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Brandon O'Brien helps pastors and church leaders understand that a
smaller church is sometimes better than a big one. He demonstrates
the strengths of small congregations, including that today's church
"shoppers" want services that are local, personal, and intimate.
Also, small churches provide space to nurture close relationships
across age and lifestyle barriers, and they facilitate a higher
level of commitment from laypeople. And small church budgets are
often more effective because of greater efficiency. The
Strategically Small Church will encourage small-church pastors in
their ministries and challenge them to play to their strengths.
2010 Christianity Today Book Award winner 2010 Golden Canon
Leadership Book Award winner Feeling caught between the traditional
church and the emerging church? Discover a third way: deep church.
C. S. Lewis used the phrase "deep church" to describe the body of
believers committed to mere Christianity. Unfortunately church in
our postmodern era has been marked by a certain shallowness.
Emerging authors, fed up with contemporary pragmatism, have offered
alternative visions for twenty-first-century Christianity.
Traditionalist churches have reacted negatively, at times
defensively. Jim Belcher knows what it's like to be part of both of
these worlds. In the 1990s he was among the pioneers of what was
then called Gen X ministry, hanging out with creative innovators
like Rob Bell, Mark Oestreicher and Mark Driscoll. But he also has
maintained ties to traditionalist circles, planting a church in the
Presbyterian Church of America. In Deep Church, Belcher brings the
best insights of all sides to forge a third way between emerging
and traditional. In a fair and evenhanded way, Belcher explores the
proposals of such emerging church leaders as Tony Jones, Brian
McLaren and Doug Pagitt. He offers measured appreciation and
affirmation as well as balanced critique. Moving beyond reaction,
Belcher provides constructive models from his own church planting
experience and paints a picture of what this alternate, deep church
looks like--a missional church committed to both tradition and
culture, valuing innovation in worship, arts and community but also
creeds and confessions. If you've felt stuck between two extremes,
you can find a home here. Plumb the depths of Christianity in a way
that neither rejects our postmodern context nor capitulates to it.
Instead of veering to the left or the right, go between the
extremes--and go deep.
In "Deep Church," Belcher brings the best insights of all sides to
forge a third way between emerging and traditional. In a fair and
evenhanded way, Belcher explores the proposals of such emerging
church leaders as Tony Jones, Brian McLaren and Doug Pagitt. He
offers measured appreciation and affirmation as well as balanced
critique. Moving beyond reaction, Belcher provides constructive
models from his own church planting experience and paints a picture
of what this alternate, deep church looks like--a missional church
committed to both tradition and culture, valuing innovation in
worship, arts and community but also creeds and confessions.
America's political landscape is experiencing dangerous
polarization and fragmentation, with the extremes pulling the
country apart. Voices on the left and right clash over different
worldviews, definitions of America, and what it means to be an
American citizen. The levels of incivility and hostility lead some
to invoke the language of a cold civil war or even a looming civil
war: one that could split the country in two. Is there any way to
step back from this dangerous precipice? Political philosopher Jim
Belcher shows that this is not merely a binary opposition between
conservativism on the right and liberalism on the left, but also
between conflicting visions of order and freedom on both sides.
Through his unique quadrant framework, Belcher traces the people
and movements in each position, examines their underlying
narratives, and articulates their respective contributions and
dangers. This quadrant framework not only reveals how polarization
divides us but also shows us how to move beyond the right-left
stalemate. At the core of the competing visions are the seeds of a
new vital center, a robust and surprising model that has the
ability to transcend political tribalism and bring America back
together again before it is too late.
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