Multi-award-winning singer/songwriter/recording artist and college professor, Dr. Jason Lee McKinney, has added "author" to his list of accomplishments with the unveiling of his debut book, Deconstructing a Disciple's Doubt, recently released to retail from WordCrafts Press.
Perhaps better known as the founder and frontman for the acclaimed Americana roots band that shares his name, McKinney has spent more than a decade cementing a reputation for himself and The Jason Lee McKinney Band in the competitive world of modern-day roots music, resulting in worldwide recognition, national and international tours, and a number of industry awards, including a 2021 Josie Music Award for R&B/Soul Entertainer of the Year, a 2019 Josie Music Award for R&B/Soul Vocalist of the Year, and a 2014 Independent Country Music Association Award for Artist of the Year.
McKinney's independent artistic creativity drove him to pursue multiple academic degrees, including a BA in Management, an MBA, an MA in Philosophy and Apologetics, and an Ed.D. in Leadership and Professional Practice.
"I have spent most of my adult life working in the creative realm as a songwriter and performer," says McKinney. "We creatives tend to wonder and wander. We are natural rebels who buck against the trend and trite."
"We approach the well-worn and trodden paths with suspicion," McKinney continues. "All humans ask the big questions, but songwriters hold a mirror of the big questions back at humanity. I have both picked the big questions apart and been paralyzingly plagued by them. Art articulates the soul, and music muses on the meaning of life. Philosophy is intrinsic to the songwriter; I just decided to expand my philosophical positing and prose beyond the confines of 3-minute rhythm and rhyme."
The result of McKinney's expanded philosophical positing and prose is his new book, Deconstructing a Disciple's Doubt, a philosophy book for philosophy students, lay philosophers, non-philosophers, and people who can't even spell philosopher. It's a book for people who ask big questions like, "What is the true nature of truth? Is there such a thing as evil? Is there truly a difference between the world's religions?"
"Deconstructing a Disciple's Doubt is for doubting Thomases and denying Peters," McKinney explains. "It's for atheists whose fondest memories are of their devout grandmothers reading them the old stories of the faith. It's for the believer who does not understand for the life of them why certain things appear to be the way they are. It's for the atheist who understands why their friend has faith, and it is for the friend who understands how someone could be an atheist. I wrote this book for the wonderers and wanderers--those who not only doubt but are brave enough or plagued enough to doubt everything. This book is absolutely for those who doubt their doubt."
Although written for a lay audience, McKinney admits the language in this book may at times get a bit technical for non-philosophers, but he also acknowledges that the concepts being addressed are big, and to speak to them with any sort of intellectual currency, the precision of language is vital. He defines each of the technical words in plain language, providing context, analogy, analysis, and metaphor to ease understanding. To illustrate the concepts, he inserts dialogue from movie and TV scenes, along with his own song lyrics and QR codes to the songs. "I promise this is not an ego play, just hopefully an aid in helping you understand," he quips.
McKinney freely admits that those with academic training in philosophy or theology may view the book as pop philosophy due to the numerous movie quotes and song lyrics and the many simple anecdotes from his life. "But," he notes, "the aim of this book is not for philosophers and theologians. The aim of this book is for the average person who still asks and is kept up late at night by the big questions. I wrote this book, not from the position of someone who knows it all (or even knows much at all) but rather as one humble offering of one person's experience of having intellectual, emotional, and spiritual doubts. Through my many deconstructions and reconstructions, I have re-found, rebuilt, and reclaimed my faith again and again, though not without change, transformation, and scars. I wrote this book to help others like me, and I sincerely hope it does."
For more information about Dr. McKinney, his debut book, Deconstructing a Disciple's Doubt, and One Last Thing, his recently-released 11th studio album with The Jason Lee McKinney Band, visit jasonleemckinneyband.com.