John Ortberg, one of the best known Christian teachers and writers in the country, very kindly agreed to write a foreword for my book. Here it is, he does a really nice job of capturing the essence of the book. There's just one problem, though. He's such a gifted writer, that I'm afraid that my own writing will suffer in comparison. So, read the foreword, but then try to forget just how good it is. ;-)
"The good news about bad news is that there is not nearly as much of it to go around as you might think.
The bad news about good news is that good news doesn’t tend to sell. Everybody wants to get good news from the doctor and their boss and their (choose one) therapist/stockbroker/fantasy football league commissioner. But it turns out that articles which indicate that the economy should run along OK or that rivers are relatively clean don’t tend to sell newspapers, which means they don’t tend to get writers promoted, which means they don’t tend to get written.
People go to conferences that warn about dire situations.
People buy books that say the world is falling apart.
Bad news has probably always had this pull. Paul Revere didn’t get famous by riding around saying: “The British stayed home. Go ahead and sleep in tomorrow.”
But living in the information age (or perhaps more accurately the Anxious Information Age), we seem to get bad news more often, on more channels, in high def.
For a variety of reasons, folks in the evangelical Christian community are often seem to have a particularly sharp appetite for bad news. Authors and speakers who can document that the younger generation is about to lose their faith, or that churches are about to lose their congregations, or that the nation is about to lose its soul, never seem to run short of listeners no matter how shaky their case may be.
The gravitational pull of bad news is a problem. Like the little boy who cried wolf, the purveyors of doom can eventually lose all credibility, so that when bad news really does happen no one is listening anymore.
But there is Good News. Bradley Wright has written a terrific book.
The good news about this book is that it is not based on optimism. Its based on reality. It turns out that much of what gets repeated as bad news is often based on bad data. 90% of all statistics in the media are both negative and inaccurate. (I just made that up. But I’ll bet there’s a bias in that direction.)
Brad is an academician, a bona fide believer, and a highly engaging writer. He has a passion for all people—particular for people of faith—to think well and honor the life of the mind and treat statistics with discernment and not to chronically alarmist.
He wants to help us quit mistaking negativity with thoughtfulness.
He wants to help us stop mindlessly passing on pessimistic diagnoses that either neither helpful nor accurate.
He wants us to actually be aware of and celebrate good news that is spreading on multiple fronts.
--Crime is getting better (but we think its getting worse)
--we are working less and playing more (but we think we’re playing less and working more)
--Poverty is going down
Two thousand years ago, a book began to be widely read whose core was summarized as euaggelion—good news. Not dysaggelion.
We, of all people, should be able to recognize and celebrate and express gratitude wherever we find it.
For all good news is God’s good news. And to ignore it, hide it, minimize it, or distort it is neither mentally healthy nor spiritually sound.
So take a deep breath, turn the page, and get ready to be happy."
2 comments:
“..poverty is going down ..”
Brad, what’s your confidence in this?
Rogoff and camp (former IMF’r) says inequality is increasing. See my profile. But know this is not an adversarial question. I hope to read the book! Cheers, ~ Jim
Hello RA, In the book I discuss poverty trends in both the US (where it dropped in the 50s and 60s) and in developing countries (where it's falling now).
Presumably the preface refers to the latter.
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