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For small group leaders and Sunday school facilitators who prefer
truth over technique, G'ospel-Centered Teaching' is refreshing in
its simple purpose to remind you of something you already
instinctively know. While discussing in depth common related
concerns (missional apathy, biblical illiteracy in the church,
shallow discussions, etc.), author and teacher Trevin Wax duly
offers a practical guide to making sure your message is always
surely centred on Jesus and what He has done.
Christianity Today Book Award of Merit-Popular Theology The Gospel
Coaltion Award of Distinction-Popular Theology Every generation
faces the temptation to wander from orthodoxy-to seek out the jolt
that comes with false teaching, and to drift with cultural
currents. And so every generation must be awakened again to the
thrill of orthodoxy, and experience the astonishment that comes
from stumbling afresh upon the electrifying paradoxes at the heart
of the Christian faith. In The Thrill of Orthodoxy, Trevin Wax
turns the tables on those who believe Christian teaching is narrow
and outdated. Returning to the church's creeds, he explains what
orthodoxy is and why we can have proper confidence in it, and lays
out common ways we can stray from it. By showing how heresies are
always actually narrower than orthodoxy-taking one aspect of the
truth and wielding it as a weapon against others-Wax beckons us
away from the broad road that ultimately proves bland and boring,
and toward the straight and narrow path, where true adventure can
be found.
Christians are too often guilty of pledging their allegiance to
the influential principalities and powers of this age rather than
to Christ alone. In Holy Subversion, Trevin Wax challenges such
behavior by urging a return to the subversive lifestyle of the
earliest Christians. Their proclamation and demonstration that
"Jesus is Lord" directly opposed the Caesar worship of their
day.
Today, Christians in the West must choose between Jesus and our
"Caesars": self, success, money, leisure, sex, power. What would it
look like, asks Wax, if today's church reclaimed the communal,
subversive nature of the gospel, intentionally undermining all
contenders for our devotion? How would the message that "Jesus is
Lord" change our thinking about our jobs, our families, and our
church participation? Here this gifted pastor-theologian offers
help in taking our faith public, dethroning modern-day Caesars,
honoring the Lordship of Christ, and understanding the church as
the ultimate counterculture-an embodiment of Christ's supremacy
over all.
If following Jesus involves a life of sacrifice and suffering, is
it wrong for a Christian to seek purpose and joy in this world?
Many Christians sense a tension between their desire to enjoy life
in this world-the beauty of God's creation, the rich love of deep
relationships with others-and the reality that this world is fallen
and broken, in need of redemption. How can we embrace and thrive in
the tension between enjoying creation and promoting redemption? By
living out our God-given purpose. As "worldly saints," created in
the image of God, we are natural creatures with a supernatural
purpose-to know and love God. Because we live in a world that is
stained by the curse of sin, we must learn to embrace our nature as
creatures created in the image of God while recognizing our
desperate need for the grace that God offers to us in the gospel.
Writing in a devotional style that is theologically rich,
biblically accurate, and aimed at ordinary readers, Mike Wittmer
helps readers understand who they are, why they are here, and the
importance of the story they tell themselves. In Becoming Worldly
Saints, he gives an integrated vision that shows how we can be
heavenly minded in a way that leads to earthly good, empowering
believers to seize the abundant life God has for them.
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