Why Christians Need to Read More Old Books, Not Just Talk about Them
Dr. James Emery White


Audio By Carbonatix
By Dr. James Emery White, Crosswalk.com
A survey by the BBC found that the book most people lied about reading was not Tolstoyâs War and Peace, but Lewis Carrollâs Aliceâs Adventures in Wonderland. This was followed by George Orwellâs 1984, and then J.R.R. Tolkienâs Lord of the Rings (due to the movies, probably the easiest to lie about). Yes, War and Peace came in fourth, followed by another Tolstoy tome, Anna Karenina, in fifth place.
The ranking may surprise you, but what is more intriguing is why we lie about reading at all.
The obvious answer is intellectual pride. We like to appear smarter, more informed, and more well-read than we actually are. Saying we have read War and Peace is akin to saying we are, or at least feeling like we are, an intellectual.
It runs a risk, of course. When I was a boy, I knew an insufferably arrogant person who had a habit of boasting about knowledge that I sensed they didnât really possess. In my own insufferably arrogant spirit, I would ask them questions about their supposed knowledge that was based on fabrications.
For example, letâs say they pretended to know everything about sports. I would make up a name and ask them what they thought about them as a player. They would answer as if they knew, saying things to sound knowledgeable about the person.
And it was all about a person whose name I had simply made up.
Many years later, I found the same tendency among my graduate students. For example, encountering those who claimed to be, say, âCalvinists,â but who had never even read John Calvinâs Institutes, just books about them.
But putting pride aside and, even more daringly, the issue of morality, there is another question about reading that is more intellectually relevant than which books you lie about reading.
Itâs the question of which books you actually should read.
There is a large difference between being âwidelyâ read and being âwellâ read. A recent examination of required reading at Ivy League schools as compared to other institutions of higher learning showed a rather distinct difference. Not surprisingly, the reading list tilts heavily toward political philosophy and critical thinking. Case in point: the most required book across most schools is Strunk and Whiteâs The Elements of Style (a very good writing guide, I might add).
In Ivy League schools? Platoâs Republic.
As I wrote in A Mind for God, when it comes to the actual books we open, it is very important to be selective. As Schopenhauer once suggested, âIf a man wants to read good books, he must make a point of avoiding bad ones; for life is short, and time and energy limited.â Richard Weaver observes that it may be doubted whether one person in three draws what may be correctly termed âknowledgeâ from his freely chosen reading matter.
So what are the âgoodâ books? Where is âknowledgeâ gained? Robert Maynard Hutchins observes, âUntil lately the West has regarded it as self-evident that the road to education lay through the great books.â And what are the great books? âThere never was very much doubt in anybodyâs mind about which the masterpieces were,â writes Hutchins. âThey were the books that had endured and that the common voice of mankind called the finest creations, in writing, of the Western mind.â The great books are those writings that have most shaped history and culture, civilization and science, politics and economics. They prompt us to think about the great issues of life.
C.S. Lewis simply called them the âoldâ books.
Actual collections of such writings have been attempted. Hutchins, along with Mortimer Adler, compiled a set that went from Homer to Freud, over 25 centuries, including the works of Plato and Aristotle, Virgil and Augustine, Shakespeare and Pascal, Locke and Rousseau, Kant and Hegel, Darwin and Dostoevsky. Charles W. Eliot, who served as president of Harvard for 40 years, dreamed of a five-foot shelf of books that would provide an education to anyone who would spend even 15 minutes a day reading them. His vision took form when he became the editor of the 50-volume Harvard Classics (1909). In the appendix to A Mind for God, I suggested my own list of books.
(And, of course, the foundational book for any list is the Bible.)
Critiques can be made of such reading programs, both in scope and intent, but at least they propel the reader into what Hutchins calls the âGreat Conversation.â Or as Descartes would suggest, the reading of such books is like a conversation with the noblest men of past centuries, ânay a carefully studied conversation, in which they reveal to us none but the best of their thoughts.â
C.S. Lewis went further, arguing that the old books were needed to confront our current ageâs perspective. âEvery age has its own outlook,â Lewis contended. âIt is specially good at seeing certain truths and specially liable to make certain mistakes. We all, therefore, need the books that will correct the characteristic mistakes of our own period. And that means the old books.â
Our tendency, of course, is not to read the old books at all, or at least to do no more than read books about the old books. More often than not, it is because we determine in advance that they are beyond us, are irrelevant, or would be dry, dull reading. The wonderful surprise is how seldom this is true. Some might take more effort than others, but that is the pointâto exercise the mind. We accept that getting into physical shape will take determination, will power and raw sweat. The mind demands no less yet offers so much more.
All to say, donât lie about reading War and Peace.
Just read it.
James Emery White
Editorâs Note
This blog was first released in 2021, and the Church & Culture Team thought that you would enjoy reading it again.
Sources
âThe Book Most People Have Lied about Readingâand Itâs Not âWar and Peace,ââ The Telegraph, February 3, 2016, read online.
Christopher Ingraham, âWhat Ivy League Students Are Reading That You Arenât,â The Washington Post, February 3, 2016, read online.
James Emery White, A Mind for God (InterVarsity), order from Amazon.
Schopenhauer, Some Forms of Literature.
Weaver, Ideas Have Consequences.
Robert Maynard Hutchins, The Great Conversation: The Substance of a Liberal Education, Vol. 1 of the Great Books of the Western World.
C.S. Lewis, âOn the Reading of Old Books,â God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics, ed. Walter Hooper.
Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method, I, The Essential Descartes, ed. by Margaret D. Wilson.
Photo Courtesy: ©iStock/Getty Images Plus/rihard_wolfram
Published Date: August 4, 2025
James Emery White is the founding and senior pastor of Mecklenburg Community Church in Charlotte, NC, and a former professor of theology and culture at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, where he also served as their fourth president. His latest book, Hybrid Church: Rethinking the Church for a Post-Christian Digital Age, is now available on Amazon or from your favorite bookseller. To enjoy a free subscription to the Church & Culture blog, visit churchandculture.org where you can view past blogs in our archive, read the latest church and culture news from around the world, and listen to the Church & Culture Podcast. Follow Dr. White on X, Facebook, and Instagram at @JamesEmeryWhite.