Product Details
Static: Tune Out the "Christian Noise" and Experience the Real Message of Jesus

Static: Tune Out the "Christian Noise" and Experience the Real Message of Jesus
By Ron Martoia

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Product Description

Words communicate. Christians often use words to communicate to others; however, these words aren't understood by many of those outside the church. We can be so absorbed in our "christianese" that we don't realize others don't understand the jargon and cannot figure out what it is we mean by what we are saying. Static readers will become aware of what we are saying so we can re-focus our thinking to communicate clearly to those outside the church.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #755367 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-03-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review

Ron takes biblical terms such as salvation and kingdom, dusts off the cobwebs of routine, and finds under them fresh expressions for a new day.--Scot McKnight, author of The Jesus Creed and professor at North Park University

In Static, Ron Martoia gives us a new lens for looking at the Bible the way it was meant to be understood by the people who were the first to hear it.-—Chuck Smith Jr., author of There Is a Season

From the Back Cover

Why do people tune out the Christian message . . .

yet they’ll tune in to the talk shows to discuss spiritual wholeness?

In Static, Ron Martoia explores how the words that many Christians use to describe their faith are tragically shutting down spiritual conversations.

What if these words are turning people off to the real message of Jesus?

What if these words are causing misunderstandings about Jesus?

What if we haven’t heard the whole story?


Customer Reviews

Learning how not to talk5
I'm 80 pages into this book, so far I love it. I love how the author has opened up new ideas, which are both thought provoking, and in my case very valid. I've never been one to share a lot about my faith, whether it be to Christians or those who don't yet know Christ. I am part of a group that is using this book as a study and it has really opened up conversation, allowed all of us to share and get to know each other a little better. So far it has been a very easy read, and opened my eyes to things I was unaware of. I think it will help guide and provide direction for our church going forward.

Language Bellman5
You don't have to be in/around the church for long to begin picking up baggage! Much of the religious heavy luggage occurs at the point of the way we Christians talk. Very quickly our language becomes burdened with all kinds of meanings - most of which are not known by those around us, and hotly debated by those inside the church. Static finally brings some help to the luggage of language. Martoia gives us some new handles on the words that have become so laden with implied meaning and as Ron points out - just mis-interpreted!

What a great time for the church to begin to learn that most of the world (those we wish to communicate our message to) have no clue what we are saying. Maybe the starting point is us clarifying to ourselves first exactly what we are trying to communicate. It begins by cutting through the noise to gain clarity with some of the religious and Biblical terminology that has become such normal baggage for us.

Read Static with an open mind and you'll discover fresh meaning to old terms that we've just assumed we knew what they meant. It could just re-define the way we do church, the way we live life, and the way we communicate the Gospel! (what does Gospel mean anyway?!)

Reclaiming the Newsflash5
Helping clear out the distortion in our hearts and minds, Static returns us to the compelling newsflash of the Biblical Narrative- Narrative filled with truly good news in a language that was accessible to people of the time. Isn't that the longing of today as well? Static helps us think about how to communicate this message, the real message of Jesus, by having us go back to the Scripture to reclaim this newsflash. Static's deep and rich interpretation of Scripture provides us the safety for questioning not only our own understanding of words like gospel, repentance, sin, salvation, and kingdom of God but also how our interpretation of these words translate (or fail to translate) to a culture seeking authentic peace and hope.

The entertaining setting of Static places us in an on-going conversation between Ron and his friends, Phil and Jess. Phil and Jess are trying to figure out why Phil's `evangelistic' techniques are not working on his coworker. In an all too familiar dialogue about the command to `preach the good news", Static has not only Phil and Jess wondering why words like `gospel' and `sin' are shutting down spiritual conversations, but it also has the reader experiencing a bit of déjà vu. With great angst, Phil and Jess begin questioning the origins of their own thoughts. Might I say, it catalyzes a few questions in the mind of the reader. Ron helps us all, through these conversations, become more aware that the real message of Jesus, when stripped of some of the noise, is one of a much richer, fuller, life giving story than what perhaps is embedded in our minds. Static is a great book for helping us reclaim and understand the original intention and compelling newsflash in a world desperately seeking hope.