Skip to content

Paul Young

Episode: 91

Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast, we welcome New York Times bestselling author Paul Young. Originally written as a Christmas gift for his children, The Shack has gone on to sell more than 25 million copies, and became a major motion picture starring Sam Worthington, Octavia Spencer, and Tim McGraw. Paul’s journey is anything but conventional. Raised among a Stone-Age tribe in the highlands of New Guinea, he later worked three jobs while writing The Shack on a commuter train. After twenty-six publishers rejected the book, he and two friends self-published it with just three hundred dollars in marketing — and watched it become one of the most-read books of the 21st century. The real story behind The Shack is the eleven-year unraveling that came before it — a story of failure, forgiveness, and the kind of grace that only shows up when you’ve stopped pretending. Join us as we talk about leading through hidden pain, the cost and freedom of forgiveness, and his long-awaited sequel, Return to the Shack.

Prev Episode

00:00:00
When you learn to live without

00:00:01
expectations, everything becomes a gift.

00:00:04
How do you do that?

00:00:06
Oh,

00:00:12
today on the Servant Leadership Podcast,

00:00:14
we welcome New York Times bestselling

00:00:16
author Paul Young. Originally written as

00:00:18
a Christmas gift for his children, The

00:00:20
Shack has gone on to sell more than 25

00:00:22
million copies and became a major motion

00:00:24
picture starring Sam Worththington,

00:00:26
Octavia Spencer, and Tim McGrath. Paul's

00:00:28
journey is anything but conventional.

00:00:30
Raised among a stone age tribe in the

00:00:32
highlands of New Guinea, he later worked

00:00:34
three jobs while writing The Shack on a

00:00:36
commuter train. After 26 publishers

00:00:38
rejected the book, he and two friends

00:00:40
self-published it with just $300 in

00:00:42
marketing and watched it become one of

00:00:44
the most read books of the 21st century.

00:00:47
The real story behind The Shack is the

00:00:48
11-year unraveling that came before it.

00:00:51
A story of failure, forgiveness, and the

00:00:53
kind of grace that only shows up when

00:00:55
you've stopped pretending. Join us as we

00:00:57
talk about leading through hidden pain,

00:00:59
the cost and freedom of forgiveness and

00:01:02
his long- awaited sequel, Return to the

00:01:04
Shack.

00:01:06
Paul, welcome to the Servant Leadership

00:01:08
Podcast.

00:01:10
Absolutely honored to be with you. My

00:01:12
whole life has led up to this moment and

00:01:14
I don't want to be anywhere else. I

00:01:16
mean, think about it. Our whole lives

00:01:18
from moment of conception have now led

00:01:20
up to this moment.

00:01:22
It is crazy that I love that

00:01:24
perspective. Uh that's one of the things

00:01:26
that makes you unique. You see the world

00:01:28
differently.

00:01:29
Missionary kid.

00:01:30
Yeah. Talk about people obviously know

00:01:33
you from the shack, but talk about your

00:01:34
growing up experience because you had a

00:01:36
crazy experience growing up.

00:01:38
Yeah. When you grow up, you think your

00:01:40
experience is normal kind of. And uh I

00:01:44
was born Canadian. At a year old um my

00:01:47
I'm firstborn missionary kid, preachers

00:01:49
kid. So at 8 months they packed

00:01:51
everything up and we moved to the

00:01:53
interior highlands of New Guinea uh at

00:01:56
the time and Netherlands New Guinea.

00:01:58
Then it became under Indonesian control

00:02:01
different and now it's West Papua mostly

00:02:03
is how it's known and um uh very

00:02:09
primitive beautiful tribal people that

00:02:12
had never seen a white person before.

00:02:13
And I'm a year old and so my first

00:02:15
language was the name of the tribe was

00:02:17
Donnie. and uh first dreaming language.

00:02:20
I grew up thinking that I was a person

00:02:22
of color and and when I was sent away to

00:02:26
boarding school, it was a it was not a

00:02:29
good shock. It was I lost everything

00:02:32
because um my dad was an abusive

00:02:35
disciplinarian, but at the time I didn't

00:02:37
know that he he had been somewhat

00:02:40
destroyed by his father and his father

00:02:42
before him. And I I was still part of

00:02:45
that legacy. Um, and then some other

00:02:49
really tragic thing, sexual abuse

00:02:50
started.

00:02:52
And I don't know yet, I don't even know

00:02:54
if if in the context of the culture that

00:02:56
it was a targeted thing um or that it

00:03:00
was just part of the culture. But then I

00:03:03
was sent to boarding school at six and

00:03:06
inside a Christian missionary boarding

00:03:08
school, the sexual abuse continued as a

00:03:11
six-year-old. And uh but

00:03:15
around 10 we went back to Canada. My dad

00:03:18
became an itinerant preacher 13 schools

00:03:21
before I graduated high school. Complete

00:03:23
me uh mess. Porn addict by 12. Um hated

00:03:28
myself.

00:03:30
Perfectionist performer. Always

00:03:32
responding to the world um in front of

00:03:35
me changing. I didn't think I was smart

00:03:38
or creative. I just thought I knew how

00:03:39
to fool people. lying was a survival

00:03:41
skill. And um dragged all of that into

00:03:46
marriage to Kim and

00:03:49
to go to the other end and see

00:03:51
backwards. Kim and I have now been

00:03:52
married almost 47 years and we are the

00:03:55
best we've ever been. Um six kids. We

00:03:59
now have 17 living grandchildren and

00:04:02
we're not done. Um, but I dragged all

00:04:05
that crap into my marriage and and uh 13

00:04:12
years in when Matthew was born, the

00:04:15
youngest of our kids, I Kim caught me in

00:04:18
a three-month affair with one of her

00:04:19
best friends, and it literally blew up

00:04:22
the world. And I had to make a decision,

00:04:24
either see if there was a way to heal or

00:04:28
kill myself. And suicide had always been

00:04:30
the last way to run away. Um, but this

00:04:34
this was the crisis and uh I decided to

00:04:38
give it one more shot to see if there

00:04:40
was a way to change. Pulled the yellow

00:04:43
pages off. Kim, you got to understand

00:04:46
Kim is not a meek, mild, submitted

00:04:48
woman. I mean, she was born in North

00:04:50
Dakota. Mine not of all places. And u

00:04:54
and five sisters and her are called the

00:04:57
force. And you know, may the force be

00:04:59
with you. So, part of what saved my life

00:05:03
was the intensity of Kim's fury.

00:05:07
And uh the only reason she allowed me to

00:05:10
stay inside the marriage was because she

00:05:12
believed I'd hit the bottom. And I did.

00:05:15
When you hit the bottom, you don't point

00:05:16
fingers at anybody anymore. You own what

00:05:19
you've done. Um, I pulled the yellow

00:05:22
pages off the shelf, looked under

00:05:24
counselors, saw one that had in their

00:05:26
box specializing in sexual abuse

00:05:28
histories, and walked into total

00:05:30
strangers and for the first time in my

00:05:32
life uttered these words, "Can you help

00:05:36
me?"

00:05:38
And I, wouldn't you know it, ran into

00:05:42
the perfect person for me, Scott. And uh

00:05:46
later he became my friend which probably

00:05:48
violates some rule somewhere but uh he

00:05:50
didn't care and I was grateful. Um and

00:05:54
uh slowly it took Kim and I 11 years to

00:05:58
heal. 11 years

00:06:01
before I knew for sure that she now

00:06:03
trusted me and she had every reason to.

00:06:05
The beginning of the 12th year was the

00:06:07
year I turned 50. I uh I looked around

00:06:11
and thought

00:06:13
my

00:06:15
my I was so amazed like I'm the

00:06:18
healthiest person that I know or at

00:06:19
least one of them

00:06:21
and I had no addictions. I had no

00:06:23
secrets. I I was the same person in

00:06:26
every situation. I didn't know that was

00:06:28
possible. Um joy had become a constant

00:06:31
companion. I had learned how to stay

00:06:34
present to the moment and not future

00:06:35
trip all kinds of tragic fantasies or,

00:06:40
you know,

00:06:42
huge success or all that kind of crappy

00:06:45
stuff that you want to imagine for

00:06:47
yourself based on fear. And uh and my

00:06:51
relationships were were healing. I'm

00:06:53
still after all these years dealing with

00:06:56
the consequences of the choices that I

00:06:58
made because they ripple out. I am

00:07:03
resolved and uh there's been

00:07:06
reconciliation in many of my

00:07:08
relationships but some of them still no

00:07:11
um you can forgive someone without ever

00:07:13
trusting them again but rec reconciling

00:07:16
is for the sake of the one who did the

00:07:18
harm and that's a rugged road. Um, so

00:07:23
year I turned 50,

00:07:26
I thought, you know, I think I'm finally

00:07:28
healthy enough to to do this little

00:07:30
thing that Kim's been asking me to do

00:07:32
for about four years. And that's someday

00:07:35
as a gift for our kids. Would you just

00:07:37
write in one place how you think because

00:07:40
you think outside the box? And she

00:07:41
didn't tell me that she was thinking

00:07:44
four to six pages. Um and uh and so I

00:07:49
wrote a story for Christmas. It was the

00:07:50
only Christmas present I had. We were we

00:07:53
had lost everything on our journey to

00:07:55
learn how to trust. The 11 years was

00:07:58
about learning how to trust, you know,

00:08:00
not manage, not control. Um which is

00:08:04
from my history was something that I had

00:08:06
no capacity to. And inside my religious

00:08:10
upbringing,

00:08:11
it it wasn't about trust, it was about

00:08:13
performance. And uh and so the a lot of

00:08:18
things came undone and started you know

00:08:20
from the roots. Some people in their

00:08:24
process of healing they need an art

00:08:26
restoration expert. They need somebody

00:08:29
who can slowly and carefully remove the

00:08:32
pieces that that shouldn't be there that

00:08:35
cover up the truth of a person's being.

00:08:38
Me I needed a sledgehammer and a you

00:08:42
know a battering ram. Um, I mean there

00:08:45
were the still the kind of gentle

00:08:48
unravelings, but man, uh, I was so stuck

00:08:53
inside of performance perfectionism.

00:08:56
And, uh, so I wrote a story for my kids.

00:08:59
Uh, Christmas comes.

00:09:02
Um, Kinko's has it for I can get eight

00:09:06
copies for X, but across the street,

00:09:08
Office Depot had a sale and I could get

00:09:11
15 copies for the same price. I make 15

00:09:14
copies on their photocopier.

00:09:16
Gave my kids a Christmas present of a

00:09:18
book that I wrote called The Shack, you

00:09:20
know. And uh I never thought of myself

00:09:23
as anyone who could ever be a published

00:09:25
author. It just wasn't on my radar. Um I

00:09:29
read good books growing up, the

00:09:31
classics. And and I think that's where I

00:09:34
at least learned to write in a

00:09:36
bluecollar kind of way. And uh plus

00:09:42
I'd always had this longing for beauty

00:09:46
and longing for authenticity

00:09:49
and longing for

00:09:52
more more of for wholeness

00:09:56
and uh and that always drove me. I I

00:10:00
loved Jesus. I just didn't trust God the

00:10:02
Father. And uh cuz I'd painted God with

00:10:05
the face of my own dad. And uh so I had

00:10:09
to become an atheist about that kind of

00:10:11
God which is always a movement toward

00:10:14
Jesus. I think uh halfway from relig

00:10:17
religion I think and uh but I'm I'm done

00:10:21
creating divisions in the world. I don't

00:10:23
want to do that. Um I think love is the

00:10:26
most powerful agent in the world that

00:10:28
violence or evil only compounds

00:10:32
the destruction that uh we know exists

00:10:36
around us. And uh um I think that love,

00:10:42
kindness, gentleness,

00:10:45
uh confrontation in terms of care, um

00:10:50
those things actually change the world.

00:10:53
and that uh we're surrounded by

00:10:55
institutional structures and systems

00:10:58
that that rely on fear fundamentally in

00:11:02
order to keep their systems alive. And I

00:11:05
kind of challenge that. But I'm not

00:11:07
after hurting anybody in the midst of

00:11:09
those kinds of challenges. I don't feel

00:11:12
like I'm I'm here as some kind of sage

00:11:14
or prophet or any of those things. Um,

00:11:19
I'm here as someone who has moved in the

00:11:22
direction of authenticity and I want to

00:11:24
live that way relating to the person who

00:11:27
is in front of me which is you, Chris,

00:11:28
in this moment. In this moment, you

00:11:30
matter more to me than the entire cosmos

00:11:34
because I think whether you do or not I

00:11:36
and I and this is true about every

00:11:38
person that I'm in front of. I think I'm

00:11:41
in front of someone who is an eternal

00:11:44
being

00:11:45
who is indwelt by love. and the truth of

00:11:48
their being is good. Period.

00:11:51
Period. That's some of my friends.

00:11:54
Period. And made in the image of a God

00:11:56
who is good. Period. And uh and that's

00:12:01
from where I live. And I and I get to

00:12:04
watch

00:12:07
unbelievably beautiful things occur in

00:12:10
the hearts and lives of many of us who

00:12:13
were really

00:12:15
torn apart and uh and get to watch

00:12:18
healing and wholeness happen from the

00:12:20
place of affection and care and

00:12:23
kindness.

00:12:24
You you can't self-discipline yourself

00:12:27
into wholeness where the where the ways

00:12:29
of your being match the truth of your

00:12:31
being. And I think a lot of us feel that

00:12:35
that breakage in us where we can't get

00:12:38
we can't get from

00:12:42
seeing the good to actually living the

00:12:45
good.

00:12:46
And um so and I think there are are

00:12:50
realizations on the road where we can

00:12:54
begin to live that way where where the

00:12:56
ways of our being the choices we make

00:12:58
actually are expressions of the truth of

00:13:00
our being. But most of us or many of us

00:13:03
were were not given the truth of our

00:13:07
being as good. We're given something

00:13:08
else. Both in religious frames of

00:13:10
reference and you know the trauma and

00:13:12
tragedies that we experienced growing

00:13:14
up. They've all pounded into us that

00:13:16
were just useless

00:13:20
uh pieces of [ __ ] And and frankly my

00:13:24
theology did the same thing. I had to

00:13:27
start from scratch at the beginning of

00:13:29
those 11 years. I am so so grateful

00:13:33
every moment of every day. And uh so

00:13:37
that's the overview. Well, it's

00:13:40
interesting. There's a lot of people

00:13:42
listening to this that are probably in

00:13:46
eerily similar situation to you where

00:13:50
they've got their life together or so

00:13:53
they think, but deep down they know

00:13:54
their life is not put together and they

00:13:56
know there's something wrong and they

00:13:58
haven't hit maybe the rock bottom you

00:14:00
hit. Um,

00:14:02
and they're praying still at this point

00:14:04
that they don't hit that rock bottom so

00:14:06
that they can keep living maybe a double

00:14:08
life, you know, or keep keep living two

00:14:11
parts. How how do you talk to those

00:14:13
people?

00:14:17
First, I want to say that on the

00:14:18
elevator going down, you can get off at

00:14:20
any floor, you know, but you cannot do

00:14:23
it in isolation. You will not. We're I

00:14:26
think we're created as relational beings

00:14:30
and that we need a somewhat even if it's

00:14:33
one person you have to pay to start

00:14:35
caring for you that uh that we're we're

00:14:39
designed as community people. That's

00:14:42
part of the truth of who we are. So, how

00:14:45
do I how do I and what do I say to a

00:14:49
person? And I talk to people all the

00:14:52
time

00:14:53
that are caught in the same web of

00:14:57
having to put on a face for the audience

00:14:59
that they're in front of where there's

00:15:02
they're not living from authenticity.

00:15:04
And I can talk in generalities about

00:15:06
general things, but when I'm actually

00:15:08
with a person, their story is what what

00:15:12
really matters. And the response to

00:15:14
their story is going to be unique. It's

00:15:16
like raising kids. If you're going to

00:15:18
have a good book on raising kids, you

00:15:20
need one per child, you know, because

00:15:23
because you can think you got it

00:15:24
together after the first one. Introduce

00:15:26
a second one and and you're dealing with

00:15:29
an entirely different form. Um entirely

00:15:33
different wonder. So,

00:15:37
and this happened with my dad. Um my dad

00:15:40
and I struggled in our relationship all

00:15:43
the way up till when he turned 80 and he

00:15:46
passed at 90 92 93 and um and it wasn't

00:15:51
I mean I forgave him you know for all

00:15:53
the damage

00:15:56
but I didn't release him from my

00:15:58
expectations.

00:16:00
I didn't and I didn't realize that I had

00:16:02
him. But they were the bombs that I

00:16:04
planted in the fields I invited him onto

00:16:07
and eventually he just blew one up. And

00:16:10
when I realized that that's what I was

00:16:11
doing, I let him become a human being

00:16:16
rather than my dad because he he didn't

00:16:19
have a capacity to be a a a father like

00:16:22
a dad. And suddenly his story mattered.

00:16:26
Suddenly his responses mattered. And I I

00:16:30
learned a an absolutely significant

00:16:32
thing. When you live without when you

00:16:36
learn to live without expectations,

00:16:39
everything becomes a gift.

00:16:41
And uh

00:16:42
how do you do that?

00:16:44
Oh, one incremental

00:16:47
fire at a time, you know, but but for

00:16:50
one thing, you have to realize that a

00:16:54
human being is more important than the

00:16:55
categories that we put them in. And that

00:16:58
includes right down to things like

00:17:00
father or dad because not everybody's a

00:17:03
dad.

00:17:05
Everybody's a human being. So dad is a

00:17:08
compartment that is less than a human

00:17:11
being. It's a great honor and it's all

00:17:13
of those things. And if you're ever if

00:17:15
you're ever healthy to some degree and

00:17:17
you you get to be a dad or a mom or an

00:17:20
aunt or you know it's one of the

00:17:23
greatest

00:17:25
wonders and joys of existence. But but

00:17:29
in this journey,

00:17:31
you have to

00:17:34
recognize that the person in front of

00:17:36
you is greater than

00:17:38
the trap that they're caught in, the

00:17:41
false persona that they present, the

00:17:45
anger that they use for control, all of

00:17:48
those things. Inside of all of that,

00:17:51
there is a human being and there's

00:17:53
truth. There is truth about that human

00:17:55
being. And it's not the destruction that

00:17:57
not the survival mechanisms that they

00:18:00
use to perpetuate their self-existence,

00:18:04
self-control,

00:18:05
self promotion, self-p protection are

00:18:09
evidences of false personas.

00:18:12
And that that's not to give you power

00:18:14
over them. That's to recognize there is

00:18:17
a reason that those things exist. And

00:18:20
suddenly their story matters. And when

00:18:22
you when you draw a line beneath which

00:18:25
nothing's acceptable as a gift, you

00:18:27
won't recognize a gift that that is

00:18:29
right in front of you because it it you

00:18:31
know it's like the kid at Christmas who

00:18:33
wants the bike, right? That's all he

00:18:36
wants. That's the expectation. And he'll

00:18:38
rip through every present looking for

00:18:39
the bike and when it's not there, it was

00:18:41
a terrible Christmas. but they didn't

00:18:44
recognize any of the gifts and the

00:18:46
kindnesses and and uh the giftgiving joy

00:18:49
of anybody that offered them something.

00:18:52
So false personas and self uh uh self-p

00:18:58
protection, self-promotion, all of those

00:18:59
things are evidences that somebody's

00:19:02
caught in some kind of web that has done

00:19:05
a significant amount of damage to them.

00:19:08
The hard part of all this is to not get

00:19:10
sucked into uh creating an identity

00:19:13
around what you've built, what you've

00:19:16
created, your performance, your false

00:19:18
persona, any of that stuff. I mean, you

00:19:21
attach your identity to it. It's just a

00:19:23
matter of time. You know, when you go to

00:19:26
someone's funeral,

00:19:29
they e you'll you'll either hear lies

00:19:33
or you you'll hear relational impact.

00:19:37
And uh and I don't think lies should be

00:19:39
ever told at a funeral. Um but we do it.

00:19:43
Um and you'll you'll see the ones who've

00:19:46
been harmed who have to be there and and

00:19:49
put a persona on at the funeral. The

00:19:53
what what you'll hear in a funeral of

00:19:55
health is how someone loved someone.

00:19:59
You're not going to hear about well

00:20:01
let's see how much money they made or

00:20:04
let's see what kind of empire they built

00:20:06
you know as look what a great life

00:20:11
you'll either hear the good the bad and

00:20:12
the ugly right when we buried my dad it

00:20:14
was a very small group and uh and there

00:20:18
were like 13 of us and and we didn't lie

00:20:22
we told the good the bad and the ugly um

00:20:27
we allowed

00:20:28
It took a long time. My expectations

00:20:30
locked my dad into a prison and myself

00:20:32
into a prison. But we we told

00:20:37
the truth and we and as I aged,

00:20:41
I got rid of the prison. That's part of

00:20:43
the expectations were part of that

00:20:45
prison. And that allowed my dad even in

00:20:48
my own understanding to change. I have a

00:20:52
bunch of friends on death row. I'm

00:20:53
literally a bunch of friends on death

00:20:55
row uh in Tennessee.

00:20:58
And one of the things that they say is

00:21:00
it's a horrible thing to be only known

00:21:02
for the worst day of your life.

00:21:05
And they say, "You know what? In this in

00:21:08
this world, judgment is vengeance."

00:21:12
And and so you're not allowed to change.

00:21:14
He said, "We have a sign on our door on

00:21:17
our cages, animals." And so from the

00:21:20
outside,

00:21:23
you'll just put them into a category and

00:21:25
then assassinate the category. And and

00:21:27
one of my friends, Terry, he's got this

00:21:29
great line, proximity changes

00:21:32
everything. When you actually get to

00:21:34
know a human being and you allow

00:21:36
yourself to enter that story, you're

00:21:40
going to lead completely differently

00:21:43
than when they are just cogs in the

00:21:45
wheel and they're just something about

00:21:48
mechanics. And once you enter that

00:21:51
world, your business, no matter what it

00:21:54
produces that is helpful and good,

00:21:57
if it is harming those who are in it,

00:22:01
you have a human trafficking

00:22:02
organization. That's what you have.

00:22:04
And I don't care if it's religious or

00:22:06
business or marketing or whatever. If

00:22:09
the people that are in your and you

00:22:10
wonder why are people just leaving in

00:22:12
droves from the businesses that are out

00:22:15
there because they want to belong. They

00:22:18
want to belong to something that is more

00:22:19
than the ROI. And um and so the

00:22:23
relationships are what

00:22:26
matters. And and part of that is caring

00:22:30
for whether the people in your community

00:22:34
of business

00:22:36
are involved with something that fits

00:22:40
for them their way. Their way. And if it

00:22:44
doesn't, help them find what fits. You

00:22:48
know, just don't lock them into, well,

00:22:50
you're either helping our ROI or you're

00:22:53
an inhibitor to ROI. No, this is a human

00:22:57
being. And when when you have turned

00:23:00
them into

00:23:03
a cog for success or an inhibitor from

00:23:05
success,

00:23:07
then you've dehumanized them. And if

00:23:10
business becomes more significant

00:23:13
than the relationships of those who are

00:23:16
in it,

00:23:18
then

00:23:19
your funeral is going to be a very sad

00:23:21
event

00:23:23
rather than a celebration of life.

00:23:26
Wow.

00:23:27
I love I love your perspective. Um

00:23:31
there's just so much wisdom. You know,

00:23:33
one of the things that's interesting is

00:23:35
that some of this is just who you always

00:23:37
have been. learned more about yourself

00:23:39
over the years. When you handed over

00:23:42
those copies for Christmas of The Shack,

00:23:46
you had no idea what was to come after

00:23:49
that.

00:23:50
No idea.

00:23:51
What was your expectation

00:23:54
um from your kids standpoint of like how

00:23:56
they would receive it? And then for our

00:23:59
audience that doesn't know how much this

00:24:01
blew up, talk about the after.

00:24:04
Well, you know, you give your kids a

00:24:06
book and it's like, "Thanks, Dad. A

00:24:08
book."

00:24:11
Me, I'm writing it as uh as fiction that

00:24:16
encapsulates.

00:24:18
The two main character are Mac, who's

00:24:20
the dad, and Missy, who's the daughter

00:24:24
who's abducted. And both of their names

00:24:26
spell map. Because my sexual abuse

00:24:30
experience, right, that's Missy. you

00:24:33
know, where

00:24:35
in a sense the child in me was murdered

00:24:37
and it took me 50 years to even begin to

00:24:40
understand what it must have been like

00:24:41
to be a child. Mac Mackenzie Ellen

00:24:44
Phillips spells map. Melissa and

00:24:46
Phillips spells map. McKenzie is much

00:24:48
more my journey, you know, um

00:24:52
detoxifying my relationship with God.

00:24:54
the uh uh getting to a place of of

00:25:00
scrapping my way with uh the kindness of

00:25:03
beauty or you know the higher power love

00:25:07
um to get to a place where there was

00:25:09
enough wholeness that I lived what I

00:25:11
knew had to be true. Um so I you know I

00:25:14
give this book to my kids and literally

00:25:16
I had nothing else that year. I was

00:25:17
working three jobs. Um, most of them

00:25:20
were bluecollar and there were some that

00:25:22
interchanged during those those years,

00:25:24
but

00:25:26
we had we had lost pretty much

00:25:28
everything and uh and stumbled our way

00:25:31
into

00:25:34
a couple two and a half three years of

00:25:36
some of the greatest years of our lives

00:25:38
even though the transition sucked. So,

00:25:41
um, this book I just went back to work.

00:25:43
I gave it to my kids. I had extra

00:25:45
copies. Thank you, Office Depot. and uh

00:25:48
I gave them to my friends and I went

00:25:50
back to work. It was done. Those 15

00:25:52
copies did everything I ever wanted that

00:25:55
book to do. And my friends kept giving

00:25:57
it away and it started a chain reaction

00:25:59
that

00:26:01
I mean you would laugh about the kinds

00:26:04
of things that that were a part of this

00:26:07
whole craziness. Um, in a world where

00:26:12
four to six thousand copies of a book is

00:26:14
considered a bestseller in the first 13

00:26:17
months with no I mean we did sorry we

00:26:21
did almost no marketing because we

00:26:23
didn't have any money and 26 publishers

00:26:25
had already turned it down. Couple guys

00:26:28
created their own publishing house with

00:26:29
one title and uh because they wanted to

00:26:32
do some books for themselves too. And um

00:26:36
in the first 13 months we spent we less

00:26:39
than 300 bucks. We think it's for an

00:26:41
internet ad that never ran. And um and

00:26:44
we get this genius. We put the name of

00:26:47
the website. We created a website could

00:26:49
so people could buy the book. We put the

00:26:51
name of the website at the back of the

00:26:53
book.

00:26:55
I mean think about the genius, right?

00:26:57
And and so it turned into word of mouth.

00:27:00
13 months we shipped 1.1 million copies

00:27:04
of the shack and then it blew up. Hashet

00:27:07
the publishing company got involved. It

00:27:10
just became this thing in the world and

00:27:13
uh so somewhere like it's north of 25

00:27:16
million or something like that and um

00:27:21
it it is as surreal today. But here's

00:27:23
the impact.

00:27:25
All the things that mattered to me were

00:27:28
in place before I wrote.

00:27:31
Um, and and that includes identity and

00:27:34
worth and value and significance and

00:27:36
security, meaning, community, all those

00:27:40
things that matter were in place. And

00:27:42
I'm so grateful for that because I the

00:27:45
way I grew up, I had such a sucking

00:27:47
wound that would have taken any of those

00:27:49
things and I'd placed them right inside

00:27:51
of a book or inside of success and it

00:27:55
would have just ripped through my

00:27:56
relationships in in not good ways.

00:27:59
But because they were in place, I can

00:28:01
say that the only real gift that the

00:28:06
shaq gave to to me and my family and my

00:28:09
friends was that I get a constant

00:28:12
invitation to walk on the holy ground of

00:28:14
other people's stories

00:28:16
cuz people write me and beautiful

00:28:20
responses to how this little book has

00:28:24
ripped into some of the dark places in

00:28:26
their souls and some of the some of the

00:28:29
transformation formational kinds of

00:28:30
things. That's holy ground. Every human

00:28:33
being is holy ground. There's a burning

00:28:35
bush. Yeah. And uh but the beautiful

00:28:38
thing about that burning bush that comes

00:28:40
from Moses' experience in the wilderness

00:28:42
is that it burns away everything that is

00:28:45
not of love's kind. Leave leaving and

00:28:48
exposing everything that is everything

00:28:51
that keeps us from being fully human and

00:28:54
fully alive gets destroyed in the

00:28:56
process of of human growth and uh the

00:29:00
healing of all the things that that kept

00:29:03
us from being fully human and fully

00:29:05
alive. And uh so that's

00:29:10
you know

00:29:12
I'm grateful for it. My identity is not

00:29:14
in it. I don't need it. um don't need a

00:29:17
movie uh don't need all all those things

00:29:21
which are temporary in this world and

00:29:24
valued by this world not the eternal

00:29:26
things like relationship and love and

00:29:29
transformation and wholeness but the

00:29:32
things which are valued because the

00:29:34
world values them they are basically

00:29:38
what's called unrighteous wealth

00:29:40
and uh and unrighteous wealth is is to

00:29:45
be utilized for the sake of the other,

00:29:48
not for the sake of the self, not for

00:29:49
self-p protection, not for

00:29:51
self-promotion, not for identity, not

00:29:53
for worth. If you do that, you're just,

00:29:55
you know, covering your ass. And uh it's

00:29:58
all self-centered. But when it's used

00:30:00
for the sake of the other, it doesn't

00:30:03
change that the wealth is still

00:30:04
unrighteous,

00:30:06
but it allows us

00:30:09
to to uh not manipulate. What's a good

00:30:14
word? It allows us to utilize those

00:30:18
things which really have no true value

00:30:22
for the sake of the other. Other

00:30:25
centered, self-giving, co-suffering,

00:30:28
radically forgiving ways that can then

00:30:32
ripple into the world and change things

00:30:34
for the good. And I absolutely believe

00:30:37
that. I believe every person at the core

00:30:39
of their being is good, not evil. I

00:30:42
think evil is always a a tearing down or

00:30:45
an attempt to cover what has been good

00:30:48
from the beginning and uh and I see that

00:30:51
in every person that I meet.

00:30:53
Well, it's a fascinating story because

00:30:55
like you said, 25 million books sold,

00:30:58
right? And and you didn't need that for

00:31:00
sure because you'd already accomplished

00:31:02
what you wanted setting out before any

00:31:04
of that happened.

00:31:06
But then to see the blessing it turned

00:31:07
out to be is really cool. And then you

00:31:12
said you don't need a movie, but then

00:31:14
about hund00 million dollars later of a

00:31:17
movie that that does amazing at the box

00:31:20
office and then impacts lives for years

00:31:22
to come. How did the movie come about?

00:31:25
Well, the guys that created the little

00:31:28
publishing house from the very beginning

00:31:30
wanted to make a movie that and and that

00:31:33
was their their desire. And we published

00:31:36
the book because if basically if you can

00:31:40
get Hollywood

00:31:42
um if you can sell a 100,000 copies,

00:31:44
Hollywood will want to talk to you.

00:31:46
Somebody will, especially in this age

00:31:47
where content is becoming king, at least

00:31:50
for a while. And um and so that was the

00:31:53
goal. We were hoping to get through

00:31:54
10,000 copies in two years and then up

00:31:56
to a 100,000 in five years. And then and

00:31:59
you have to realize I knew nothing about

00:32:01
any of this stuff. Not about movies, not

00:32:04
about publishing, not about being a

00:32:05
writer, any of that stuff. And uh so I'm

00:32:08
like, okay. I mean, you live in the

00:32:10
moment's grace.

00:32:12
You don't you're not freaking out about

00:32:16
outcomes, you know? So So I'm like,

00:32:19
okay. And uh it came a point where

00:32:24
I had I had all the rights to the films

00:32:26
and all and and all that but they had

00:32:28
the desire and I thought and I told him

00:32:31
from the beginning I'll I'll give you

00:32:33
the movie but there was a timing to it

00:32:36
and I think there's always a timing to

00:32:38
our lives where we recognize and if I

00:32:40
had listened to Kim more

00:32:44
I'd have done so much better in my life

00:32:46
about a lot of things. I think women

00:32:49
generally speaking have great [ __ ]

00:32:52
detectors and um and red flags about

00:32:56
something that's not right and and but

00:32:59
there is a timing to relationships and

00:33:01
there is a timing to choices and uh

00:33:04
there came a time where it was the right

00:33:07
thing to do to give away the movie to

00:33:09
them and that's what I did and I gave

00:33:12
away all creative control all uh income

00:33:15
from it all uh uh rights to it and it

00:33:19
was by far the right choice within the

00:33:22
context of the timing that it was and

00:33:24
then I didn't expect to be involved and

00:33:26
I got invited to be involved many many

00:33:29
ways in many many times and it was

00:33:32
absolutely a gift and a joy for me but

00:33:35
again when you when you learn to live

00:33:38
without expectations everything becomes

00:33:40
a gift and uh

00:33:42
so you know it's a beautiful movie they

00:33:44
did a great job and I'm so grateful that

00:33:47
it exists this. But people would say to

00:33:49
me, what if they make a really crappy

00:33:51
movie? And I'm like, you know, if the

00:33:56
purposes of God are such that more will

00:33:58
be accomplished by a crappy movie in

00:34:00
people's lives,

00:34:02
I'm in. I'm in. because I don't I don't

00:34:05
need a great movie

00:34:08
to build my my true

00:34:13
wealth,

00:34:14
you know, the love and relationships,

00:34:17
the authenticity, being a trutht teller,

00:34:20
being kind, you know, the the things

00:34:23
that actually matter. But creativity is

00:34:26
incredibly cool. I love beauty. I love

00:34:28
art. I think it sneaks past our watchful

00:34:31
dragons. um they have a way to our to

00:34:34
our heart in a way that that blossoms

00:34:38
and we might try to shut it down but we

00:34:41
all get touched by something you know

00:34:43
child's smile a sunset looking over a

00:34:47
canyon um watching dance watching a good

00:34:52
film and uh reading a great book

00:34:57
listening to poetry I don't know there's

00:34:59
a bazillion things that that enter in

00:35:02
and begin to whisper to us that there's

00:35:04
more there's there's more real than what

00:35:08
we may be participating in. Well, you

00:35:11
talk about timing and almost this

00:35:13
perfect or providential timing of how

00:35:15
all that came to be. Uh I find it

00:35:18
interesting and one of the one of the

00:35:20
things I was most excited about to have

00:35:22
you on is the timing of later this year

00:35:26
uh return to the show.

00:35:28
Yes. what made you finally go back to

00:35:31
the shack and like just share some of

00:35:33
that journey?

00:35:34
Yeah. 20 years later, right? 18 from

00:35:37
when it when we've printed it. Um and

00:35:40
people would ask me, "Do you think

00:35:42
you'll ever write a sequel for The

00:35:43
Shack?" And I'd go, "No, I doubt it." I

00:35:46
mean, how do you write a sequel for The

00:35:47
Shack? If any one out there is familiar

00:35:50
with it, it is such a broad spectrum of

00:35:56
conversations about so many things that

00:35:58
are important and uh and it's like h and

00:36:03
I don't think you can write a sequel for

00:36:04
the shack, you know, it's it's not going

00:36:06
to it's it's not and you don't want it

00:36:09
to compare or compete. That's a that's a

00:36:11
scarcity mindset. And um when you when

00:36:14
you have a scarcity mindset about the

00:36:16
world, you're always going to end up in

00:36:18
violence and fear is going to be your

00:36:19
motivator. When you have an abundance,

00:36:21
like you know, creativity has no limits

00:36:24
and um and you don't need to compare and

00:36:27
compete at all. It's about

00:36:29
community and cooperation and those

00:36:31
kinds of things. And that's that's

00:36:34
pushed forward. The motivator is love.

00:36:36
And uh so I'm not I'm not afraid to have

00:36:40
written something that that uh is 20

00:36:44
years more mature cuz I'm 20 years more

00:36:46
mature. It started with this. I told you

00:36:50
I have a bunch of friends on death row

00:36:52
and without them this the sequel would

00:36:55
not exist. Um, that happened because a

00:36:59
friend of mine in in Nashville said,

00:37:01
"Hey, there's a guy on death row who's

00:37:03
been absolutely

00:37:05
impacted and transformed by the shack.

00:37:08
If I buy a copy, would you sign it and I

00:37:11
can take it in?" And I said, "No."

00:37:14
I said, "But you can buy the book and

00:37:17
I'll sign it, but I'll give it to him.

00:37:20
Get me in." And that's how my

00:37:22
relationship with Terry King began. And

00:37:24
then Ron Cawthorne was there and then it

00:37:27
be just it just blew from there. It was

00:37:29
never a religious thing or a ministry or

00:37:32
although

00:37:34
God bless the people that are involved

00:37:36
in those kinds of kindnesses

00:37:39
but it was just a relational building

00:37:42
kind of thing. Um, so

00:37:46
it's been nine years now that I've known

00:37:48
these these brothers and uh and they

00:37:51
really are they all come from different

00:37:54
walks. Um, most of them like Terry's

00:37:57
been in on death row for 43 years. Uh,

00:38:01
KB and Akquil for 33 years. Um, while

00:38:05
I've been there, there have been four

00:38:07
four men exonerated because of DNA

00:38:09
evidence. One of them had been on death

00:38:11
row for 41 years.

00:38:13
And uh and yet I've had I've had um just

00:38:18
in 25 I've had three of my friends

00:38:20
executed. Um one one the day before my

00:38:24
dad's birthday and uh and

00:38:30
you know

00:38:32
I didn't write a book to um try to build

00:38:36
an agenda against the death penalty

00:38:38
although I abhore it. Um, I don't think

00:38:41
justice is ever done by killing another

00:38:43
person's life. Most people don't know

00:38:45
that cause of death when someone's

00:38:46
executed is listed as homicide. And um,

00:38:50
and there's a 10% error rate that's

00:38:53
known. It may be way higher than that,

00:38:56
but I'm I'm not willing to live when it

00:39:00
comes to human beings with a 10% error

00:39:03
rate. And um and no, there is there are

00:39:08
so much more restorative and these guys

00:39:10
have worked hard, learned, and they're

00:39:12
not transforming their lives because

00:39:15
they hope for a better outcome. You

00:39:17
know, but like Terry said to me the

00:39:19
other day, he said, "All of the guys on

00:39:21
death row, we have a basis for

00:39:24
relationship because we all have the

00:39:25
same sentence,

00:39:27
you know, here we are, but our prison is

00:39:30
obvious." That's one of the other guys.

00:39:33
Our prison is obvious. So many people

00:39:35
out there outside these ball bars and

00:39:38
this concrete,

00:39:40
they don't know, they don't recognize

00:39:42
the prisons that they're in, some of

00:39:43
which we've already talked about. And uh

00:39:46
so my relationship has grown. They have

00:39:49
they have called me when I've been

00:39:51
through really hard times and helped me

00:39:54
walk through things. You know, they sent

00:39:56
me this absolutely beautiful card after

00:39:58
my dad had been buried and I got back

00:40:00
down to where we live. And uh

00:40:04
it's um it's it's I those guys are more

00:40:08
free than most people I know. And I've

00:40:11
taken other friends in there and these

00:40:13
guys have just blown them away by the

00:40:15
quality of persons they are, by the

00:40:18
freedom that they have inside of

00:40:20
concrete and steel. And uh

00:40:24
so I start thinking, wait a minute, in

00:40:27
the shack I've got um I've got a serial

00:40:30
killer.

00:40:31
What if he ended up on death row where

00:40:33
my friends are?

00:40:35
And um and that started

00:40:39
Mac has forgiven him, but it's one thing

00:40:43
to forgive an idea of a person. What if

00:40:46
what if you have to actually be in front

00:40:49
of the person who did such a horrendous

00:40:52
thing? And and killing of people is a

00:40:55
horrendous thing. Um and the guys on

00:40:58
death row, they don't they don't make

00:41:00
light of that at all. They embrace the

00:41:02
consequences of their choices. And

00:41:04
there's hell as part of that. And I'm

00:41:07
not talking eternal conscious torment,

00:41:08
religious hell, which I don't believe

00:41:11
in, but um I'm talking about the hell of

00:41:14
dealing with your own consequences of

00:41:16
the choices you've made. And um and so

00:41:22
the more I worked on it, the more it

00:41:24
began to form. And last uh last November

00:41:29
uh November 25, I started putting pen to

00:41:32
paper and it and it just it just showed

00:41:35
up. Um and I'm so grateful for it. It is

00:41:39
25 years more mature, but it is

00:41:42
different. But you don't have to have

00:41:43
read the shack in order to read return

00:41:46
to the shack. And the subtitle is uh a

00:41:49
journey into redemption. It's it turned

00:41:53
out beautiful. And that's not a

00:41:54
marketing statement. It's a it's a Paul

00:41:58
Young who's thrilled about giving birth

00:42:01
to another baby. That

00:42:04
is I know totally biased. I get it. But

00:42:07
I I love it. My friends who have read

00:42:09
it, pre-eread it, they love it. And uh

00:42:14
some of them say, you know, we kind of

00:42:16
like this better than The Shack. And I

00:42:17
go, well, it's because you read The

00:42:18
Shack. You know, you have a you have a

00:42:20
context to say that. And uh but you

00:42:24
know, it's an adventure. We'll see how

00:42:26
it spills out. I I write for my kids. I

00:42:29
write for my family. And I write for the

00:42:31
one. And sometimes I'm the one. But I

00:42:34
write for the one out there

00:42:37
who is who feels the burden of the

00:42:39
brokenness of the world as well as

00:42:41
perhaps their own life.

00:42:43
And uh and and I want to give a voice. I

00:42:47
want to say to that person,

00:42:50
I see you.

00:42:52
I see you in the midst of the billions

00:42:54
of people, you know. Um, I have no

00:42:58
expectations.

00:43:00
Everything apart this journey becomes a

00:43:02
gift. And, uh, I don't need it. I don't

00:43:06
need the book. I don't need the movie. I

00:43:08
don't need the shack. I don't I am

00:43:11
thrilled with the process and the

00:43:13
spilling out of what what it's done in

00:43:17
the world, but fundamentally it's

00:43:18
unrighteous wealth. But I'm thrilled

00:43:21
with the way that it has

00:43:24
has has become useful for the sake of

00:43:27
the healing of hearts and the healing of

00:43:30
relationships. Yeah. So, I'm excited

00:43:32
about it. Thank you. This is a this is a

00:43:34
galley copy, which means you can't buy

00:43:36
it.

00:43:37
I think people are going to be excited.

00:43:39
I'm and I'm I'm excited. It's It's not

00:43:41
that I'm like some stoic person back

00:43:44
here doing holy things. Um I'm thrilled

00:43:47
about it and uh I'm thrilled about

00:43:52
a lot of things. I I live a life

00:43:57
fundamentally of gratitude

00:43:59
because you look at my history and and

00:44:01
you look at the things that I've done

00:44:02
that is harmful.

00:44:06
I feel that suffering. I don't feel it

00:44:09
as woundedness anymore,

00:44:12
but I but the healthier I I am moving

00:44:16
into more health that I'm moving into,

00:44:18
the more sensitive I am about minor

00:44:21
deviations of harm and of evil. And I I

00:44:25
constantly have to watch words that I

00:44:27
use that I've never thought about that

00:44:29
actually hurt people. And I don't want

00:44:33
to participate in harm. I I get

00:44:36
triggered and stuff like that, but it's

00:44:37
not I recognize that when I do, I tend

00:44:41
to um participate in evil of some sort

00:44:44
and it's time to ask for forgiveness or

00:44:48
you know when somebody tries to harm me

00:44:50
or my family or you know I get I get

00:44:53
called a few names mostly by my own

00:44:55
people and uh not my family but my

00:44:58
religious history people. um but to

00:45:02
extend forgiveness

00:45:04
and uh

00:45:06
we live in a world that needs as much of

00:45:08
that as we can

00:45:10
that we can participate in. Well, this

00:45:13
is where and I told you outside of

00:45:15
recording this podcast, I'm definitely

00:45:17
going to want you back, especially when

00:45:19
this comes out because I think what a

00:45:22
lot of people will realize when they

00:45:24
actually start reading this is that

00:45:27
everyone can relate to feeling wronged

00:45:29
by another person in some deep harmful

00:45:32
ways.

00:45:32
Yeah.

00:45:33
But sometimes uh it's so easy to look at

00:45:36
that and not realize the harm you may

00:45:37
have caused other people around you as

00:45:39
well. And uh just wrestling with that

00:45:42
and wrestling with well if I know

00:45:44
forgiveness is right and I know uh

00:45:48
reconciliation is the right thing to try

00:45:50
to pursue. Um

00:45:53
but then I've got this wrong that's been

00:45:54
done that I can't let go of or that I

00:45:56
thought I already let go of. Like just

00:45:58
yeah

00:45:58
being able to talk through that in a lot

00:46:00
of detail. I'm I'm super excited to read

00:46:02
it and uh and to have you back on.

00:46:05
Oh can't wait. I can't wait. Chris, I'd

00:46:08
love to be back on just to just to talk

00:46:10
to you. You don't even have to record

00:46:11
it.

00:46:13
Well, here here's what I want to do. I

00:46:15
want to finish for those listening with

00:46:17
10 rapid fire questions.

00:46:19
Say the first thing that comes to mind,

00:46:21
no wrong answer.

00:46:23
Okay, fire away.

00:46:24
Who is the first person you think of

00:46:27
when I say servant leadership?

00:46:29
Oh, well, Jesus, of course. There's no

00:46:33
no question.

00:46:34
Five words that most describe you.

00:46:38
Five.

00:46:41
Most describe me now.

00:46:43
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

00:46:45
Creative,

00:46:47
kind,

00:46:49
gentle, trustworthy,

00:46:53
and good.

00:46:55
Those are good. All right. Favorite

00:46:57
author or book?

00:47:02
George McDonald. One of my favorite

00:47:04
authors. and uh um probably

00:47:10
unspoken sermons, creation and Christ.

00:47:14
And uh you you'll want to get the non

00:47:17
brogue Scottish uh Scottish one. Look

00:47:20
look for one that has been um edited

00:47:23
into something a little more English.

00:47:26
Yeah. All right. Favorite food?

00:47:30
often it's the one that is in front of

00:47:32
me, but probably vanilla ice cream.

00:47:36
That's good. Favorite thing to do in

00:47:38
your free time?

00:47:40
Play with my grandbabies.

00:47:41
Wow. And you've got a lot of them.

00:47:44
I do.

00:47:44
Uh what's what's a surprising fact about

00:47:46
you?

00:47:48
I grew up in Cannibal Valley.

00:47:50
Wow, that's crazy. All right. Where's

00:47:53
your favorite place you've ever been?

00:47:57
And you're talking geographic.

00:48:00
You could take it any way you want.

00:48:06
Holding a new baby.

00:48:08
Wow. I love that. Uh, where's a place

00:48:12
you want to go that you have not been to

00:48:14
yet?

00:48:16
Um, Maine, just because it's the only

00:48:20
state I haven't been in.

00:48:22
All right. Best advice you've ever

00:48:24
received.

00:48:30
Ask for help.

00:48:33
All right. And finally,

00:48:36
why should people care about becoming

00:48:38
better servant leaders?

00:48:43
Because at the end of your life, you

00:48:45
will know you've lived a good life.

00:48:49
Wow. That's so good. Well, Paul, thank

00:48:52
you for being on. Thank you for riding

00:48:54
the shack. I know it's been a blessing

00:48:56
to so many people. Uh, and I know you

00:48:58
didn't even need that, but thank you,

00:49:00
uh, because it is awesome.

00:49:01
You're welcome. I'm thrilled to

00:49:03
participate. Much love to you, Chris.

00:49:06
Thank you for listening to this episode

00:49:08
of the Servant Leadership Podcast. If

00:49:10
you enjoyed what you heard, please give

00:49:12
it a thumbs up and leave a comment

00:49:14
below. Don't forget to subscribe and hit

00:49:18
the notification bell to never miss an

00:49:20
update. Be sure to check out the servant

00:49:22
leadership podcast.org for more updates

00:49:24
and additional bonus content.

Back To Top