1. Great post. I totally agree that the focus needs to be on telling compelling stories, not trying to manufacture something fit to certain market needs. I know that this site is dedicated to readers, but this post strikes me as being more focused on writers (which I actually think is still useful to those who “just read”). So, the rest of my comment is more focused toward writers. . .

    I think that if it’s true that Christian fiction is “dying,” it’s due to a lack of boldness. If we write a thriller from a Christian perspective, we should be bold enough to not feel the need to inject artificial sermons, yet also bold enough to speak about God when it’s evoked naturally from within the story and characters. The reason I don’t read a lot of Christian fiction is because I often encounter fiction turned non-fiction self-help.

    The truth is that you don’t need to rely on a small market of middle-aged females who are looking for a conversion in every story to sell Christian fiction. If you tell a story powerfully, organically, and boldly, non-Christians will buy and read it.

    The Passion of the Christ found a huge audience with non-Christians. The message was evoked naturally from the story. It wasn’t forced. It wasn’t a “Jesus Juke.” People knew what to expect going into it. And it spoke boldly. That was what made it powerful. It’s also what made it financially successful.

    Sure, some non-Christians are going to dislike any creative work that talks about God. But CBA readers are going to dislike any creative work that speaks uncomfortable truths. And for the most part, you can talk about God if it makes sense to the story, and no one bats an eye. Just go up to someone on the street that you’ve never met, ask them the single greatest thing that’s happened to them, listen well, and then ask if you can tell them the single greatest thing that’s happened to you, and go on to explain your belief in how God’s changed your life, and you’ll see that people are far more receptive to the Gospel than you might imagine. The problem is that we’re not bold enough in speaking about it.

    Because we’ve not been bold enough in writing about truth, CBA fiction has grown a reputation for being a bit of an aberration. A sort of Frankenstein of fiction and moralizing sermons. Christ didn’t come to make Frankensteins of us all, but to bring us back to life. Real life. Full life. Don’t try to convert people with your books–that’s not what fiction does. Don’t try to convert the characters in your books–unless that’s what the story is about. Don’t be afraid to speak truth–even if it offends people. In fact, it will offend people. Do it anyways.

    Then, when you get bad reviews from people saying they were offended by what you said, we can go comfort each other in a lonely corner, because I’m right there with you. Writing is hard. Having people hate what you write because you spoke uncomfortable truths is painful. But telling honest stories is worth the pain. Because I need to read honest stories.

    • HG Ferguson says:

      Brennan, in a time when we’re being told we must do everything we can as writers to NOT identify ourselves as Christians either on our websites and/or interviews sites lest we give “offense” — i.e, hurt sales….thank you for being bold. Stay strong. Stay true.

    • Zac Totah says:

      Love this, Brennan. I think you nailed it. As writers, we’re so caught up in the dos and don’ts of “Christian” stories, we often miss the point. That’s why I appreciate Lewis and Tolkien; they managed to infuse the truth in bold ways (especially Lewis), but not at the expense of the story they were telling.

      Your point that if we tell powerful, organic, bold stories then non-Christians will read them is exactly what I was aiming for in my post.

      Great thoughts. Thanks for sharing.

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