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Political division. Racial tension. Vaccine wars. In Agents of
Grace, award-winning writer, journalist, and podcast host Daniel
Darling equips us to discern what's worth fighting for, how to move
beyond our profound disagreements, and how to live as agents of
Jesus's love. When Daniel Darling was fired as spokesperson for the
National Religious Broadcasters Association, it wasn't his exit
that made national news--it was the way he handled it. Daniel's
charitable response to those he had worked with was so radical that
it made headlines. But why has kindness among Christians become so
startling? In Agents of Grace, Daniel explores practical ways we
can follow the Bible's command to "strive actively for peace" even
in a painfully divided church, country, and world. On a very
personal level, he helps us climb out of cynicism about how the
people of God treat each other, especially when we are trying to
heal from such pain in our own lives. Beautifully written, Agents
of Grace draws on modern-day examples and biblical truths to
address: Divisions that keep us from obeying Jesus's command to
love one another Virtues that will lead us to a peace-filled life
The theological differences that are worth fighting for, and those
that are not How to avoid apathy and heal from past hurt, even amid
hypocrisy and corruption The difference between forgiveness,
reconciliation, and trust  In this hope-filled book, Daniel
issues a clarion call to live as bridgebuilders in a divided
country, healers in a hurting church, and countercultural
Jesus-followers in a world that needs to know God's love.
Your God is too small. We like God small. We prefer a God who is
safe, domesticated, who thinks like we think, likes what we like,
and whom we can manage, predict, and control. A small God is
convenient. Practical. Manageable. The truth: God is big. Bigger
than big. Bigger than all the words we use to say big. Ironically,
many today seem turned off by the concept of an awesome,
terrifyingly great God. We assume that a God you would need to fear
is guilty of some kind of fault. For us, thinking of God as so
infinitely greater and wiser than we are and who would cause us to
tremble in his presence is a leftover relic from an oppressive,
archaic view of religion. But what if this small version of God
we've created is holding us back from the greatest experience of
our lives-from genuine, confident, world-transforming faith? In Not
God Enough, J.D. reveals how to discover a God who: is big enough
to handle your questions, doubts, and fears is not silent is worthy
of worship wants to take you from boring to bold in your faith has
a purpose and mission for you on earth is pursuing you right now
God is not just a slightly better, slightly smarter version of you.
God is infinite and glorious, and an encounter with Him won't just
change the way you think about your faith. It'll change your entire
life.
If you're a leader in a church or business, and you want to improve
your culture of hospitality, then you'll love Danny's new book.
It's a must-read! -Dan T. Cathy, CEO, Chick-fil-A When it comes to
interacting with guests, churches typically gravitate towards one
of two camps: over-the-top, shock-and-awe, let-us-entertain-you or
oh-man,-some-people-just-showed-up, underwhelming experience. Each
extreme has drawbacks: on one end, people become the center of the
universe. On the other, hospitality is effectively ignored in
deference to the "serious business" of worship. People Are the
Mission proposes a healthy middle, one where guests are esteemed
but the gospel is the goal. Danny Franks, Connections Pastor at
Summit Church, shows churches how to take a more balanced approach
- a "third way" that is both guest-friendly and gospel-centric. He
shows why honoring the stranger doesn't stand in opposition to
honoring the Savior. People are the mission that Christ has called
us to, and if we focus on people we can better assist people to
focus on the gospel.
Only One Addiction Can Set You Free Matt Papa was a "professional
Christian" in full-time ministry, ready and determined to change
the world. All the while he was depressed, addicted to the approval
of others, and enslaved to sin. But then everything changed. He
encountered the glory of God. All of us live in the tension between
where we are and where we ought to be. We try our best to bully our
desires into submission. And we all know, this is exhausting. Are
you tired? Stuck? Still fighting the same sin you've been fighting
for years? The call in these pages is not to work or to strive, but
to lift your eyes. You don't need more willpower. You need a vision
of greatness that sweeps you off your feet. You need to see glory.
Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. Look
and Live. "Matt has helped me see that love for God grows out of an
experience of beholding the love of God. We burn only as we behold.
. . . This is a fantastic book and I commend it to you with the
most enthusiastic support."--from the Foreword by J.D. Greear "Matt
Papa cares about the glory of God, and you can sense that zeal on
every page of this dynamic book. He also cares about you and me
getting to grips with that glory. . . . Matt guides us through
these pages with kindness, seriousness, and love--for God's greater
glory and our greater good."--Matt Redman, songwriter and worship
leader "Making our lives about one unflinching gaze upon the glory
of Christ--what a vision Matt Papa has put before us. I encourage
everyone to read this book!"--Tony Merida, pastor, professor, and
author "Matt Papa's book is a snakebite kit for suffering sinners.
Each sentence of Look and Live extracts Satan's deadly venom and
resuscitates the soul with the life-giving power of the glory of
God!"--Tony Nolan, snakebite survivor, author, and gospel preacher
"To journey through this book is to go on a quest that will awaken
our souls to the reality of the One who is 'majestic in holiness'
and 'awesome in glorious deeds.'"--Dr. Brent Crowe, author,
speaker, and vice president of Student Leadership University "I
have been wonderfully blessed by Matt Papa's friendship and
ministry. I am grateful his reflections on worship are now shared
in Look and Live. It is biblically faithful and keeps the focus of
worship where it belongs: on our glorious God."--Daniel L. Akin,
president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary "Matt Papa
faithfully points us to the soul-stirring glory of God. Read this
book and allow your heart to once again behold the wondrous
mystery."--Matt Boswell, founder of Doxology & Theology, and
pastor of ministries and worship at Providence Church, Frisco,
Texas "This is Matt's life message--that Jesus Christ alone is
worth living for, and that when you gaze upon His majesty and glory
you will never be the same. This book is theologically robust and
practically helpful, packed with Scripture and insight into the
person and work of the risen Son of God. . . . This is a true gift
to the church."--Clayton King, president of Crossroads Camps and
Clayton King Ministries "If C. S. Lewis and David Crowder wrote a
book together about worship, you would have the rich theology of
the great Christian apologist with the deep passion of worship from
the contemporary artist. That's what Matt Papa has given us in Look
and Live--a must-read for every worshiper."--Mike Harland,
president of LifeWay Worship
Why does God often feel more like a doctrine we know about than
a Person we know? Why do so many of us think of Christianity as a
lifestyle to which we conform, rather than a God with whom we
commune?
Jesus gave his disciples the audacious promise that it was to
their advantage he go back to heaven because the Holy Spirit could
then come to live inside of them. How many of us consider our
connection to the Holy Spirit so strong and so real that we would
call his presence in us better than Jesus beside us?
Author J.D. Greear asks those questions because throughout his
Christian life he felt disconnected to God and unsure about how to
interact with him. Although he had learned a lot of truths about
God, he sensed very little relationship with him at least, not the
dynamic, two-way relationship he really wanted. He tried to have
such a relationship, but all of God s work seemed stockpiled in the
past: he created the world, died on a cross, and left a Bible. God
seemed like a busy teacher who had given an assignment and then
stepped out of the room, leaving students to get the work done on
their own.
But Greear discovered it doesn t have to be like that. Not at
all. In clear and practical language, he explains how any follower
of Jesus can have a satisfying, powerful relationship with God
through the Holy Spirit.
While many books about the Holy Spirit get stuck in secondary
questions that divide believers, The God Factor focuses on a
central, truth that unites us: God wants to be vitally present in
and through his people. This truth, though central, is sadly
neglected. This generation of Christians mission-driven but burned
out, weary, and longing for joy desperately needs to recover the
dynamic presence of God. And the good news is that God wants us to
have exactly that."
People are leaving the church J.D. Greear pastors. Big givers. Key
volunteers. Some of his best leaders and friends. And that's
exactly how he wants it to be. When Jesus gave his disciples the
Great Commission, he revealed that the key for reaching the world
with the gospel is found in sending, not gathering. Though many
churches focus time and energy on attracting people and counting
numbers, the real mission of the church isn't how many people you
can gather. It's about training up disciples and then sending them
out. The true measure of success for a church should be its sending
capacity, not its seating capacity. But there is a cost to this. To
see ministry multiply, we must release the seeds God has placed in
our hands. And to do that, we must ask ourselves whether we are
concerned more with building our kingdom or God's. In Gaining By
Losing, J.D. Greear unpacks ten plumb lines that you can use to
reorient your church's priorities around God's mission to reach a
lost world. The good news is that you don't need to choose between
gathering or sending. Effective churches can, and must, do both.
"If there were a "Guinness Book of World Records" entry for 'amount
of times having prayed the sinner's prayer, ' I'm pretty sure I'd
be a top contender," says pastor and author J. D. Greear. He
struggled for many years to gain an assurance of salvation and
eventually learned he was not alone. "Lack of assurance" is
epidemic among evangelical Christians.
In "Stop Asking Jesus Into Your Heart," J. D. shows that faulty
ways of present- ing the gospel are a leading source of the
confusion. Our presentations may not be heretical, but they are
sometimes misleading. The idea of "asking Jesus into your heart" or
"giving your life to Jesus" often gives false assurance to those
who are not saved--and keeps those who genuinely are saved from
fully embracing that reality.
Greear unpacks the doctrine of assurance, showing that salvation is
a posture we take to the promise of God in Christ, a posture that
begins at a certain point and is maintained for the rest of our
lives. He also answers the tough questions about assurance: What
exactly is faith? What is repentance? Why are there so many
warnings that seem to imply we can lose our salvation?
Such issues are handled with respect to the theological rigors they
require, but Greear never loses his pastoral sensitivity or a
communication technique that makes this message teachable to a wide
audience from teens to adults.
Is gospel Christianity dead? Pundits are writing the obituary of
historic, orthodox Christianity, but pastor and author J. D. Greear
( Gospel, Stop Asking Jesus into Your Heart ) believes the
postmortems are premature. Jesus promised to build his church. He
said that the gates of hell would not prevail against it. The
church is not going away. Along with this promise, Jesus gave clear
instructions for how the church would prevail. He promised to build
it on the rock of the gospel. The most pressing need for
Christianity today is not a new strategy. It is not an updated
message. It is a return to keeping the gospel above all.
Even in conservative churches, the Gospel has been eclipsed by
moralism and legalism. J.D. Greear's new book, simply titled
"Gospel," cuts through the superficiality of religion and
reacquaints readers with the revolutionary truth of the Gospel.
Grasping what the Gospel shows us about God leads us from a life of
self-involvement to one of joy, freedom, radical generosity and
audacious faith. Sin is not overcome by a resolution to do better,
but by standing in awe of what God has done for us in Christ.
God is not just after obedience. He's after a new kind of
obedience, and that obedience is produced only by the Gospel.
The core of this book is a "Gospel prayer" Greear wrote for his
church, celebrating God's faithfulness, presence, love and promise.
It goes to war against the incipient works-righteousness and
idolatry in our hearts, and leads us to radical generosity and
audacious faith. It gives readers an appli- cable, exciting vision
of how God might use them to bring His healing to the world.
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