Archive for June, 2009

Review: Simple Church by Rainer and Geiger

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

If you’ve spent much time in a medium size to larger church, then simplicity begins to sound very good.
Simple Church, by Thom S. Rainer and Eric Geiger
But simplicity is neither easy nor cost-free according to the authors of Simple Church: Returning to God’s Process for Making Disciples (Broadman & Holman, 2006, ISBN 0805443908, hardback, 257 pages), by Thom S. Rainer and
Eric Geiger.

Thom Rainer, Ph.D., is a church consultant as well as president and CEO of the LifeWay Christian Resources, the publishing arm of the Southern Baptists. Geiger is a young researcher. In a study of over 400 churches from a variety of evangelical denominations in 37 states, the authors determined that the healthiest churches in America tend to have a simple process for making disciples.

It’s easy to misunderstand this book and think that it’s about simplifying church life. That’s not the point. It’s about defining and then implementing a simple, clearly-stated process of making disciples. This isn’t a book about doctrine or style or denomination or church size. It’s a book about clarity concerning the process of making disciples.

Here is the authors’ definition:

"A simple church is a congregation designed around a straight-forward and strategic process that moves people through stages of spiritual growth."

In other words, this is a strategic process tied carefully to the purpose or the vision of the church.

This isn’t a book about developing a purpose statement, however. It is about developing a process statement — describing a sequential process of making disciples that intentionally moves people from one stage of discipleship to another. From the examples in the book, it’s likely that a church’s process will have 3 or 4 steps or stages.

To be most effective, say the authors, the discipleship process have four elements:

Clarity — the ability of the process to be communicated and understood by people. The authors recommend that either a metaphor or visual diagram by used to illustrate the process so that it is clear. The most famous example of such a process diagram and metaphor, of course, is Rick Warren’s baseball diamond with four bases that people move around.

Movement — the sequential steps in the process that cause people to move to greater areas of commitment. Here is where the authors’ concept varies from a purpose statement (which focuses on the result) or an entry-points diagram (which focuses on doors through which people come into fellowship with a congregation).

Alignment — the arrangement of all ministries and staff around the same simple processes. Instead of each ministry doing its own thing in its own way, the same processes guide each ministry.

Focus — the commitment to abandon everything that falls outside of the simple ministry process. Here’s the hard part for most churches, getting rid of sacred cows that don’t contribute to the discipleship process. But the result of the pain of discarding the non-essentials is a leaner, simpler, more effective, more vibrant congregation.

This isn’t simplicity for simplicity’s sake. It is simplicity in order to be effective in making disciples. I think that the concepts of Simple Church are exciting and powerful. For those churches that will discipline their life and ministry using these guidelines — embracing all the struggle and change that this will involve — there is a great deal of hope for vitality and health.

Strongly recommended.

A Place at the Table: George Eldon Ladd

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

A Place at the Table by John A. D'EliaI just finished John A. D’Elia, A Place at the Table: George Eldon Ladd and the Rehabilitation of Evangelical Scholarship in America (Oxford, 2008; ISBN 0195341678, hardcover, 271 pages).

I was a student of Dr. Ladd’s from 1973-1976, during his final three years of active teaching at Fuller Theological Seminary before retirement. He profoundly influenced my understanding of the New Testament and challenged me to grow both in faith and in a critical examination of the text. He even paid me the compliment of suggesting that I pursue graduate studies at the University of Heidelberg — a direction I did not pursue.

I found A Place at the Table at once fascinating, insightful, and sad. Ladd’s brilliant mind and quest for Christ-honoring scholarship was crippled by his emotional weaknesses and personal demons.

I came away from the book with a renewed awareness that we ourselves are often not capable of assessing our impact. We’re often discouraged, sometimes in despair. Ladd saw himself as a failure, but God used him and still uses his influence to bring evangelical scholarship to a new level — and touch many lives through the preaching and teaching of those he trained. God’s plans for our lives are often not our own — and God is quite able to use us in spite of ourselves.

“Bella” (2006) has a powerful pro-life message

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Bella (2009)I recently watched “Bella” (2006), an independent film that I found well-acted, moving, and with a strong pro-life theme.

Nina, an unmarried waitress, is fired from her job shortly after finding out that she is pregnant. The chef, whose brother owns the restaurant, takes the day off to be with her. It isn’t a story of romance so much as a story about love and caring for another human being.

This isn’t your typical “Christian” film, with all the predictable syurpy dialog that I associate with some I’ve seen. In “Bella” you’re seeing the grit and pain of real life. However, the filmmakers are committed Catholic Christians. The production company is named Metanoia Films. (Metanoia means “repentance” in Greek.) And the message of love, healing, and redemption comes through loud and clear — though unexpectedly.

The movie stars Tammy Blanchard and Eduardo Verástegui, actors I had never heard of, who did a very convincing job with their parts. Verástegui is also part owner of Metanoia Films.

“Hollywood belongs to God,” said Verástegui in an interview.” And we need to take it back. And that’s what I’m trying to do, by example first, trying my best every day to be involved in projects that will inspire people to use their talents to do something positive for the world.”

I recommend “Bella” to you as a DVD worth renting and watching. It is rated PG.