2019/05/17

알라딘: 드디어 스승을 만났다 - 옥성호의 책읽기 노하우



알라딘: 드디어 스승을 만났다 - 옥성호의 책읽기 노하우







 7.6100자평(6)리뷰(6)
이 책 어때요?


- 절판 확인일 : 2017-03-08
- 이 도서를 판매중인 서점 : 0곳 판매







기본정보

135쪽------------------


책소개
'부족한 기독교 3부작 시리즈'로 알려진 옥성호의 자신의 책 읽기 방법을 공개한 책. '한 스승을 통한 책읽기', '씹어먹는 책읽기','꿀꺽 삼키는 책읽기' 등 총3개의 챕터로 구성되어 있으며, 그 구체적 실천방법을 자신의 경험을 예로 들어 제시하고 있다.


목차


추천의 글: 백금산
글을 열며

책읽기 노하우1
한 스승을 통한 책읽기

스승을 만나자, 아니 스승을 만나자
스승은 평생을 두고 연구할 수준의 성과물이 있는 사람
스승은 우리를 예수 그리스도에게로 인도하는 연결점이 되어야 한다
로이드 존스를 나의 스승으로 만들기
로이드 존스의 사상을 내 것으로 소화하기 위한 베이직 5권의 책
존 맥아더를 나의 스승으로 만들기
존 맥아더의 사상을 내 것으로 소화하기 위한 베이직 7권의 책
존 맥아더를 통해 기독교의 진리를 더 깊이 알기 위한 필독서

마무리

책읽기 노하우2
씹어먹는 책읽기

책이 나으 저널이요 나의 일기장이 되도록 하라
  • 내용 요약 중심의 기록
  • 통찰력을 위한 기록
  • 나만의 인덱스 작성
  • 내가 만난 최초의 인덱스
  • 매크로 인덱스로의 발전
  • 포스트잇을 활용한 확장 메모
  • 각주를 따라가는 심화 독서
  • 적극적으로 책읽기와 보이지 않는 질문 찾아 내기
  • 무엇을 안다는 사실
마무리

책읽기 노하우3
꿀꺽 삼키는 책읽기

목차 또는 소제목과 내용의 상관 관계를 빨리 파악하라
스캔 중에 눈을 사로잡는 단어 중심으로 읽으라
마무리

책읽기 노하우
책 없이 책읽기

생각의 정리 그리고 생각을 책읽기와 연결시키기
저널과 메모의 구분
무엇을 어떻게 쓸 것인가
통찰력 적용의 사례
진짜 물어야 할 다음 질문
마무리

책읽기 노하우5
원서로 읽기

영어 원서 읽기가 주는 가장 큰 유익
영어로 말을 잘 하는 법
마무리

글을 닫으며
부록
접기



저자 및 역자소개
옥성호 (지은이)
저자파일
최고의 작품 투표
신간알림 신청


한국외국어대학교 노어과를 졸업하고 미국 인디애나주 노터데임대학교(University of Notre Dame)에서 MBA를 취득했다. 2007년 『심리학에 물든 부족한 기독교』 시리즈를 시작으로 『갑각류 크리스천』 시리즈, 『아버지, 옥한흠』 『진영, 아빠는 유학중』 『진리해부』 『야고보를 찾아서』, 장편소설 『서초교회 잔혹사』 『낯선 하루』 등 스무 권이 넘는 책을 저술했다.
특허 솔루션 전문 기업인 위즈도메인에서 10년간 미주 지사장을 그리고 2011년부터 2013년까지 국제제자훈련원 출판본부장을 역임했다. 2018년 현재 ... 더보기


최근작 : <신의 변명>,<야고보를 찾아서>,<진리해부> … 총 24종(모두보기)

구매자 (6)
전체 (6)

공감순







책을 읽는 것에 왕도는 없다..그러나 약간의 노하우는 있다.^^
leseho 2008-06-17 공감 (1) 댓글 (0)
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공감





독서광 옥성호씨의 독서법, 역시 탁월합니다.
낭만인생 2011-04-14 공감 (0) 댓글 (0)
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공감





생각보다 짧은 내용에 쉽게 읽기는 했지만 뭔가 허전한 느낌..아쉽다
책읽는삶 2008-10-09 공감 (0) 댓글 (0)
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공감





책 읽는 노하우.. 짧아서 아쉬워요
ojongchul 2009-11-12 공감 (0) 댓글 (0)
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공감





^^
남쉭 2008-04-30 공감 (0) 댓글 (0)
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마이리뷰

구매자 (3)
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리뷰쓰기

공감순





한 권의 책을 완전히 내것으로!!!




요즘 나에게 고민은 책을 읽어도, 읽을 때 뿐이고 (많이 읽지도 못하지만...)
나중에 생각해 보면 그 내용이 무엇이었는지,
읽으면서 좋았던 것은 어디쯤에 나오는지 도통 생각이 잘 안난다는 것이다.

그런 면에서 이 책은 실질적인 도움을 줄 수 있을 것이다.
다른 내용들이야 대체적으로 책 읽기에 관한 책이라면 비슷하게 다룰 만한 내용이지만
"드디어 스승을 만났다"에서는 2장 '씹어먹는 책읽기' 부분에서 읽은 책을
어떻게 완벽하게 내 것으로 소화해 낼 것인가에 대한 실질적인 노하우를 알려준다.
나도 책은 더럽게 봐야(줄도 긋고 글도 써 가면서) 한다고 생각하지만
어떻게 책의 내용들, 그리고 내 생각들을 정리하며 볼 것인지에 대한 도전을 준다.
그리고 책에서 중요한 내용들을 인덱스로 한다는 것은 참 좋은 방법인것 같다.
내가 찾고자 하는 내용을 내 기억에 의존해서만 찾는다는 것은 참 어려우니까~

아무튼 다시 한 번 내 독서 의지를 불태우고 있다.
이 의지가 오래 지속될 수 있기를~~
- 접기
낯선 2008-10-16 공감(1) 댓글(0)
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공감




위대한 스승을 소개해주는 책


막연하게 읽는 독서법을 언젠가는 벗어나고 싶었는데..훌륭한 책을 집필한 저자만의 노하우가 공개되어 있고 꼼꼼하고 철저한 저자의 성격을 엿볼 수 있었다. 무엇보다 저자는 책을 볼 줄아는 서안이 돗보인다. 책을 얇고 책값은 비싸지만 왠지 수지맞았다고 생각이 드는 것은 책속에 저자가 소개한 또 다른 책들이 있었기에 이것만으로도 책값은 충분히 한다고 생각한다. 수지맞았다.
대니얼 2008-02-27 공감(0) 댓글(1)
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공감




이 책을 읽고...^^




솔찍히 책을 읽는 것에 대한 왕도는 아직 없는 것 같습니다.

제가 여태껏 느낀 바로는 일단 많이 읽어야 노하우도 생기는 것 같습니다.

책을 읽지 않고 노하우만 원하는 것은 수영은 전혀 못하면서 자유형과 접형과 배형 등등의

수영 기술만 알고 있는 것과 같을 것입니다.

저도 책을 읽기 시작한지 얼마 안되어 뭐라 주제넘게 말씀드린다는 것이 우습지만

그래도 한 마디 해본다면 열심히 책을 많이 읽은 이후에 이 책을 보신다면 많은 도움이

될 것입니다. 너무 큰 기대보다는 약간의 유익을 얻는다는 생각을 가지고 읽으시면 더 많은 것을

얻을 수 있는 책입니다. ^^
- 접기
leseho 2008-06-17 공감(0) 댓글(0)
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John MacArthur and Murray’s The Life of Martyn Lloyd-Jones | Open Book with Stephen Nichols

John MacArthur and Murray’s The Life of Martyn Lloyd-Jones | Open Book with Stephen Nichols



John MacArthur and Murray’s The Life of Martyn Lloyd-Jones

APRIL 4, 2019 00:09:38

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On this episode of Open Book, Stephen Nichols and John MacArthur discuss ministry role models, including a man so faithful to his pulpit that not even a Nazi air strike could prevent him from preaching.



TRANSCRIPT



STEPHEN NICHOLS: Welcome back to another episode of Open Book. Once again, we’re in the church office of Dr. John MacArthur. Iain Murray wrote so many biographies. The Edwards one we all love. And then, of course, he did the Pink one we already mentioned. But he’s your biographer, so we’ll get to that in a moment. But let’s just start with this one, The Life of Martyn Lloyd-Jones.



JOHN MACARTHUR: Yes. I think I needed a full life model. When people ask me who’s my model of ministry, I always go immediately to my dad as a faithful man. He was everything in his personal life that he was in the pulpit. So much integrity, so much love for the truth. But when I think about who my ministry model has always been, it’s been the Apostle Paul. He just fills my mind because of everything he’s written, and I’ve studied it all through the years. But the guy who sort of fleshed out ministry and preaching —uncompromising preaching and courageous preaching—for me was Lloyd-Jones. His theology was right. It was biblical. He had a passion for the Word of God. He was sacrificial and there was a humility about him. There was a kind of demeanor that he got lost in the truth that he was proclaiming.



NICHOLS: Derek Thomas mentioned a story that sometimes he would preach during the bombing of London and dust would literally fall on him, and his secretary would come up and dust him off and dust off the pulpit.



MACARTHUR: That’s my kind of guy.



NICHOLS: And he would just keep preaching. So I can see why you’re drawn to him as a model.



MACARTHUR: It came down to a couple of things for me. It came down to the fact that he was so faithful to the Word of God, that the apex of his entire career was a crisis moment. It potentially could have made him a worldwide phenomenon when Billy Graham wanted to elevate him, and he absolutely refused because he saw that entire operation as a compromise. He had nothing personal about Billy. And Billy came back to him and said, “I want you to lead this pastor’s conferences. I want you to be a part of this.” And he said, “Stop the invitations. Stop cooperating with the apostates and the liberals, and I will do that.”



NICHOLS: That’s conviction.



MACARTHUR: Because he had no thought for what it would mean to him. All he could think about was what was right. And the other thing that was so powerful to me, and I’ve run into this through the years when I go to England, people still ask me, “Do you think Lloyd-Jones was right to take the position he did against Anglicanism?” I mean, that’s what separated him from Packer and Stott and Dick, the other guy that was part of that triumvirate, and Michael Green.



NICHOLS: Lucas.



MACARTHUR: Dick Lucas and Michael Green. And it was all because he couldn’t tolerate cooperating with Anglicanism, with the Episcopalian church or the Church of England. I mean this was his domain. He could have literally risen to the pinnacle— in a worldly sense—with Graham and in his own kingdom, the U.K. But he just had disdain for both of those things because he saw that there were compromises.



And a third thing that struck me about him was that people told him he needed to travel more, that he needed to get out and preach because he was so gifted. He came to the United States a few times. But they told him he needed to leave the church and he needed to go and preach here, and preach there, and get around the world. And he said, “No, I’m going to stay in the same place.” And the result of that is that now, he is heard more around the world than he ever was when he was alive. Because all those recordings are now just circling the globe.



NICHOLS: They’re all digitized. The Lloyd-Jones library is out there. It’s great.



MACARTHUR: Look and I’ve said this through the years. He showed me that you stay in one pulpit, stand behind that pulpit, pour your entire life into that pulpit. Take care of the depth and let God worry about the breadth. Let him take it where he wants.



NICHOLS: And be faithful to the Word. So let’s talk about the author. Iain Murray is the author of that biography. He’s written a biography of you.



MACARTHUR: Yes. I don’t understand why, but he did.



NICHOLS: He writes, as you said, all about dead people.



MACARTHUR: He writes about dead people, and I’m not dead yet. I thought they might not release it till I died.



NICHOLS: He’s a dear friend. Everyone knows you have him every year to your Shepherds’ Conference, and I’ve seen you with him, the respect that you have for him, and I know you hold him very dearly.



MACARTHUR: Patricia and I have been in his home, and they’ve been in our home. And it’s a very rich providence for us how this ever happened because we are worlds apart, and I don’t know why he was interested in me, or us, or this place. And that would have been another book if we could talk about it.



But building on the Lloyd-Jones narratives, which helped me understand an uncompromising preacher of the Word of God, was Murray’s Evangelicalism Divided. He picked up the narrative from the Graham issue and showed what had happened subsequently to evangelicalism. And I wanted him to come to the Shepherds’ Conference and basically share that history.



NICHOLS: That was the first time he was invited?



MACARTHUR: That was the first time.



NICHOLS: And it was the book, Evangelicalism Divided?



MACARTHUR: Yes, okay. Among a lot of other things, he’s my favorite biographer. I honestly will tell you, I have a very hard time reading a biography by a religious writer who will not reveal his theology. This is why I don’t like to read George Marsden. I don’t know what he believes about anything.



NICHOLS: He’s a little detached.



MACARTHUR: It’s totally detached. I read Murray and Murray can’t even write about me without taking an issue. He takes issues with me and he’s writing about me, and he loves me.



NICHOLS: And he’s going to see you face to face.



MACARTHUR: He’s my friend, he has to see me. And I’m not dead. He says things like, “One could wish that MacArthur would have addressed this or that.” No, he’s so endeared. I called him the other day and we actually cherish the times we’re together. The last time I was with him, he said, “I want to take you and Patricia on a tour of all the locations of Samuel Rutherford.”



NICHOLS: Oh, wow. Iain Murray as your personal tour guide.



MACARTHUR: Personal tour guide. So I have to know what I’m doing. I read two biographies on Samuel Rutherford so I didn’t act like an ignorant guy. And for a week we go on this personal tutorial on Samuel Rutherford. We’re standing in the rain in the church where he preached. We have so many wonderful memories. But his interest in me, I don’t really know what drove that interest. Then he wrote another little book called Seven Leaders, and at the back of that he threw me in again. I’m not sure why. But there’s something about the way he sees the hand of God. I think that’s the explanation. I’m not the explanation for what’s happening.



NICHOLS: No, I totally think you’re right. I think he is drawn to faithful ministers.



MACARTHUR: Yes, yes.



NICHOLS: And that’s a lot of what he does.



MACARTHUR: Then he asked my wife to write the introduction to his book that he did on Amy Carmichael. And she said to me, “I’ve never written an introduction to anything.” So I said, “Well, I’ll work with you on that.”



NICHOLS: You have. You can throw her a few pointers. Well, that’s great. That was Iain Murray’s The Life of Martyn Lloyd-Jones. And we threw in a little bit of Iain Murray’s on your own life as a bonus. Thank you, I appreciate it.



MACARTHUR: It’s not really a life. It’s kind of a brief book. But he’s saying more than he should have



NICHOLS: And there’s more to the life. The book is done, but the life keeps going.



MACARTHUR: So far.



NICHOLS: Well thank you, I really appreciate that.



Transcript lightly edited for readability.