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Danger Isn’t Enough: A “Fully Awake” Interview with Author & Filmmaker Joel N. Clark

If you had to pick five words to describe the Christian life, would these make your list: wonder, whimsy, beauty, magic, adventure? These five elements are bursting at the seams of Joel N. Clark’s new book Awake: Discover the Power of YOUR Story.

I haven’t encountered a book like Awake before – I could call it a Christian adventure memoir, but it’s more. In Awake author and filmmaker Joel N. Clark shares stories that challenged him to live a bigger story, one suffused with wonder and deeply connected to God. As Joel reveals in this exclusive interview, he believes God created all of us to live that way, pursuing Him “fully awake.”

Read on as Joel discusses what we stand to gain if we accept the “fully awake” challenge. -Adam Forrest, Zondervan

Awake
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ZBLOG: You write that you want to live “fully awake.” What does a fully awake life look like?

JOEL: For much of my life I’ve heard pastors say, “God is not just found in the four walls of the church, but he’s found in our places of work, in our homes and in our daily lives.” Yet for many years my relationship with God came down to the times I prayed, read the Bible, worshiped (which usually meant singing) and went to church. This was the entirety of my relationship with God and therefore I was bored with him and all things Christian.

Living “fully awake” is about more than finding God in the midst of ALL of my story. It’s about experiencing him fully, his pleasure, his heart and his presence in the midst of every part of it. This is something that doesn’t come naturally, but he is speaking and acting constantly throughout the day.

When I am “fully awake” I am able to see and hear him in all of it and my life is filled with wonder, beauty and magic, even in the seasons of pain and heartache.

ZBLOG: In Awake you recount many of your adventures, and some are quite dangerous! Some readers may be tempted to say, “Joel is just addicted to danger” – but you claim you’ve never been an adrenaline junkie.

So, what is it that drives you?

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Guest Post: Nikki Grimes, Calling All Christians

What exactly is a "Christian author"? I think it's a fair question, considering the countless times I've been asked (challenged? demanded?) to identify myself as such. If I might generalize for a moment, in the minds of most churchgoers I believe a Christian author is one who 1) publishes exclusively with a Christian press, 2) writes exclusively for a Christian audience, and 3) focuses on themes which are specifically, and overtly, Christian or biblical in nature.

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According to the above definition, I am definitely not ranked among the chosen. Mind you, God himself has never set limits on how I respond to the call to be salt and light in the world. He only cares that I am. But that is a rant for another day. For now, let me address the issue of my identity as an author.

I am both a Christian and an author, and the two identities are not mutually exclusive. As a believer, Christianity is the grid through which I view and comment on the world. That being the case, in all of my books the presence of God is assumed, faith is frequently a factor, and issues of morality and character are woven into my stories, to varying degrees.

There are, of course, those of my books in which the themes are more overtly Christian, and in which the Bible itself is front and center. This is true of the picture book Voices of Christmas, as well as the novels Dark Sons and A Girl Named Mister. Story is key, though. The elements of faith must grow organically from the story, rather than be superimposed as an overlay that calls attention to itself. In other words, I am a storyteller, not a theologian. My first job is to tell a good story. Whenever there are natural opportunities to weave in elements of faith, I do so. And, as it happens, there are almost always opportunities!

Fine, you say. But what about stories in which your character never graces the door of a church? Even there, my faith is somehow reflected in the story, if only by virtue of the light that shines through it. How could it be otherwise? Every time I put pen to paper, whether my subject is a ferocious feline, a fatherless boy, or a little girl grappling with being in foster care, I always write out of a sense of call.

Here's the bottom line: whether my work—written for allchildren and young adults—is published by a secular publisher, or a Christian one, I always write as an ambassador of Christ. And isn't that what we are all called to be, no matter our profession?

About the Book

 

A Girl Named Mister by Nikki Grimes, (ISBN: 0310720788, $15.99, hardcover, Young Adult Fiction). Bestselling author Nikki Grimes presents the story of Mister, a teenage girl who honestly and poignantly tells her story of temptation and teenage pregnancy through free verse.

About the Author
Nikki Grimes is the prolific and award-winning author of more than fifty books. A Coretta Scott King Award winner and recipient of the 2006 NCTE Award for Excellence in Children’s Poetry, many of her titles have been cited as Notable Books by the American Library Association. She is renowned for her use of poetry to tell a cohesive story, for her insightful writing, and for her ability to connect with her readers.

 

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