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Incarnational vs Attractional

By Jeremy Myers
4 Comments

Incarnational vs Attractional

I found the following post over at Backyard Missionary, and thought it was so good, I needed to repost part of it here. The incarnational approach to ministry is one of the best ways to connect with others today.

If Jesus were alive today and his mission was still to ’seek out and save the lost’ what might he do?…

Would he hire a building, set up a sound system, develop a music team, drama team, and then do local letterbox drops advising people that they could come and be part of his church on Sunday? Frankly I don’t believe this approach to mission would rate a blip on his strategic radar. The so called ‘attractional’ mode of mission centres its focus on the church service and is dedicated to producing an event that pagans will want to come to. The theory goes that the more professional the service is, the funkier the music, the better the coffee, and so on” the more likely the punters will come, hence the term ‘attractional’. As such the success of mission in this mode is almost always measured by the number who attend on Sunday. While a small minority of larger churches do experience some success with this approach, the overwhelming majority of smaller churches attempting to be Hillsong clones continue to haemorrhage members every week because they cannot offer the same quality of music, preaching or other services that their mega-mall comrades down the road are able to provide. [Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship

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Binding and Loosing Jesus

By Jeremy Myers
11 Comments

Binding and Loosing Jesus

Scripture says that as believers in Christ, He lives in us, and we in Him. This should be a radical, life-transforming infusion of divine power into our lives, but all too often, it seems like nothing changes.

I think that sometimes, this is because we have handcuffed Jesus. We are holding Him back from all that He wants to do in and through us. There are things I know Jesus wants to do in my own life, but I am too comfortable  where I am at now, or too scared to move.

Sometimes I imagine myself as being the physically challenged younger brother of Jesus, holding Him back from having the real fun. Or maybe it’s like the movie Alien where Jesus wants to break out of me, and I’m trying to do everything I can to stop Him. [Read more…]

God is Redeeming Theology Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship

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Did Jesus Work?

By Jeremy Myers
49 Comments

Did Jesus Work?

I know we all say Jesus was a carpenter, and we all assume he learned the trade from his father, Joseph. We also assume that he worked as a carpenter up until he began his three years of ministry at about the age of thirty.

But did he continue to work as a carpenter even after he began his ministry? We never read about him working in the Gospels (that I can recall). Luke 8:3 indicates that Jesus had some followers who “provided for him from their substance.” Does this mean that he lived off of the donations of benefactors?

I really wish Jesus had worked during his ministry. I also wish he had gotten married and had kids. Yes, I know that this would have created lots of problems for the future of the church, especially in regard to leadership. But it would have given us married, working fathers who also want to teach a good model to follow. Jesus doesn’t fit.  [Read more…]

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

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Reflections Upon Graduation from Seminary

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Reflections Upon Graduation from Seminary

Six years ago, I wrote a letter to my future self. I was preparing to enter seminary, and was apprehensive about what Seminary would do to me. Many students go into seminary as on-fire followers of Jesus, and come out as frozen, arrogant know-it-alls.

So I wrote a letter to myself, telling me what I wanted to be able to say once I came out of seminary. I never went back and read it all during seminary, and when I graduated three years ago, went back and read it. I posted it on this blog here.

Yesterday, as I was sifting through some old files, I stumbled across something I wrote when I was nearing graduation three years ago. I forgot that I had written it. This reflection upon graduation from seminary is posted below. [Read more…]

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

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Who are you in life?

By Jeremy Myers
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Who are you in life?

Knowing how to get through life depends in large part on know what kind of person you are.

A while back I wrote a post about three different types of people: wave makers, wave riders, and sand sitters. I decided at the time that I was a wave rider.

Today, Ed Cyzewski, of In a Mirror Dimly, and author of Coffeehouse Theology, wrote about three types of people: pastor, theologian, or artist. He emphasizes the importance of knowing who you are.

Here is some of what he wrote:

Pastors are expected to do many things that play to my weaknesses. I soon realized that I could not effectively serve God or the church as a pastor, even if I have a pastoral heart in some respects.

Theologians immerse themselves in research and become experts in all of the primary and secondary sources of their field. They must absorb much. They have to read certain theology books that may not prove insightful or beneficial but must be learned for the sake of their field. They run the risk of turning God into a subject to be studied.

While I have many friends who thrive as Christian theology scholars, I soon learned I wasn’t cut out for that kind of life.

Instead, I stumbled into writing, a more artistic pursuit than the other two. In some respects I write as a kind of middle man between the seminary and the pew, but I’m also interested in examining ideas and experiences in the forms of nonfiction stories and am moving toward fiction.

Head on over there to read the rest of his post, and then let me know: are you a pastor, a theologian, or an artist?

As for me, I don’t really know. I’m trying to figure it out. I know what I love, and I know what I want to do, but reality is far removed from desire.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology - General

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