Life is funny.
You don’t have to live very many years to understand this,
but the older you get, the truer it is every day. Life is funny.
If you know me at all and know my story these last six years
or so, you know how almost surreal it is that I am sitting at my kitchen table,
in Lynchburg Virginia, writing a review of Dave Ramsey’s latest book.
Just that sentence alone is chock full of miracles. I’m
sitting in my kitchen. At my table. In Lynchburg Virginia. Writing a review of
Dave Ramsey’s latest book. For the uninitiated let’s review why this is so many
answers to prayer all in one line of type.
For the last six years I have been homeless. I slept in my
1996 Yukon, parked on a friend’s property in Franklin TN. Before that, I slept
in my 1995 Volvo 850, until it died at the 250,000 mile mark. That was the car
I had when I lost my entire career, my home, and for the six years that
ensued…my hope. When I first became homeless I would hide it behind the Oak
Hill Assembly of God on Franklin Road in Nashville TN, where I lived the past
seventeen years.
So my having a kitchen -with a table- is nothing short of a
miracle to me. My kitchen is in my little townhouse in Lynchburg, Virginia. I’m
here because I work for my alma mater, Liberty University. So I have a job, a
home, a kitchen with a table, a new (to me) car, and best of all…I have hope.
I also have this friend in Nashville. Maybe you’ve heard of
the guy. His name is Dave Ramsey.
Now, that line right there made some of you chuckle. Or it
made you “LOL” as we say these days. If it made you laugh, then you know why.
If it didn’t, here is a link to the recent history with Dave and myself. This
explains most of it.
There is a lot more to this, of course but this isn’t a
story about me and Dave. It’s about his new book. However, in the spirit of
full disclosure I wanted to get these things on the table because I know…let me
emphasize…I know, that I am going to
get slammed for writing this review. I got slammed for merely having dinner
with the guy, so I expect a few torpedoes here. But honestly...I don’t care.
So here is my review of Dave Ramsey’s newest book: “The
Legacy Journey”
And for the record, Dave did not approach me at all about
reviewing this book. He doesn’t even know I am doing this.
The Legacy Journey
Dave Ramsey
Copyright 2014 Lampo Licensing LLC
Published by Ramsey Press, The Lampo Group, Inc.
Brentwood TN
236 Pages
First of all,
let me say I simply love books. I love all kinds of books. I love the way they
look and the way they smell and the way they feel in your hands. I will
probably never own a Kindle version of anything, because a book is simply
something you hold in your hands and feel the pages between your fingers. So
the first thing I would say is, as a product, The Legacy Journey is beautiful. It looks like a journal. And in
many ways it is. Half a lifetime has gone into the development of this
particular chapter of Dave Ramsey’s life.
But a book review
is not about the outside. It’s about the content.
Right up front, you need to know that if you think this book is simply "Okay, I've followed the steps of Financial Peace, I'm rich...now what?" You are in for a surprise. This book isn't just about what to do once you've accumulated those "piles of cash," Ramsey frequently references. It's about something far more important.
Right up front, you need to know that if you think this book is simply "Okay, I've followed the steps of Financial Peace, I'm rich...now what?" You are in for a surprise. This book isn't just about what to do once you've accumulated those "piles of cash," Ramsey frequently references. It's about something far more important.
This book taught me a lot. It taught me a lot about Dave Ramsey that I simply did not know before. Living in Nashville for seventeen
years, where everyone claims Christianity, it’s easy to simply assume that
everyone there was born a Believer and has had a faith-walk all their lives.
This book explains that Dave came to Faith in Christ as an adult. When you put
this in perspective, you begin to understand that he was maturing as a
Christian at the same time God was taking him down a path he had not planned
on. A path that challenged him at every turn but also blessed him beyond what
he had imagined.
It’s hard to mature as a believer when you are having
success. That’s just human nature. The more you have, the more doors seem to
open for you and the easier it is to be caught up in your own hype and read too
many of your own newspaper clippings. Dave Ramsey had to intentionally
cultivate his spiritual growth even while his financial and professional life
was exploding exponentially. That takes discipline. We’ve seen the other side
of this with the rock stars and celebrities who come to Christ and are thrust
in the evangelical limelight before they have a chance to put down roots.
Ramsey had to make it a point to avoid this sort of pitfall. That’s simply not
easy.
But it explained a lot as I read it, knowing that the Dave
Ramsey I heard on the airwaves in Nashville when I first got to town in 1997,
was in many ways not the same radio host I heard on my last day there this past
May. Ramsey has grown as a believer. That’s obvious, and much like those
members of the Sanhedrin in Acts 4 who saw the dramatic change in Peter and
John and could only attribute it to their having spent much time in the
presence of Jesus. Jesus will work off your rough edges if you let him and it
is evident through this book that Dave is at his most reflective, and the
imprint of his years with Jesus are showing more boldly than ever.
There was one
troubling section of this book that I need to address. It’s chapter two.
The chapter is called “The War on Success” and to be
honest…I hate it. I hate that it had to be written. I hate that in this
country, the day has come when successful people –particularly successful
people of faith- have to literally hide their success for fear they will be
run-through by the acid tongued both outside the church and, sadly, within.
It’s funny…when I was a homeless man, the people who
attacked the wealthy could not believe that I didn’t hate them, rage against
them for being wealthy, and twist scriptures to condemn them. But I couldn’t. I
am a full-on, hard core capitalist. I have no problem with people being
wealthy. Heck I want to be wealthy. I
know as many mean-spirited, unkind, unfriendly “poor” folks as I do rich ones.
Money only amplifies what you are. If you’re a jerk at your core…you’re just
going to be a jerk with cooler toys. Why people have become so animus toward
people who work hard and have success is something I’ll never understand. Dave
addresses this in his book and he does it with patience and kindness,
explaining it in a way that assumes that perhaps those folks simply never did
the numbers. He treats their contempt as an oversight, and a result of their
lack of information. The chapter is a perfect rebuttal to those who hold to a
mantra that money is somehow akin to evil.
The chapters that follow are some of the best writing I’ve
read on the value of being a better, deeper, more whole person. This isn’t a
book about money…not really. This is a book about really being rich. Rich in wisdom, rich in integrity,
rich in character. Rich in the things that your kids grow teary-eyed when they
reminisce about them to your grandchildren one day. When you’re seven years
old, you might brag about how much money your dad has, but when you are a
little older, you want to be able to brag about the man your dad is.
That is really what this book is about.
Dave Ramsey takes his readers on a journey to a mountain
top. Mountains give us the advantage of looking both backward in victory, and
forward in expectation. On this particular mountain, Ramsey reflects not only
on who he was way down in that valley you can barely see anymore, but who he
became along the way, and who he sees himself becoming as he takes on the next
leg of the journey.
His regular listeners and readers have made this journey
with him, and while their mountain might look a little different, the view is
likely just as rewarding. Reading this book you begin to understand that all
his talk about stewardship, and being intentional, and setting goals and having
plans, is not just for the financial areas of life. In fact that’s the easiest
place to learn those traits, because the results are instantly visible, and
palpable. No, reading this book you come to understand that the character you
develop here with your money, becomes character everywhere else. Tithing is
just a dollar figure, but a giving heart is cultivated. Carefully managing your
checkbook becomes carefully managing your daily planner. A good steward of his paycheck
becomes a good steward of his workday and honors his boss. A person with
financial integrity, reflects a person with spiritual integrity. Money problems
are really just symptoms. This book is about those who saw the symptoms,
diagnosed the problem, took the medicine, got well, and then became stronger
than ever. That is the Legacy Journey as Dave Ramsey describes it here.
His chapter on “Safeguarding Your Legacy” moved me deeply. I
finished reading this book in the lobby of my church, waiting for my daughter
to finish her small groups. On the way home we discussed my legacy, frankly and
openly. It was a good conversation and I explained to her why I had asked. This
chapter made me renew my vow to God to live my life before her in a manner
honoring our Lord. It has been a hard road these last six years and she
suffered much along with me. It was good to read Dave’s thoughts on what a
legacy really is and how you measure it and how you guard against ruining it.
These are great tips I am implementing before I even go to bed tonight.
Dave writes at great length about the value of family,
history, integrity and faith in this book. But one story touched me deeply and
I’ll close this review with this.
He writes a wonderful story about a man named Clyde Eckles
West. To relate the entire story would be to spoil one of the wonderful, sweet
moments in this volume. But suffice it to say that I blinked back a few tears
as the story unfolded and the legacy of this man came into focus. Legacy really
is everything.
In closing, I have to say this is a really great book. Great
in its necessity. There is a lot more to this work than “Just another Dave
Ramsey book about money.” Far more. A few years ago I read a wonderful book by
a fellow Liberty University grad, Mark DeMoss. The book was “The Little Red
Book of Wisdom.” It’s one of my favorite books about just plain being a better
person. Dave Ramsey’s new book is a similar work. Sure, there is the expected
money advice. That’s what he is known for.
But over the years, this is also a man who has been broken,
rebuilt, and reshaped many times as God continued to “complete the work he has
begun in you.”
The Legacy Journey is about taking a longer than usual pause
to reflect, give thanks, reset the compass, and prepare for the rest of the
voyage, while carefully leaving the road you travel a little better for the
next sojourner.
It’s a wonderful read and I give it five stars.
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