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Book Review: The Irresistible Revolution

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Book Review: The Irresistible Revolution

Irresistible RevolutionOther than posting a short blurb on my 4000 books post, I usually do not review books unless they were given to me as review copies. But The Irresistible Revolution by Shane Claiborne deserves a blog post. I’m not sure yet if it will gain a place on my Burning Books list, but time will tell.

No matter what you believe about the role of Christians in society and culture, especially in regard to social issues like hunger, poverty, and war, Shane’s book will challenge you to think and act differently. It is the story of how he and some friends entered into one of the worst areas of Philadelphia to live out the love of Jesus among the people who were there. Shane gives plenty of examples about the things they have done and the lessons they have learned along the way.

For example, their community developed a statement of beliefs to show people that they were not a cult, but they also developed a statement of practices to show they were not just believers (p. 125). I would love to see this sort of thing adopted in churches everywhere. We have doctrinal statements, but how many of us have practical statements? If what you believe isn’t leading you to do something for others, what good is it? (That sounds a lot like James 2.)  And of course, their community in Philly didn’t just write a statement of practices, they actually practice them. That’s important too.

Here are some of the other ideas that challenged me:

  • The greatest tragedy in the church today is not that rich Christians do not care about the poor but that rich Christians do not know the poor (p. 113, 127, 157).
  • We don’t need more churches. What we need is a church (p. 145).
  • We lose our children to the culture of drugs and materialism, violence and war, not because we did not entertain them, but because we did not challenge them to actually live the gospel in difficult and heroic ways (p. 226).
  • If we believe terrorists are beyond redemption, we should rip out half our New Testament, since it was written by a converted terrorist who became an extremist for grace (p. 272).
  • Violence is for those who have lost their imagination (p. 279).
  • We should no longer talk about “issues” and “needs.” We need to talk about and get to know people. For example, it’s easy to talk about “ending world hunger,”  but such theoretical discussions cease when we discover that Jim lost his job and doesn’t have any money to put food on the table for his wife and three kids. Stop talking about issues and needs, and get out there and find someone who is dealing with such things, and then help them (p. 292).
  • Bigger is not better. We do not need million-dollar mansions for God to accomplish His will for the world. In fact, those megabuildings might only get in the way (p. 322ff). We need to grow smaller and smaller until we take over the world (p. 340).

Not everyone is going to agree with Shane, his beliefs, or his practices. There were several things he said and did in the book that made me quite uncomfortable. Like the time they went and threw $10,000 worth of coins onto the sidewalks of Wall Street to make a point about greed (pp. 188-189). I’m still not sure what was accomplished, and it seemed a somewhat wasteful way of using $10,000.

I highly recommend this book. And I, for one, am going to do more than just read it. I am going to start trying to live the Kingdom of God ideas it contains. Read this book. Let Shane challenge you to change.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books I'm Reading, Discipleship

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Church Planter Disconnect

By Jeremy Myers
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Church Planter Disconnect

I took a short survey at Church Planter Profiles yesterday. All I really wanted was the chance to win a $50 Amazon gift card, but I found the survey amusing. They did not seem to recognize that house churches are churches too. The survey was about buildings, budget, staff, and how quickly you reached 200 people.

Clearly, what they actually wanted is not “Church Planter Profiles” but “Megachurch Planter Profiles.” Apparently, that is the only way to properly do church.

I even found their homepage picture a little sad:

So apparently, God can only use you to plant a church if you fit this “unique combination of personality, gifting, ability, experience, and drive.” Otherwise, God can’t use you.

Well, I’m not one of them, but I’m still ready. How about it, God?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship

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Money, Missions, and Megachurches

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Money, Missions, and Megachurches

I was reading a book recently by a pastor of a megachurch in California. He said that their church committed from very early on to give 50% of their annual budget to missions.

That is quite commendable. I’m glad they took such a stand, though it would be interesting to see how they define “missions.” (For example, is Youth Group missions? Is the annual Missions Conference missions? How about when the pastor takes a a two week fishin’ trip…I mean mission trip…to Alaska? But we’ll leave all those questions aside.)

The funny thing is that I hear this sort of thing from several megachurches. It seems they have a desire to justify their big buildings, stained glass windows, and fancy choir robes by saying they give 50% of their budget away.

But that’s like multi-millionaires saying they give away 50% of their income in order to justify spending the other 50% on a house with 50 bathrooms, 7 Lamborghinis, a personal airstrip and golf course, and weekly jaunts to Greece and Italy. The generosity is commendable, no doubt about it. But they’re still spending millions of dollars on themselves every year.

And then yesterday, it hit me. Most house churches I know give away nearly 100% of their church “budget.” They don’t have paid staff, mortgages, electric bills, or any of the other things that traditional churches have.

But since these churches are so small, they don’t equal the “missional” force of a megachurch giving away 50% of it’s income, right?

Wrong.

According to some studies, there are at least 1.4 million people involved in house churches in the United States. Some place it as high as 50 million, but we’ll keep with the much lower figure of 1.4. It looks like the average attendance in mega-churches might be around 3000 people, and very few of those are giving away 50% of their budget. So the 1.4 million people involved in house churches equals about 467 megachurches, and almost 100% of the money that these 1.4 million people give to their home groups goes straight to some sort of missions activity. To equal the same amount of giving power, you would need over 900 megachurches giving 50% or more of their annual budget. When you realize that there are only about 1400 megachurches in the US, it seems unlikely that two-thirds of them are giving away 50% of their budget.

It seems then, that there might be more mission and tithing power in house churches than megachurches.

What do you think about all this? And does anyone have any better statistics?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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The Heresy in Debates about James 2

By Jeremy Myers
7 Comments

The Heresy in Debates about James 2

Faith and WorksEverywhere I turn, Christians and churches are debating James 2:14-26, and especially the role of faith and works.

Enough already!

The primary problem with such debates is that they cause us to ignore the rest of the book of James, which the church so desperately needs to hear. As we debate James 2, we continue to show favoritism in church (James 2:1-9), gossip and slander one another (James 3), judge, condemn, and fight with each other (James 4), and misuse, abuse, and neglect the poor (James 5).

I say we should stop all debates about James 2:14-26 until we have obeyed the rest of the book. (Frankly, if we did that, I think it would clear up James 2…)

I was thinking about this earlier today, so it was with great appreciation that I read the following comment on the blog of Alan Knox, who was quoting Arthur Sido at his blog, The Voice of One Crying Out in Suburbia:

I asked Beoda and another young boy, Stevenson, to write their names in the small Bible I brought with me on the page facing the first chapter of James to remind me that James is not speaking of theological concepts to be debated in the ivy covered halls of academia. He was speaking of real people, real orphans who had their lives turned upside down. Real widows who lost their husband and often had children to care for in a very different, very difficult world. James was writing about Beoda and Selene, about Stevenson, about Kimberly.

The great tragedy–can I call it heresy?–of James 2 is not necessarily where we stand on the issue of faith vs. works, but how we allow this debate to sidetrack us from the message of James that we so desperately need to hear and obey today.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Bible Study, Discipleship

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Are Bedbugs the Modern Day Leprosy?

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

Are Bedbugs the Modern Day Leprosy?

One of the blogs I read is “The Red Letter Christians.” Today, Bart Campolo shared a story about a man who showed up at one of their meetings and he was almost literally covered with bedbugs. He writes this:

Sure enough, Stanley ’s back was literally crawling with bedbugs.  How did I know they were bedbugs, you ask?  Around here we learn to spot our bedbugs the way an endangered horror movie hero learns to spot her zombies.  Della knew too.  “You gotta get him out of here, or my family’s leaving,” she told me. “I love y’all, Bart, but we can’t be getting no bedbugs.”  And just that quickly, everything changed between Stanley and the rest of us.

I’ll am not judging Della. I know how she feels. We live in New York and are afraid to go anywhere near where bedbugs might be. What did Bart and his group do? Go to the blog to read the rest of the post to find out.

Would you (or do you) hang out with people who have bed bugs? Why or why not?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship

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