Book Reviews

God Save Texas

Lawrence Wright

Lawrence Wright is a writer for The New Yorker and the author of other books. He is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author who has lived in Austin for several decades. This is his portrait of Texas, a state that he clearly loves, but also a state that he is concerned about.

The book is an interesting mixture of culture, history and politics. The subtitle gives you a feel for the book: A Journey into the Soul of the Lone Star State.

There are chapters on Houston, on Dallas, and on Austin. There are chapters on culture and on politics. There is a chapter on the three presidents who hailed from Texas, on the battle over immigrants and crossing the Rio Grande border, on musicians who have come from Texas, and on the Marfa/Big Bend area.

The book rambles a bit, but in an interesting way. I ranges on everything from Buc-ee’s to George Mitchell to Roy Orbison, and all kinds of things in between. The book is quite interesting, though his more liberal political views get tiring at times when he focuses on politics. Generally, the first half of the book is much more interesting than the second half. But he is quite knowledgeable and a good writer. Overall, an interesting portrait of Texas.

Convergence: Spiritual Journeys of a Charismatic Calvinist

Sam Storms

Sam Storms describes himself as a charismatic Calvinist. He is a graduate of Dallas Seminary (a few years ahead of me) and he also holds a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Dallas. At one point he would have considered himself a Calvinist scholar and pastor but, influenced by Jack Deere, he was introduced to the Vineyard movement and became part of the charismatic movement also. So now he would consider himself both charismatic and Calvinist.

This is his story. Actually, the first few chapters give his story of his pilgrimage and his journeys and his interactions. His journey included times pastoring in Oklahoma, being part of the staff of the Kansas City Vineyard/IHOP, and also a stint of teaching at Wheaton College.

The middle section of the book includes a series of comparisons and contrasts between charismatics and cessationists on a range of issues. For example, he compares their attitudes towards worship, towards the Scriptures, and many other things.

In the final section, Storms includes several chapters on God speaking to us today with leadings and impressions.

In general, Storms calls for the reader to fully embrace dependence upon Scripture as well as dependence upon the Spirit and all of his gifts.

Storms’ book is a bit reminiscent of Jack Deere’s Surprised by the Power of the Spirit in that he is advocating the full range of charismatic gifts from the perspective of a superb exegete.

Quite an interesting read.

Team of Teams

General Stanley McChrystal

Stanley McChrystal is a retired four-star general from the U.S. Army. His last assignment was to serve as the commander of all American forces in Afghanistan.

General McChrystal took command of the Joint Special Forces Task Force in 2003. He soon realized that although the allied forces had huge advantages in money, resources and training they were not winning against the nascent Al Qaeda network. He began to realize that conventional war tactics no longer applied in the twenty-first century.

To defeat Al Qaeda in Iraq, his task force would have to adopt the speed and flexibility of the de-centralized network of Al Qaeda. During the war, McChrystal and his colleagues transformed the Task Force into a network, combining transparent communications and decentralized decision making. Walls between silos were torn down. Decision making was pushed down. Adaptability and flexibility were emphasized. The Task Force became a team of teams and began to defeat Al Qaeda.

McChrystal and his colleagues argued that the challenges that the U.S. Army faced in Iraq were germane in today’s world to countless businesses and organizations.

The basic principles implemented by McChrystal and his team included the following:

1. Shift from silos to networking.

2. Shift from secrecy to transparency.

3. Empower individual team members.

4. Decentralize decision making whenever possible.

5. Focus on adaptability more than planning and predicting.

6. Flexibility and cohesiveness of small teams must be scaled to fit larger organizations.

7. Leadership is no longer command and control, micromanaging, but creating the broader environment.

McChrystal argues that these principles apply to all of life in the 21st century and not just when you are fighting Al Qaeda.

Our struggle in Iraq in 2004 is not an exception – it is the new norm. The models of organizational success that dominated the twentieth century have their roots in the industrial revolution and, simply put, the world has changed. The pursuit of “efficiency” – getting the most with the least investment of energy, time, or money – was once a laudable goal, but being effective in today’s world is less a question of optimizing for a known (and relatively stable) set of variables than responsiveness to a constantly shifting environment. Adaptability, not efficiency, must become our central competency.

McChrystal makes a strong case that the old adage of sharing information on a need-to-know-basis no longer works in today’s world. The emphasis must be on transparency and information-sharing so that all members of the teams have an opportunity to contribute.

Walter Isaacson, the renowned biographer of Steven Jobs, Albert Einstein, Benjamin Franklin and Leonardo da Vinci, outlines the basic principles of the book in the foreword:

1. Whether in business or in war, the ability to react quickly and adapt is critical, and it’s becoming even more so as technology and disruptive forces increase the pace of change. That requires new ways to communicate and work together.

2. Organizations need to reinvent themselves. This involves breaking down silos, working across divisions, and mastering the flexible response that comes from true teamwork and collaboration.

3. High-speed networks and digital communications mean that collaboration can – and must – happen in real time. The distributed, decentralized, and weblike architecture of the Internet empowers each individual to be a collaborator. Likewise the necessity of real-time innovation and problem-solving requires integrative and transparent leadership that empowers individual team members.

4. This new environment gave Al Qaeda a distinct advantage, allowing the networked organization to strike rapidly, reconfigure in real time, and integrate its globally dispersed actions.

5. The U.S. military and its allies had to transform the way the special operations community operated, changing the way it waged the War on Terror.

6. Management models based on planning and predicting instead of resilient adaptation to changing circumstances are no longer suited to today’s challenges. Organizations must be networked, not siloed, in order to succeed. Their goal must shift from efficiency to sustained organizational adaptability. This requires dramatic shifts in mental and organizational models, as well as sustained efforts on the part of leadership to create the environment for such a change.

7. One conclusion they reached was that agility and adaptability are normally limited to small teams. They explored the traits that make small teams adaptable, such as trust, common purpose, shared awareness, and the empowerment of individual members to act.

8. The primary lesson that emerged, and is detailed in this book, is the need to scale the adaptability and cohesiveness of small teams up to the enterprise level. This involves creating a team of teams to foster cross-silo collaboration.

9. Doing this requires increasing transparency to ensure common understanding and awareness.

10. Decisions are pushed downward, allowing the members to act quickly. This new approach also requires changing the traditional conception of the leader. The role of the leader becomes creating the broader environment instead of command-and-control micromanaging.

At the end of the book McChrystal recaps a few basic points for leaders everywhere:

* Although we intuitively know the world has changed, most leaders reflect a model and leader development process that are sorely out of date. We often demand unrealistic levels of knowledge in leaders and force them into ineffective attempts to micromanage.

* The temptation to lead as a chess master, controlling each move of the organization, must give way to an approach as a gardener, enabling rather than directing.

* A gardening approach to leadership is anything but passive. The leader acts as an “Eyes-On, Hands-Off” enabler who creates and maintains an ecosystem in which the organization operates.

Open: An Autobiography

Andre Agassi

This is the superb autobiography of Andre Agassi. It is the story of a very demanding father who was obsessed with making his son into the #1 tennis player in the world.

The book relates the story of endless hours hitting tennis balls and beginning his journey as a competitive tennis player when he is quite young. The book also relates his career as an international tennis star, including marriages first to Brooke Shields, and then later to Stefanie Graf.

Most of the book is a page-turner. Agassi is so honest and insightful, and the writer who helps him is apparently superb at telling a story.

Overall, I would say this is one of the best sports biographies that I have read.

As my friend, Taylor Ince, put it when he recommended the book: “It’s about the father. It always is.”

Karl Barth

Mark Galli

Mark Galli, long-time editor for Christianity Today, call this “An Introductory Biography for Evangelicals.” I had not read much on Barth, and so it was quite interesting to me to see the basic overview of his life and thought.

Widely considered the greatest theologian of the 20th century, Barth did most of his work in the middle decades of the century. After being educated by German theological liberals, he became disenchanted with that theology and began to write against it. His commentary on the Book of Romans hit the theological world of Europe like a bombshell. Though he was Swiss, he spent several decades in Germany, and opposed Hitler from the start.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer considered Barth a mentor and they were also friends. Before the outbreak of World War II, Barth lost his job in Germany because of his opposition to the Nazis and returned to his native Switzerland.

Some of the quotes by Barth in the book surprised me with their power. Certainly he has an exalted view of God and his greatness.

It seems like Barth had a warm and devoted trust in Christ and a love for Scripture. To give balance to this picture, he did not do well in loving his wife and he apparently had at least an emotional affair with his long-time assistant.

This is a good introduction to Barth for a neophyte like me.