{"id":1008,"date":"2010-03-29T21:48:17","date_gmt":"2010-03-30T02:48:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/redeeminggod.com\/?p=1008"},"modified":"2013-05-31T18:38:30","modified_gmt":"2013-06-01T02:38:30","slug":"religionless-church-planting","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/redeeminggod.com\/religionless-church-planting\/","title":{"rendered":"Religionless Church Planting"},"content":{"rendered":"
Every once in a while I read a book that puts into words what I have been thinking, but couldn’t quite express. These are not so much “Aha!” moments as “Yes! Someone who understands!” moments. This last month, I happened to read two such books. Both put into words what I have been thinking and feeling for\u00a0two-three years now.<\/p>\n
Previously, I wrote about how the average reader can only read about 4000 books<\/a> in a lifetime. These are two books I am glad are on my list.\u00a0Both books\u00a0might have made it into my Top Ten List. Definitely my top twenty.<\/p>\n The first book, Church Without Walls<\/a>\u00a0<\/em>by Jim Petersen,\u00a0<\/em>is a book I’ve owned for about ten years, but never got around to reading. It’s probably a good thing I didn’t read it ten years ago, because it wouldn’t have meant much to me back then. Ten years ago, I thought I had church all figured out. I even wrote a book about it (I\u00a0thank God\u00a0it never got published…). Jim Petersen bases his book off of some church planting work he did in Brazil in the 1960s. He found that to really reach people who wouldn’t step foot in the typical church, he had to radically change the way the church looked and functioned. In the rest of the book, he summarizes the historical, theological, and biblical insights he came to as he struggled with how to allow this new church of Brazilian Christians be the church in their culture. (I recently learned that this this story is further developed in a new release, Will this Rock in Rio?<\/a> <\/em>by Ken Lottis.)<\/p>\n Jim Petersen then takes the lessons he learned in Brazil and applies them to our own time and culture. His basic conclusion is that various traditions have locked\u00a0us into doing church a certain way, and have ceased to be helpful for many of the people we are trying to reach with the gospel (cf. p. 208). By abandoning some of these traditions, we actually liberate\u00a0the church to live the gospel in our culture and communities. I’m looking forward to reading this book again.<\/p>\n