Friday, August 17, 2012
Activate: An Entirely New Approach to Small Groups
Activate: An Entirely New Approach to Small Groups by Nelson Searcy and Thomas Kerrick is not a book for everyone. The last few months I have been devouring books on small groups. I certainly haven't read everything there is to read but I've had a pretty good sampling. This book is really a nuts and bolts kind of book about how to oversee a small group church ministry. Like any good church publication they have a catchy alliterative hook: Focus, Form, Fill and Facilitate. Their small groups fun in semesters and very little of it was applicable to the church where I serve. What I did like about the book was how detailed their administrative approach to small groups was. Ideally every church member had a small group leader, each small group leader had someone they were accountable to, and each of those folks was accountable to the small group minister, the only paid staff member of the bunch. I also liked how each level of the small group system only had four responsibilities. They weren't trying to overload anyone in the system with tasks. So.....if you share my passion for the logistics of small group ministry, maybe worth a read, if not, not.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
The God Who is There by Francis Schaeffer
As promised, I finally finished The God Who is There by Francis Schaeffer. This was a really tough read. This book is part of Schaeffer's work that looks at a Christian view of Philosophy and Culture. It was written in 1968 so it does feel a little dated. The book is primarily about how Christianity is different from post-modernism.
It begins by examining philosophy, art, music and general culture and showing how they have progressed to a place where there are no absolutes anymore. In postmodernism the opposite of right is not necessarily wrong. Schaeffer then looks at how postmodernism has effected theology and the liberalization of theology. Next he points out how historic Christianity looks nothing like "postmodern" Christianity. That historic Christianity actually has answers to people's questions about the meaning of life and what people are for. That people's questions like these are where we meet people as we "pre-evangelize" them. He describes taking people's roofs off and exposing how their relativistic philosophy does not match the reality of God's world around them. Finally, he explores what Christian's demonstrating the character of the God who is there should look like.
A difficult read. I'm going to keep reading the rest of the complete works, but unless you are particularly interested in philosophy I might pass on this one
It begins by examining philosophy, art, music and general culture and showing how they have progressed to a place where there are no absolutes anymore. In postmodernism the opposite of right is not necessarily wrong. Schaeffer then looks at how postmodernism has effected theology and the liberalization of theology. Next he points out how historic Christianity looks nothing like "postmodern" Christianity. That historic Christianity actually has answers to people's questions about the meaning of life and what people are for. That people's questions like these are where we meet people as we "pre-evangelize" them. He describes taking people's roofs off and exposing how their relativistic philosophy does not match the reality of God's world around them. Finally, he explores what Christian's demonstrating the character of the God who is there should look like.
A difficult read. I'm going to keep reading the rest of the complete works, but unless you are particularly interested in philosophy I might pass on this one
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Jesus + Nothing = Everything by Tullian Tchividjian
This short book by Tullian Tchividjian was written as he was recovering from taking over D. James Kennedy's pulpit in Fort Lauderdale. Dr. Kennedy was a giant of a pastor, very politically and theologically conservative. Mr Tchividjian is a much younger, hipper pastor who had recently started a church plant in FL. Coral Ridge convinced him to combine the two congregations and things went sideways fast. This book is what came from that experience. For any of us who think anything but Jesus is important, this book has much to say. By making Jesus everything, we have everything that we need. I've read several books recently that try to unpack the gospel, I think this was the best of them.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
A Scandalous Freedom by Steve Brown
Very rarely does a book just upend your view of God and the Christian life. This is one of those books. A Scandalous Freedom is about just that, freedom in Christ that much of the world is going to find scandalous. Dr Brown's thesis is that we are truly free in Christ and that Christian leaders and plain old Christians spend a lot of their time stealing other Christian's freedoms. The point of freedom is not "freedom, but... " If there is a but, it's not really freedom.
How many of us have heard we need to limit our freedom to safeguard weaker brothers. Yeah, I know Paul said it, but he said it for a particular situation. If I know my brother is on a diet I shouldn't scarf down a sundae in front of him, but that doesn't mean I can never eat sundaes because someone around me might be on a diet.
Through the whole book I kept saying to myself how bad I want this to be true. 43 years of teaching kept whispering in my mind that this was antinomian. At the end of the book I was confused, but you know what, I felt a little free-er.
How many of us have heard we need to limit our freedom to safeguard weaker brothers. Yeah, I know Paul said it, but he said it for a particular situation. If I know my brother is on a diet I shouldn't scarf down a sundae in front of him, but that doesn't mean I can never eat sundaes because someone around me might be on a diet.
Through the whole book I kept saying to myself how bad I want this to be true. 43 years of teaching kept whispering in my mind that this was antinomian. At the end of the book I was confused, but you know what, I felt a little free-er.
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