Tag archive for "Stuff Christians Like"

Pop Culture

Cannarf Reviews: Stuff Christians Like by Jon Acuff

5 Comments 26 May 2010

Author: Jon Acuff

Book Name: Stuff Christians Like

I’m Glad it Wasn’t Called: I am the George Washington of Christian Satire and this book is the literary equivalent of the Battle of Valley Forge.*

*Jon has never claimed to be the George Washington of Christian Satire, but I’m about to make a joke about George Washington and it will be marginally funnier if it’s a callback.

Book Synopsis in Twitteresque 140 characters or less: Jon uses intelligent satire to poke fun at a group he is a part of, clearing away the clutter of Christianity to see the beauty of Christ.

Where I Bought It: Amazon.com, a small online retailer you’ve probably never heard of.

Paid for With: A credit card that has since expired. Now there’s something George Washington never had to deal with 250 years ago…expiring credit cards. Of course, I’d rather deal with that then having multiple bouts of dysentery and doctors who thought “bleeding” people was a medically sound treatment option.

How Long it Took Me to Read: 20.5 days, give or take a month.

Who I WOULD NOT recommend this book to: people who have no idea what a “Christian” is. Without some type of context for Christianity, I don’t think the book will make any sense. Lucky for Jon, that only eliminates about 75 of the 300 million people in the U.S.

Who I WOULD recommend this book to: definitely any Christian. If you can’t read this book and laugh at yourself, then I don’t know why you’re reading my website right now. At the same time, I think non-Christians will get a kick out of the book too. (Kinda like the Romans used to enjoy watching us getting eaten by lions, but without the barbaric vitriol and horrific sound of teeth on cartilage.)

What I used for a bookmark: nothing. For some reason I thought I could remember what page I was on in this book because every time I put it down (usually at the end of a cable-laying session) I was at a page number I thought I could remember. “Ooh, I’m on page 100, that will be easy to remember”…”Okay, I’ll read to page 144, which is 12 squared, that will be easy to remember”. Needless to say, I spent the first ten minutes of every dump trying to figure out where I left off.

What were some interesting true stories from the book: Not a lot of stories in the book, just a lot of things that make you laugh. I’d recall some of my favorites, but I gave the book away already. (Ooh, but I have to mention this. In the book Jon suggests that Christians asking God for “a hedge of protection” might not be scary enough to ward off evil. I laugh every time I hear that now because I picture one of Jon’s replacement ideas: lions on trampolines.)

What were some interesting true stories NOT from the book: Jon and I hung out for 2 days at Catalyst in October last year and it was good fun. Jon even took me out to dinner with his publisher, which I wrote about last year. Why none of this stuff was in the book is a mystery to me. (And no Jon, the shout out in the acknowledgments section doesn’t make it all better, but nice try.)

Expectations Going In: Confession: I think Jon is very funny, but sometimes I don’t read his longer blog posts. I kinda thought the book would be the same way. I’d read some pages and skim others. I expected a funny book, but not an amazing book.

Cannarf Rating: Jon took my expectations, built an altar around them, soaked them with clown tears, and called down comedic fire to consume them. Stuff Christians Like blew me away with consistent creativity and unpredictable humor. I laughed at the new material, I laughed at the old material, and I laughed at material that was having a mid-life crisis and was driving around in a tricked out Nissan Cube . Can’t recommend this book enough.  The Rating: +3 cannarfs. (what’s a cannarf?)

Have any of you read Stuff Christians Like? What did you think?

Miscellaneous

Misguided Compassion

7 Comments 15 May 2009

I’ve got a new guest post up at Stuff Christians Like today. SCL#541 Making an Idol Out of Sports. It includes a 20-question Idolatry Quiz I originally created for the book I’m working on, so be sure to check it out if you think you’ve got sports idolatry issues.

Not to get all sci-fi here, but with this new post at SCL I am starting to see a pattern developing. Take a look at my 4 posts:

Other than #499, my other 3 posts include the numbers 1, 4, and 5. Coincidence? Maybe. Or maybe it means I’m going to live to be 145 years old??? Hey, only a fool would ignore proof like that.

In other, equally ridiculous news, I was thinking the other day about how sensitive I was as a kid. This sensitivity sometimes led me to have compassion for things that I probably should not have had compassion for. Here’s a few examples:

1. The other team’s pitcher - If the Red Sox were winning by a couple runs, I was cool with that. But if they broke a game open and scored 6 runs in an inning, I started to feel bad for the other pitcher. I pictured him crying himself to sleep later that night because of that 3-run double by Mike Greenwell that put the game way out of reach. If I was Greenwell, I might have let them tag me out at second, just so he didn’t feel so bad. Now I realize that pitcher is a multi-millionaire who blows his nose with 5-dollar bills and forgets about his bad outing before he’s even out of the shower.

2. The ant I just stepped on – Oops, I just killed an ant by accident. I wonder what his name was. Did he have hopes and dreams in life to someday carry a potato chip crumb that was 15 times bigger than he was? His mom, Phyllis, is probably up waiting for him to come home right now and he never will. I wonder how long she’ll wait for him in her little ant rocking chair? 2 hours? 2 weeks? This is so sad. Let me at least make sure he’s dead and grind his lifeless carcass under my sneaker until he turns into black powder.

3. The end pieces in a loaf of bread – Still to this day I feel sorry for that half-crust piece of bread on either side of a loaf. It never really had a chance to lead a normal “piece of bread” life. While other pieces are becoming toast, sandwiches, and french toast (what every piece of bread aspires to be), the end piece just kinda stays in the bag the whole time knowing he’s probably getting thrown out at the end. What a tragic existence.

That’s why I sometimes like to make toast with the end pieces. I feel like I’m redeeming a life that might have otherwise been ignored. I also once tried to make Parker a PBJ sandwich for school lunch with an end piece. Except I put peanut butter on the crusty side so it was facing into the sandwich so Erica wouldn’t see it. But she did. And she made me make him a new sandwich. I have to admit, it was the ugliest looking sandwich you’ve ever seen. Jelly going all over the place. I couldn’t just throw it out though, because then I was wasting two bread lives. So i had a few bites. Man, i was way too crusty.

Got any examples of misguided compassion from your youth (or even now)?

Love to hear ‘em.

Writing

Christian End Zone Celebrations

No Comments 03 April 2009

The Talented Mr. Jon Acuff asked me to write another post for Stuff Christians Like, and as you might expect, I graciously accepted.

In honor of the post, here’s 5 things you can do:

1. Buy Jon’s SCL book when it comes out next year.

2. Go ride a horse.

3. Harass your favorite Broncos fan about the dawning of the Kyle Orton era.

4. Go read SCL#514, Christian End Zone Celebrations and find out where “turning the pigskin back into a pig” ranks in the 5 Tiers of end zone celebrations.

5. Have a great weekend!

Miscellaneous

5 quick things

2 Comments 05 February 2009

i’ve got a packed day today, which means I won’t have my LOST recap up until some time on Friday. In the meantime, here’s 5 quickies…

1. Janelle was curious as to how she could get an avatar to appear when she leaves a comment. It’s easy (i think). What you need is a Gravatar. A gravatar is a Globally Recognized Avatar. Go here and set up an account using your email address. Then when you leave a comment on a blog that has gravatars enabled, your pic will appear.

2. I’m going to the eye doctor today for the first time in, I don’t know, 10 years? My eyesight has always been great, but I figure a check-up wouldn’t hurt.

3. Just got the new CD from The Fray…I’m only a few songs into it, but so far I’m enjoying it. I know it’s not particularly cool to like The Fray because their songs are pretty accessible lyrically and musically, but I don’t care. I love their sound.

4. I recently redesigned the look of my sports/faith blog Prayers For Blowouts (check out the design and let me know what you think). If you’re a Christian and you like sports, I think you’ll enjoy the site. If you’re a Christian and you don’t care much about sports, you still might enjoy the site. If you like sports but you’re not a Christian, again, I think you’ll dig some of the stuff we do. If you are neither a Christian nor a sports fan, then don’t bother.

5. I just turned in a new piece for publication on Stuff Christians Like. Not sure when Jon is going to schedule it to run, but I’ll let you know. It’s got a little something to do with the Bible and fantasy sports, but that’s all I’ll let on for now.

Best of The Ramblings

Humor, Writing

Best of The Ramblings

33 Comments 05 December 2008

As far as I can tell, these are the best of my “Ramblings” posts from 2002-2008. I hope you enjoy.

My Favorite Ramblings

+ i have a hunch the original lyrics to James’ Taylor’s “shower the people you love with love” song was actually “shower the people you love with money”. But then he liked the way that “love with love” rolled off the tongue, so he changed it up.

+ Why do grocery store cashiers ask me if i want my gallon of milk in a bag? I couldn’t care less. Stick it in the cart, stick it in the bag, stick it in a huge treasure chest with fake gold coins and a hermit crab. Seriously, with all the decisions that must be made in a day, do I really need to make this one? Same with my receipt. Just stick in in the bag. If i want it in my pocket, I am perfectly capable of locating and retrieving it from the bag, thank you very much. None of us have time for these irrelevant questions. I’m going to start asking the cashiers if they’d like me to hand them my credit card with my left hand or my right hand. Maybe then they’ll get the point.

+ what would happen if all of the world’s pushpins just fell out of their walls all at once? probably total anarchy.

+ Why is it that whenever someone does something blasphemous or wrong, people joke around about God striking them with lightning? When was that precedent ever set? I’m no biblical scholar, but I don’t believe God ever used lighting to kill someone in the Bible. Besides, lighting strikes only kill about 80 people a year in the U.S. whereas horse-related injuries kill over 200 people a year. So maybe next time someone does something wrong, instead of saying “watch out for the lightning bolt!” say something like “Ride ‘em cowboy!”

+ It still amazes me that aluminum foil doesn’t get hot in the oven. Every time I pull something out of the oven with foil, I always touch it just to see if it still doesn’t hold heat. I’m just waiting for the one time that it burns my finger so I can scream, “I knew it! I knew this didn’t make any sense! It was setting me up for this the whole time!”

+ I think it would be fun sometime to just walk around a restaurant and go up to other tables and ask “How’s everything today?” like those restaurant managers do from time to time.
And then if people actually had a complaint I would say “Oh, I don’t actually work here, I was just wondering how you were doing.” Am I the only one who gets that urge?

+ Speaking of restaurants, I hate it when servers, use the phrase “let me get that out of your way”. Look, maybe my plate’s not in my way, ok. in fact, if it was in my way, i would have moved it out of my way. you know why? because i have hands, and that’s what hands do, they move stuff out of my way. So next time stick with “are you done with this?” or “are we all finished here?”, but please don’t insult me or my hands with your cute little phrases.

+ If you stick a pen in your pocket during the day at work, the chances that you’ll forget to take it out and end up throwing it in the “pens and other random crap” drawer at home are about 94%.

+ it’s a good thing birds are stupid. i mean, they’re faster than us, they have pointy beaks that could rip us to shreds, and they can move in 3 dimensions when gravity has confined us to 2. If they ever got together and had some sort of brainstorming session with the top bird minds, they would probably get past this whole “what can we poop on next” thing and move to “let’s destroy the humans”. like i said, i’m glad they’re stupid.

+ the guy who created the paperclip was a genius. he basically took a useless piece of wire, bent it 3 times, and changed the world.

+ Is there an amish buggy equivalent of running out of gas? Do the horses ever just stop trotting because they’ve got nothing left? “Amos, did you forget to feed the horses this morning?”. oops. I suppose if this was a recurring problem, then they would also carry along some extra hay, which would be the amish equivalent of a gas can. What if one of their horses dies? Do they carry a shetland pony in the trunk like a spare tire?

+ Boy, the alarm clock really put the rooster out of business, didn’t it? I mean, before alarm clocks we were completely at the mercy of the rooster. It was either that or let your body sleep until it was ready to get up. You ever try sleeping through a rooster wake up call? Well, me either, but I bet they’re really tough to sleep through. And the worst part of it all is that no one has the heart to tell the rooster that we don’t need him anymore. He just keeps on with the cock-a-doodle-doos like we’re all amish or something. At this point in civilization we eat the chickens, get eggs from the hens, and the rooster is pretty much useless. All it’s good for these days is posing for country decorating knick-knacks.

+ Speaking of the rooster, what’s the deal with weathervanes? Do we really need to stick a wrought-iron rooster on top of a roof to tell which direction the wind is blowing? What genius was sitting around one day and said, ‘you know, it would sure be a lot easier to tell which direction the wind was coming from if we had a tin chicken on top of the barn!’ And besides, why is it so important that we know which direction the wind is blowing anyway? Unless your steering a sailboat or a professional paper airplane flyer, I don’t see why it even matters. The whole thing is utter nonsense.

+ You have officially grown up when the word ‘puddle’ goes from carrying a good connotation to a bad connotation.

+ Gotta hate being at work the week after a nice vacation to the beach. The worst is when you open your wallet and sand falls out of it. Not only are you ripped that there’s sand in your wallet, but the reminder of where you were exactly a week ago feels about as good as a vaccination.

+ If i was a terribly mean person i would go up to a beggar with a $5 bill in each hand and offer him either one of them. Then when he went to grab for one of them i would say, “uh uh uh…beggars can’t be choosers” and i would give him the other $5 bill. In the end, he still gets $5. But since I’m not terribly mean, i would never do that. In fact, this wasn’t even my idea.

+ What is the origin of the expression “he’s going to eat us out of house and home”? Can someone please explain to me what this means? I understand that if someone quite literally did not stop eating, that eventually the cost of the food alone would cause you to miss mortgage payments and lose your house to the bank. So now you have no house, I’m with you to this point. But the home too? Can someone actually eat so much that it will break up the very bonds of the family unit? Might the very fibers of love that hold our families together be torn asunder by an insatiable hunger? I’m gonna say no. And I’m gonna ask you to never use this cliche again, just for me.

+ Sometimes I think I might grow my hair out really long and ratty for a few years just so I can cut it and say to myself “Wow, why didn’t I do this years ago?” I’ve always wanted to say that.

+ You know those signs that say “Pass with care”?
The funny thing is, the people who are doing the passing are never doing it with care. They are either late, annoyed, or just jerks. Either way, the last thing on their mind is the word ‘care’. Then again, maybe that’s why they put the sign there. Just so they can say I told you so when the guy ends up going off the road to miss a head-on collision with oncoming traffic. The police officer inspecting the carnage can only shake his head and say “Didn’t you see the sign, man?” Just once I want to be on long straight road and come across a sign that says “Pass with reckless abandon and no regard for the sanctity of human life”. Now that would be fun.

+ Of the many activities that would suffer a rapid decline in participation in a world without gravity, I think the act of spitting might be one that takes the biggest hit.

+ Has the “you just passed so-and-so’s deli and restaurant” sign ever worked on anyone? Has anyone ever driven by a restaurant, seen it, made the semi-conscious decision that they were not going to stop and go in, then suddenly a half-mile later seen one of these signs and thought, “What was I thinking?”. Here’s a hint. If I didn’t bother to go in when I was actually there, do you think I’m going to go through the trouble of going back there to go in? Whenever I go past one of these signs I like to agree with it. It’s kinda fun. “‘You just passed Regina’s House of Ammo!’ Yes, that’s right I did. But thanks for reminding me once again that there’s a place I’ll never step foot in under any circumstances.”

+ Can someone please tell me who is responsible for naming the continental breakfast the continental breakfast? What is so continental about it, anyway? You get some stale donuts, some cereal rations, crusty bagels, and room temperature milk. Am I supposed to get excited by this? Is this what they’re serving on other continents? Is that why it’s continental? Because if it is, that explains why I haven’t been to Europe yet. I’m not flying 5000 miles to be served warm orange juice when I wake up.

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Bryan Allain is trying hard to make you laugh.
You can reach him at bryanallain(at)gmail.com

Twitter: bryanallain

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