiar with Acuff's blog, StuffChristiansLike.net, for years, I have never been a regular reader of the blog. In fact, every entry in this book was new to me. The true hilarity in this books happens when the reader comes across an essay that covers a topic that is familiar to their own life. This relatability happened to me many times while reading this book. I thought it was interesting that Acuff chose to end his humorous book with more serious essays on how Christians should live. Although I think that his insights were valuable, there was a sense in which the book ended on a down note. Again, I must emphasize that I liked what he had to say, but it felt out of place after pages and pages of satirical joke-telling. It is as if Acuff felt like he owed it to the audience, or to God, to have something more helpful tacked on the end.

Here are some of my favorite entries in the book (in no particular order):

Trying Not To Complain Around Missionaries (p. 30)

Feeling Slightly Disappointed When Someone Accepts Our Fake Offer Of Generosity (p. 45)

Just Using God's Favorite Word When We Pray (p. 52)

The Seven People You Meet In A Prayer Circle (p. 53)

The Hedge of Protection (p. 68)

Raising Our Hands In Worship (p. 87)

Fearing Your Church Will Do Something Wacky The One Time You Invite A Friend (p. 90)

Leaving Room For The Holy Spirit When You Dance (p. 95)

Using Vacation Bible School As Free Babysitting (p. 96)

Finding Typos In The Worship Music (p.97)

Losing The Will To Clap During Songs (p. 100)

Mid-Prayer Music That Materializes Out Of Nowhere (p. 107)

Telling Testimonies That Are Exciting Right Up Until The Moment You Became A Christian (p. 125)

Suddenly Realizing You Own Fourteen Bibles (p. 149)

Not Throwing Away A Bible (p. 157)

Skipping Church If You Catch Even A Whiff Of A Guest Speaker (p. 178)

Being Voluntold (p. 180)
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Humorous church etiquette advice for Evangelicals

Not having previously visited the author's website (same name as the book at dot net), I didn't know what to expect from this book. Happily, it isn't a sarcastic attack on believers, but rather a humorous look at a wide range of small issues in the life of a typical serious churchgoer. For instance, pointing out that "Sometimes saying ]I'll pray for you' is just the Christian equivalent of ending a date by saying, 'I'll give you a call.'" Or "Using 'Let me pray about it' as a euphemism for 'No.'"

The book also includes some serious advice on how to avoid problems. For instance, gossip is a common problem in church, sometimes disguised as a prayer concern in small groups. In response, the author suggests such groups adopt a "Please stop gossiping" rule, and to enforce it, suggests saying to anyone who violates the rule "This is about you--isn't it?"

Another suggestion I wish I'd thought of myself, came in response to an adult complaining about "not being [spiritually] fed." The response? "I'm perfectly happy to spoon feed my one-year-old. But if I'm still spoon-feeding him when he's five, we've got a problem. Here's a fork. Feed yourself."

I wouldn't suggest this book for anyone just exploring Christianity or new to the faith, but for those who are already "sermon-soaked", and can stand a little good-natured ribbing, it's a good way of reminding ourselves of what's important in and about church, and thereby aiding spiritual growth.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Really?

I kept thinking, "Do Christians really act like this? And if they do, why? How are they hoping win more people over?" This was a weird satire.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great fun--a few clean jokes and a bit of genuine Erasmus-like satire

I have never read "Stuff White People Like", the theme of which Jon Acuff immediately admits he's based this book on. I don't know if that's a good or bad perspective from which to view this book. But reading it as a faithful (if a bit jaded) evangelical Christian, I found it to be immensely funny and eye-opening in some places. In a humorous way, Acuff points a gently admonishing finger to some things about Christian culture that we mistake for Christianity. And how off-putting these are from the standpoint of a seeker or anyone who is not a Christian.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Good satirical criticism...not everyone's cup of tea

Stuff Christians Like is a direct rip off of the blog Stuff White People Like; author John Acuff openly admits it. In fact, it's part of the joke: one of the things Christians like is to plunder secular ideas and "Christianize" them. Stuff Christians Like is a tongue-in-cheek look at the silly things contemporary American Christian culture does.

Acuff got his start as an advertising writer. In his spare time he started the blog [...]. This blog posted daily satirical comments on Christian and church behavior. The blog and the book are both incredibly funny and occasionally the satirical criticism causes you to rethink some of our strange behavior.

Among my favorite entries were: the casserole of hope, missionary dating, disguising gossip as prayer, drinking coffee in church, feeding kids their body weight in goldfish crackers, the metro-sexual worship leader, the seven people you meet in a prayer circle, fearing that God will send you to Africa if you give him your entire life, raising our hands in worship, saying "I'll pray for you"...and then not, and complaining about "not being fed" by your church.

The short entries make this a great coffee-table book. The witty humor allows us Christians to laugh at our incongruities and maybe learn to be a little less weird.

Not everyone appreciates satire, so give the blog a try first. If you find the blog entertaining, then the book will not disappoint.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Carrying on a Proud Tradition of Christian Self-Mockery

I've got a little section on my bookshelf reserved for Christian humor. It's little, because most Christian humor is lame. At least the stuff that gets published. But I've got a few of these little cartoon books, the kind that poke fun at Christians and the Church. I was looking through them a few months ago in a vain last-minute attempt to find something funny for the Alpha introductory talk.

The problem was, they're all pretty dated. I found them pretty funny, but that's only because they were poking fun of the church in which I grew up, a church of potlucks and steeples and choirs and pastors in robes. But I quickly realized they wouldn't translate to people coming in from outside the church, or to people more attune to the Church of the 90s to the present. Which made me sad.

But then, along came Stuff Christians Like, and the day was saved. This is that same book, only with three major differences:

1) This book is the product of the 21st-Century Church, not the 1950s church. Thus you have pieces discussing metrosexual worship pastors, hip youth group rooms, side hugs, church logos (the holier, the better), mission trip romances, Rob Bell, using "love on" as a verb, using the word "just" as prayer filler, and judging fundamentalists for being judgmental.

2) This isn't a comic book, although it has great illustrations.

3 This book often uses humor to make a serious point. Just when Acuff gets you laughing, he rips home with a zinger, challenging us in our blind spots to, you know, actually be better Christians.

Of course, the book is ironic in its own way. One of his pieces is on ripping off advertising and logos to make similar-looking T-shirts (think "Jesus: The Real Thing"). When, as even Acuff admits, this book is a knock-off of the wildly popular Stuff White People Like website. In fact, Stuff Christians Like began as its own website. So there you go. In (gently) mocking Christians for being unoriginal and derivative, Jonathan Acuff's book is unoriginal and derivative.

That's not to say it's not funny. Or worth picking up. It is funny, and it is worth picking up. It might not be the most important Christian book of the last decade, but is still a worthwhile way to pass some time, laughing at ourselves and the funny way we live our lives. But don't fear that it's a sarcastic diatribe against the church, as so many of these things are. It's more along the lines of Keillor making fun of Lutherans, or Foxworthy making fun or Rednecks. The humor is in seeing yourself somewhere in there, and saying "oh yeah, I guess we are a little goofy. Maybe we should stop taking ourselves so seriously."

(note: thanks to Zondervan Publishing for sending me a free copy for the purpose of this review)
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Better than Just Fine

Okay, let's get some things straight right off the bat. First, there are some of you who are wondering if this book is one of those cutesy, poorly-made, and above all desperately unfunny productions of Christian culture that litter church bookstores across the country. A quick scan of the reviews isn't necessarily encouraging--Publishers Weekly lauds it as "inducing a knee slap," (or, as a Jack Chick tract might say, "HAW HAW HAW!"), which is nearly the kiss of death right then and there. Is this more of the same pap ladled out by well-meaning Christian organizations with no sense of sarcasm or irony?

Fortunately, the answer is no. Acuff's book is perfectly targeted at the arched-eyebrow set, people who are involved with American Christian culture but are not so insular that they can't make slightly wry comments about how goofy and absurd we can be. Most of the people who will love this book won't actually slap their knee with amusement--that would cause the other customers at Starbucks to look at them funny. Guffaws, rib-tickling, and chortling are likewise out. No, wry grins and simple, cool-points-preserving laughter are more the order of the day.

Which is not to say that the book isn't legitimately very funny. It's hilarious. To see this for yourself, there are several places where you can look to check out samples of Acuff's writing, the most notable of which is his [...] blog. The book, like the blog, is compulsively readable and conveniently broken up into bit-sized chunks perfect for consumption while waiting in line, using mass transit, or while perched upon your porcelain throne. If you like his blog, you'll love his book.

It's not quite a five-star book--it didn't change my life, or cause me to drool with laughter--but it started to flirt with greatness by the end, where Acuff interweaves his humor with truly profound observations about the Christian walk. He is definitely a fan of irony and occasionally biting sarcasm, but he's not cynical or bitter about the Christian church. Understand this: there are some people who use humor as a defense mechanism to hide their wounds, or to ease the pain of a world that is deeply disappointing. That's not what this book is about. Acuff is not afraid to reveal his heart, or to unabashedly, unironically marvel at the love of God. Perhaps this will seem a bit of a betrayal to the legitimate cynic looking for iconoclastic humor, but Acuff will tell you that God is just too good for that kind of bitter amusement.

Who should buy this book:
- Evangelicals with a sense of humor
- Christian hipsters
- People who are actually Christian hipsters but would detest that label, so let's call them "missional postmoderns."
- All "pastor's kids" (Acuff is one)
- Metrosexual worship leaders
- Any Christian reading this review on an iPad, laptop, or Kindle while in a coffee shop
- Cultural anthropologists looking for original source documentation for their thesis on "Shifting Modalities of Collective Self-Concept Among Early Twenty-First Century American Christians." I know you're out there.
- Anyone who has ever maintained a silent Mystery Science Theater-style narrative in their head during a church service

People not in the target audience for this book:
- Most non-Christians, unless you're looking to go undercover or just figure out what the deal is with your weird co-worker who keeps giving you sidehugs.
- Christians whose primary form of "outreach" involves picketing
- Snake-handling Christians. (Those who do so in church, I mean. If you work at the zoo you're good to go.)
- Christians outside the United States. You'll still enjoy it, but you won't get some of the inside jokes.
- Catholics. You're more than welcome to the party, of course, but be aware this is written from a Protestant, evangelical sub-cultural perspective.
- People who are content with being "fine." If you read the book, you'll see what I mean.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Funny yet insightful

Some people just don't get satire. If you are one of those people, stay awake from this book!

For everyone else, this is one you'll definitely love! I've been a Jonathan Acuff fan for a while now, ever since I stumbled across his blog about a year ago. His unique combination of wit, sarcasm, and insight into the evangelical culture make his daily writings a must-read during my morning Internet perusal.

This book is much more than simply a bound version of his blog, however. While there are a few overlapping essays, most of the book consists of new material. Acuff's satirical brilliance is evident throughout, and a few of the essays had me on the verge of tears I was laughing so hard!

The best thing about Acuff's writing, however, is that even while it entertains, it is always unapologetically focused on making the reader think about God and His love in fresh new ways. Sometimes this hits pretty close to home, as he spares no one, and avoids no taboo subjects. I found myself particularly convicted several times about the silly things that I allow to distract me from the things that are truly important.

The final section of the book is a little more contemplative in tone, similar to his "Serious Wednesdays" posts on his blog. I actually thought this was the highlight of the book, and will probably revisit some of these essays frequently.

Finally, this is the rare book where I might actually recommend the audio version over the print version (better yet: get both!). My wife and I listened to the audio book (read by the author) on a road trip this week, and it made the time fly by! Acuff interrupts the reading of the book at several points to add some pithy stories about his writing or about real-life incidents which inspired the essays. It's also great to actually hear the essays in his own voice, as the sarcasm comes across much better, and I really got the sense that I was interacting with him as he told the stories. Whether you get the audio download or not, you should get a copy of this book!
1 people found this helpful