Monday, June 30, 2014

Jesus and Women | The God of Missional Grace


The narrative of the Samaritan woman is a story of a broken heart and a broken soul. She represents a broken people living in a broken land. John 4 shares how Jesus makes his way into all of this brokenness and displays one of the millions of reasons why we can say that God is a missional God.
 
In perhaps one of the most well known portions of the Bible Jesus makes his way into a land that was expressly avoided by good Jewish people. He was not afraid to go into places of need, places that other people avoided. Why would he go there? Simply, because God loves Samaritans. Not because they deserve love but because God is a God of grace. How ironic that a people who celebrated God choosing them would try to withhold him from others. How much more ironic that many try to do the same today.

In Samaria, Jesus comes to an interaction with a woman that has come to the well at midday. She comes at a time of low social interaction around the well. She is about to be surprised. The interaction with Jesus displays at least two things: One, this woman is deeply affected by sin and shame. She had been married many times before and she was still not done (she lived with another man). These attempts at "fixing" her deepest needs with these poor substitutes had taken its toll on her life. The second display is the need for a better reality. She needed something more real that what she thought was real. Relationships are real. They cause hurt and pain and longing and despair. Relationship without foundation and purpose becomes a cheap alternative to the real thing. Reconciled relationship with the Father of all things is what makes real, become real. She interacted with Jesus over her sin and shame and water. She found grace that addressed all of these. She found a satisfaction for her real thirst.

The grace of Jesus Christ doesn't stop with this woman. Even the confused disciples needed the missional grace of God. Why? Well, because they did not understand mission...at all. So Jesus explains to them the mission that he is on. They got it. Well, maybe not right away but in the book of Acts we find Peter and John back in Samaria, back among these people, preaching, laying hands on them, and praying for them to know the love of Jesus by grace through faith. They were unaware at the time that they met this Samaritan woman how this missional grace would change their future. But eventually they got it...by God's grace we will too.

Finally, the missional grace of God becomes contagious. Grace is like that. This woman declares that she is known. She calls the people that she purposely avoided to come to know the one that knows her. What good news! You are known. Really known. Known by grace. Known for all of your faults...failures...shame...guilt...and yet...grace. Grace that moves toward you. Grace that steps into your mess. This grace is overwhelming to those that know the depths of their failure. This grace is life-giving to those that have failed at life.

Here, with this woman that is not known by name... not pictured or described... just a nameless, faceless woman, the savior of the world declares his mission of grace, openly, for the first time. The cosmic purposes of God, that have been millennia in the making, collide here...in Samaria...with this woman...such amazing grace.

When Jesus was moved to mission, even mission to people unlike himself, he did not pack up his stuff and move to a new country. He did not buy a house in Samaria. He did not stop doing all that he had been doing in his life before this time to make room for mission. Why do we?

Why do we feel that mission is moving? Or mission is special training? Or that mission is something foreign and forced? Mission is meeting. Meeting people that God is calling and sharing with them cosmic moments of God's amazing grace. They are your neighbors, friends, acquaintances, and even strangers...for now. God's grace transforms us all into his adopted children.

We have people all around us that are broken and seeking to quench an unquenchable thirst with water that will never suffice.

Pray that our hearts are ripped by grace.

Pray that we step out of our patterns and see the people that God is calling all around us.

Pray that we equip and encourage one another to offer living water.

Pray we follow Jesus, the face of the God of missional grace.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Book Review: Gospel-Centered Teaching

I have heard Jonah described as a hero, read lessons that called us to be “brave like David”, and heard mothers lamenting the rebellion of their children calmed with the counsel that “if you train them up in the Lord, then they will not turn from him.” For years I cringed as I taught children’s ministry and fought against the moralistic preaching and teaching that is so common in this modern application of the church.



So when I received the book by Trevin Wax, Gospel-Centered Teaching: Showing Christ in All of Scripture I was hopeful and expectant. I was looking for a tool that I can hand to people looking to teach the Scripture. I was hoping that he would punch the moralistic deism out of many of my Baptist brothers and sisters. I was not disappointed.

This book hits the teaching of the message right on the head. He takes on the “moralistic therapeutic deism” that so many teachers and preachers use to move their people along in their faith and he tactfully replaces these methods with sound, solid, and majestic proclamation of the person of Jesus Christ.

Every teacher of the Bible should read this book for the way to share the message of the Gospel in the context of preaching and teaching. Although, to be fair, Wax applies his presentation to teaching small groups or classes it could also be applied more broadly to any proclamation about the Bible.

Wax orders his book on three questions that every teacher should be asking about the passage that they are presenting:

1. How does this topic/passage fit into the big story of Scripture?
2. What is distinctly Christian about the way that I am addressing the topic/passage?
3. How does this truth equip God’s church to live on mission?

Wax leads the teacher through each of these questions and prepares the teacher well for taking solid biblical and Christ-centered lessons into the lives of their group members.

With all of this said, there are a couple of things that really bothered me about this book.

One, it is tiny. It is not even half a book. I read this in less than 2 hours (with interruptions). I do not have issue with being concise but the price of this book is $12! Are you kidding? This should have been a PDF given out to people for free. The current state of Christian thought is troubling. Why would you sell something that is not even a book for such a price? Sad.

Second, and more importantly, Wax points out at the onset of his book that “method does not matter.” (p. 7) Method absolutely matters. Jesus’ teachings were not done this way. He did not hold groups or lessons to get the message of the Gospel across. The message was put in context of a method. He took his disciples with him. He reached into broken lives and his disciples watched. They were confused but that confusion was addressed with the message (again) then another encounter. Message, method, message….. Concept and context combined for making actual disciples, not Bible students. Wax ends his book calling the teacher to “trust that an awe-inspiring vision of His majesty will set your people’s feet on the right course.” (p. 101) Then Jesus wasted his time. Yes, trust the awe-inspiring vision but take that into the context of mission…together. Tell them and then show them.


That is Gospel-Centered teaching...and it may have resulted in an actual $12 book.

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Book Review :: Transformed: A New Way of Being Christian

There is a shift coming in the conversation about “missional church”. There is a shift away from explaining missional church in negative terms to using positive explanation. More and more voices are no longer talking about what is wrong with traditional forms of church and they are declaring boldly all of the beauty and wonder of church lived outside of the walls. A life of freedom and grace. A life of everyday wonder lived in the shadow of the glory of a savior.

If this is the kind of discussion about the missional church that you are after then Transformed: A New Way of Being Christian by Caesar Kalinowski is a great place to start.



Kalinowski is a founding member of Soma Communities in Tacoma, Washington. The insights that he shares in this book come directly from his experiences there. He shares stories and threads them through the foundation of Soma’s way of expressing church: “A Family of Missionary Servants that are called to be disciples who make disciples.”

This baptismal identity forms the basic outline for the book:
1. Family
2. Servants
3. Missionaries
4. Disciples

Kalinowski drives each of these into the heart of the reader with warm stories and biblical truth. The reader that accepts these to be true, the one that walks in this identity, will be one that feels that they are a dearly loved child of God growing in the compassion to serve and the courage to go to all people.

What next? Kalinowski sets being before doing as he places the identity of the Christian first and the rhythms of a life surrendered to the Gospel next. He sets those rhythms out as:
1. Story-Formed
2. Listen
3. Eat
4. Bless
5. Celebrate
6. Re-Create

Each of these is littered with examples and wonderful ideas to put into practice around your neighborhood right now. This is not difficult or a to-do list of ways to “get people to go to church”. But rather this book offers inspiration and encouragement to be the church right where you are. You can reach people by living in the identity of who God called you to be.


If you are looking for an introduction into missional church for yourself or want a great way to introduce others then you need to buy this book. Read it. Share it.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Jesus and Women: The Missional Face of God

I wanted to introduce a series of blog posts that will be forth coming. Each week I will interact with a passage where Jesus meets and engages with women. These moments can be powerful and instructive to our current way of "doing church" but can also have a great impact on our way of "being church". I have the suspicion that we target the former at the expense of the latter.




I have studied the interactions between Jesus and women in the Bible for some years now. I have been moved by the way that the author shows Jesus reaching into deep areas of need and shifting hardened hearts. Lately, I have been awakened to the way that these interactions display Jesus as missional. I think that there are some vast lessons that we can grasp by leaning in and spending some time with the passages that Jesus engages with women.

One reason I want to wrestle with these passages is because of the view of women by the people of the Bible. I think that we would be wise to keep our chronology in order as we view these passages. There are many implications that Jesus' interactions with women would have had on society in the 1st century and we should remember how "counter-cultural" they would have been.

Another reason is a recent influx of "Jesus Feminist" claims. I want to show the way Jesus' interactions with women point us the the heart of the Gospel. Many claim to be "Jesus Feminist" yet do not understand or proclaim the Gospel. Without the Gospel you are just Feminist not Jesus Feminist. If you proclaim the Gospel then there is no need for a tag like "Jesus Feminist" you are simply a follower of Christ.

Finally I want to wrestle with the missional implications of these passages. Specifically, I would like to apply them to the "missional church". I will use rhythms and missional community as a mechanism of application. At the end of the day, the overall thrust is the way that God is a missional God that breaks through barriers beyond our capacity but we can join him there in his activity.

Some of the books that I will be interacting with are:
Women in the Genesis of Christianity Ben Witherington
Women, Class, and Society in Early Christianity James Arlandson
The Social World of Luke-Acts Jerome Neyrey, Editor

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Book Review: Creating a Missional Culture

There is a movement at hand. It has been moving for a while under the surface but is starting to become well known. This movement has come from different countries, continents, and cities. It is a movement that captures the imaginations of a generation that is not willing to simply “go to church”, they want to “be the church”. It is sometimes called the “Missional Movement”.

As with any effective movement, there are doers and there are thinkers. There are conceptual leaders and practical leaders. And then there are some leaders who are both.

JR Woodward has written Creating a Missional Culture: Equipping the Church for the Sake of the World to share a conceptual organization of Missional church around 5 equippers. However, he has also invested the years of practice in making shared leadership the central force of unleashing Missional movement that is an extension of Missional culture. So Woodward has written to show how to identify, train, encourage, and unleash the 5-fold ministry in order to create and maintain a Missional culture.



Woodward moves through 4 parts in this book:

In Part 1 he deals with the “Power of Culture”. Here he shows the bare bones of culture, its power, and how it can be a powerful help or hindrance to the church.

In Part 2 he deals with “A Missional Imagination that Shapes Missional Culture”. Here Woodward challenges the leader to share the role of leadership. To try to be all things to your church can kill the Missional culture and deeply injure the pastor.

In Part 3 Woodward presents “The Five Culture Creators”. Woodward puts a different spin on the 5-fold ministry pattern as he identifies them as:

Dream Awakeners (Apostle)
Heart Revealers (Prophet)
Story Tellers (Evangelist)
Soul Healers (Pastor)
Light Givers (Teacher)

Finally in Part 4 he pulls of these together as he presents “Embodying a Missional Culture”. Here he explains from his experiences and praxis how unleashing leadership in this way can impact the culture of the church in order to change the world around them.

There are a lot of books written about the 5-fold ministry pattern and the theological and biblical defense for adhering to them today. Woodward is more concerned with showing how this methodology can impact how you do leadership and how you do church. Because of this, this book is simply indispensable. Every pastor of a Missional community (mid-size group) should read and implement JR Woodward’s suggestions. Every pastor of traditional (attractional) church should read and think deeply about how they can share leadership in order to better be the church that Christ has called them to be.

Buy this book, the appendices alone are worth the price.


Monday, May 26, 2014

Book Review: Return of the Kosher Pig

Was Jesus who he really said he was? This is a question that has been answered since the time of his ministry on earth. The Gospel writers and his earliest followers wrote to answer this very question. Still today there is a need to discuss this question and present thoughtful answers that quell the doubts of those that would seek to know Jesus Christ.



Rabbi Itzhak Shapira has written to answer this question once more. In his book, The Return of the Kosher Pig: The Divine Messiah in Jewish Thought, Shapira seeks to delve into the teachings of the Jewish rabbinical historical writings to show evidence that the Messiah was expected to be divine and that Jesus was this divine Messiah.

Shapira does this by showing the reader how the Jewish rabbis went about reading the scriptures and each other’s writings. Shapira forms his book by following a legal argument and presenting evidence in a logical and compelling manner. He has five sections to his book and in each he shows the scriptures and the historical Jewish understanding of these scriptures.  His final conclusion is that the Jewish people expected a Messiah and many expected a divine Messiah. Although Jesus broke many expectations as a leader, teacher, and savior the expectation of divinity was not one of them. The divine nature of Jesus should then frame his leadership and teaching.

Shapira has done a marvelous job introducing into the way that the Jewish scholar works through a text and argues logically. He presents a Jewish method of hermeneutics that is enlightening and interesting. He also serves as a reminder that the questions about Jesus have not been answered for the final time but that all believers need to be answering the doubts of those that are seeking to know Jesus more.


The one criticism that I have about this book is that it is not for everyone. There are very difficult readings and a lot of Hebrew to read. Even as someone with multiple years of training in Hebrew it becomes confusing. However, no one should expect that every book appeal to every audience.     

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