There aren’t enough hours in the day! Who hasn’t expressed these exasperated words? We feel shackled to the taskmaster of time with continual demands from every direction.There’s got to be another way of living! We know the time-management programs, no matter how well intentioned, don’t get at the underlying problems. On Thursday, June 7th join a conversation offering a perspective on living into a different sense of God among us in the local – webinar. St. Augustine said that God is always trying to give good things to us, but our hands are always too full to receive them. Rather than […] Read More
New York Times Magazine, 5.20.18, Final Words, Beverly Gage, Cause and Effect, 9-11 https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/15/magazine/when-does-a-moment-turn-into-a-movement.html Our is a time filled up with a longing for change – justice, reconciliation and the redemption of our lives as citizens of an order that is unravelling. We have witnessed an expanding assortment of movements pressing for these transformations. Social media announces and shouts out the dawning of movements that will make the difference. And yet, most of us, most of the time, know they won’t even while we wish they would. The Yale historian, Beverly Gage, address this issue in her article, […] Read More
A lot of leaders ask me about the possibility or even viability of a congregation becoming local and dwelling among its neighbours. Chris Smith from the Englewood church responds to this in an interview I did with him for the Journal of Missional Practice. One of our Editorial Team, Mary Publicover summarizes the interview here, I encourage you to check out the link to the video. A Church in Englewood and Place in our Culture (https://youtu.be/1gucswK8qUk) Chris Smith is co-author of Slow Church and editor of the Englewood Review of Books. Here in conversation with Alan Roxburgh he describes how his […] Read More
Practices for the Refounding of God’s People written by Martin Robinson and I arrived at my yesterday. Its a fun moment when the work of several years appears in front of you as a book. A big thanks to our editors at Church Publishing, Milton Brasher-Cunningham and Ryan Masteller for their patience and great work. The book addresses the nature of a missiological engagement with a modern West whose basic narratives are unravelling along with the churches birthed out of the European reformations. We’re addressing what it means to be God’s people in this place arguing that the modern West has been […] Read More
Today questions about leadership, of how we lead, in the unravelling now upending many of our assumptions across the West are tough to address. The question of leadership among God’s people is a work in progress without definitive answers. But the trajectories, for me, become clearer. Twenty years ago I contributed a chapter to the groundbreaking book Missional Church – A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America . Chapter 7 addressed the question of missional leadership. I presented a set of diagrams in that turned a triangle on its side to show a movement with the […] Read More
Anniversaries are moments of pause looking back at the expectations with which one began a journey and checking out the realities of the present. This month is the anniversary of the 1968 May workers and student uprisings in Paris that spread across Europe and the Atlantic creating for some governments the fear of revolution. These events were driven by a faith that street protest, sit ins, and occupations would re-make history. They would realize the hope of a new kind of West by ending the hegemony of elites, ending colonialisms and tearing down prevailing systems of political, economic and social […] Read More