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| Photo courtesy of Amazon.com |
The Lord placed on my heart the state of
men in the church a couple of years ago. Increasingly as I went about my life I
struggled to find lay-men (ie, those not employed by churches or similar) who
inspired me in their Jesus journey.
Very slowly it began to dawn on me that
there might be a writing project involved. Then I had a lighning bolt moment at
ACFW last year when my current publisher asked me if I had any interest in
writing non-fiction. As I got back up of the floor (this is a fiction writing
event isn’t it?) I pitched him an idea. It was terrible, hey, I had only begun
to start bouncing a few ideas around on my journey over the Pacific. So I suggested
I’d get back to him with a proposal at a later date.
As I chatted with some dear and wise
friends over the course of the Conference my confidence grew that indeed I had
something to work on.
Intimacy
On getting home I started to draft a
proposal plus the first chapter and soon realised I really didn’t have much
except for an overall premise. But I received some tremendous counsel from
someone whom I greatly respect that gave me another lightning bolt moment.
It should be my story. Not in a memoir or
autobiographical sort of way but my search for the attributes of men who have
developed an intimate walk with the Lord. Certainly, we’re all aware of the
great men in the Bible and others of yesteryear whom we admire but I want to
meet the everyday regular guy who is living a surrendered life to Jesus.
Interviews
I’ve received enthusiastic responses from
everyone I’ve shared my vision for the project with: men and women, Christians
and non-Christians. As an aside, it’s been fascinating the response I’ve had
from non-Christians. It’s been a wonderful way of sharing about Jesus.
I’m presently in interview mode, really
to both validate my premise (hey, I might just live a sheltered life and these
types of blokes are all around) and to discover men’s opinions on intimacy with
God.
Self-discovery
Even though a lot of my life’s writing
has been non-fiction of sorts (business, blogging, etc) I’ve struggled with the
transition from fiction to non-fiction. I also read far more non-fiction than I
do fiction including books similar to what I’m writing. Yes, it’s still story
telling but I can’t just make up stuff; I don’t have these crazy characters running
around in my head telling me what they’re going to do or not do.
A boss shared some wisdom with me when I
was in my 20’s: you can’t always tell people what you think they need to do or
know; rather you have to allow them to self-discover it. I’m thinking writing
non-fiction is a bit like that.
Enjoy the process
Jim Rubart only reminded me of the
importance of this in his excellent Novel Rocket post this week:
“the journey and who you’re becoming on the journey is the prize.”
Often when I start out on a new adventure
I head off on my own. I step out knowing God is in it but start without
actively engaging Him in the process. Silly me. Again, Ian?
Maybe this is why He has me doing this
project: so I wouldn’t just find men who have the answer (or some of it) but
rather that I’d self-discover what intimacy with Him is!
I can’t do this project without having
Him front and centre.
And that’s my greatest desire!
What’s something you’ve
self-discovered through your writing journey?
Ian Acheson is an author
and strategy consultant based in Sydney. Ian's first novel of speculative
fiction, Angelguard, is available in the US, UK, Canada and Australia. Angelguard was recognised with the
2014 Selah Award for Speculative Fiction.You can find more about Angelguard at Ian's website, on his author Facebook page and Twitter




