I finished the project for the Overture I: Seattle course at BGU, which was due yesterday. Instead of posting all of it (77 pages), just let me know if you're interested in reading it and I'll send it to you as an attachment to an email.
My next DMin class will be Overture II this summer. This is another eight credit course, and Julie and I will be traveling together for two weeks to Costa Rica and Mexico City. We're really looking forward to it, and I'm taking a break for a little while before we starting brushing up on our Spanish and start reading the books for that course.
Have a great day!
Bryan
God is rapidly urbanizing the world. For the first time in human history, more people live in cities than in rural areas. Followers of Jesus must learn how to navigate through the complexities of urban life. This blog documents my urban adventures both in Pittsburgh and in cities around the world. This is my personal blog, and my views may not necessarily reflect the views of North Way Christian Community, Bakke Graduate University, or any other organizations.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Overture I paper update
The book reports (at least the rough drafts) are all posted on this site now. I'm welcoming your feedback!
I'm currently working on the 20 page class project, of which I have finished 16 pages. I should be posting it soon, and then turning it all in by March 23.
I'm currently working on the 20 page class project, of which I have finished 16 pages. I should be posting it soon, and then turning it all in by March 23.
Stewardship
Stewardship: Choosing Service Over Self Interest
Peter Block
Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc. (1993)
Many organizations, as well as the people working within them, are struggling from a lack of purpose and fragmentation. This book presents stewardship as the means to moving past these issues. The author argues that individuals within an organization should learn how to be stewards of resources for the common good of society. Stewardship combats the compartmentalization process that is so rampant in American culture by moving individuals toward reconciliation, and the distribution of power that naturally follows. Through the application of stewardship principles, the leaders in an organization are strengthened and the organization itself is strengthened.
The author presents the concepts of this book in three sections. In the first section, the author describes the process by which leadership is replaced by stewardship, patriarchy is replaced by partnership, adventure and risk-taking replace safety, and service replaces self-interest. Block argues that “the principles of stewardship bring accountability into each act of governance, while partnership balances responsibility.” (27)
In the second section of the book, the author describes the process of redistribution of power, purpose, and wealth. Block opens this section with the concept that “stewardship is a way to use power to serve through the practice of partnership and empowerment. This is the alternative to the conventional notions of ‘strong leadership’ for implementing changes.” (63) A stewardship contract is clearly outlined, and the ramifications for the organizational structure including management, staff, accounting, human resources, compensation, and evaluation are described in detail. This is the logistical part of the author’s ideas for stewardship principles.
Part three presents the triumph of hope over experience. One of the major obstacles to stewardship is “cosmetic reform.” Patriarchy tends to regenerate itself when stewardship principles are implemented in an organization at a surface level. Through cosmetic change, “in a shifting, customer-driven environment, improvement efforts that produce no redistribution of power, purpose, or privilege will produce no real improvement.” (189) Stewardship principles provide an alternative to this approach. Instead of patriarchy, each step in the change process “needs to foster ownership and responsibility with all who touch it.” (204) Each person must own the vision of the organization. In the end, Block views true democracy as the means to implementing stewardship principles in order to change organizations more effectively.
This book applies to my current context in that I need to view myself as a steward of the resources God has entrusted to me. A transformational leader is able to build relationships up to the powerful and down to the powerless, in order to give themselves away through the redistribution of resources.
A major part of my role in LAMP involves the redistribution of power and resources, whether they involve people, money, or leadership, on behalf of the students and the families who live in the Homewood and East Hills section of the city of Pittsburgh. From this book, I learned it is important for leaders of initiatives to take care that the principles and changes being implemented in a project move beyond the programmatic level.
Peter Block
Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc. (1993)
Many organizations, as well as the people working within them, are struggling from a lack of purpose and fragmentation. This book presents stewardship as the means to moving past these issues. The author argues that individuals within an organization should learn how to be stewards of resources for the common good of society. Stewardship combats the compartmentalization process that is so rampant in American culture by moving individuals toward reconciliation, and the distribution of power that naturally follows. Through the application of stewardship principles, the leaders in an organization are strengthened and the organization itself is strengthened.
The author presents the concepts of this book in three sections. In the first section, the author describes the process by which leadership is replaced by stewardship, patriarchy is replaced by partnership, adventure and risk-taking replace safety, and service replaces self-interest. Block argues that “the principles of stewardship bring accountability into each act of governance, while partnership balances responsibility.” (27)
In the second section of the book, the author describes the process of redistribution of power, purpose, and wealth. Block opens this section with the concept that “stewardship is a way to use power to serve through the practice of partnership and empowerment. This is the alternative to the conventional notions of ‘strong leadership’ for implementing changes.” (63) A stewardship contract is clearly outlined, and the ramifications for the organizational structure including management, staff, accounting, human resources, compensation, and evaluation are described in detail. This is the logistical part of the author’s ideas for stewardship principles.
Part three presents the triumph of hope over experience. One of the major obstacles to stewardship is “cosmetic reform.” Patriarchy tends to regenerate itself when stewardship principles are implemented in an organization at a surface level. Through cosmetic change, “in a shifting, customer-driven environment, improvement efforts that produce no redistribution of power, purpose, or privilege will produce no real improvement.” (189) Stewardship principles provide an alternative to this approach. Instead of patriarchy, each step in the change process “needs to foster ownership and responsibility with all who touch it.” (204) Each person must own the vision of the organization. In the end, Block views true democracy as the means to implementing stewardship principles in order to change organizations more effectively.
This book applies to my current context in that I need to view myself as a steward of the resources God has entrusted to me. A transformational leader is able to build relationships up to the powerful and down to the powerless, in order to give themselves away through the redistribution of resources.
A major part of my role in LAMP involves the redistribution of power and resources, whether they involve people, money, or leadership, on behalf of the students and the families who live in the Homewood and East Hills section of the city of Pittsburgh. From this book, I learned it is important for leaders of initiatives to take care that the principles and changes being implemented in a project move beyond the programmatic level.
Reclaiming Our Prodigal Sons and Daughters
Reclaiming our Prodigal Sons and Daughters
Scott Larson and Larry Brendtro
National Education Service (2000)
Scott Larson and Larry Brendtro present a case for moving away from traditional ineffective approaches used in connecting with at-risk youth in order to implement more appropriate strategies with a particular focus on the spiritual, or heart, level of young people. This book is timely because many books written about programs and philosophies designed to impact troubled youth often bypass the importance of the spiritual development of adolescents. These authors clearly articulate strategies that are appropriately designed to address the multitude of complex youth development in our modern society.
The book is divided into two sections. The first section focuses on the problem, or what has gone wrong with wayward youth in modern society. The first chapter presents a new type of adolescent. According to the authors, “teenagers of the twenty-first century are worlds apart from the youth of a century earlier or from those being raised in more traditional cultures.” (5) This is because of three major shifts in our modern society: adolescents have become segregated from adults, they are being raised in a spiritual vacuum, and they are being nurtured by the media. In the second chapter the authors turn to the parable of the prodigal son, which “provides us with a fresh understanding of how we can reclaim wayward youth, regardless of the cause of their dilemma.” (11) The third, fourth, and fifth chapters focus on the brokenness in troubled adolescents, and the causes present in families, communities, and broader society which contribute to the brokenness.
The second section of the book focuses on fresh strategies that are needed to support the development of adolescents. The authors clearly outline the basic concepts of reclaiming troubled adolescents through reparenting, redirecting, reconciling, and redeeming. The reparenting concept was very strong, defined as “providing a youth who is not closely attached to adults with bonds to a positive adult.” (99) This represents the heart of mentoring, and the authors demonstrate the huge need for this type of mentoring because “contemporary society is faced with scores of underparented kids.” (99)
This was probably the most applicable book of any of the assigned readings for Overture I to my work with LAMP. I am a strong advocate for mentoring because I understand the unique power of individual relationships in supporting a wide variety of problems experienced by young people today. The authors outlined the need to develop courage in young people in order for them to thrive in society, and they said that “disadvantaged youths may actually have an advantage when it comes to developing the attribute of courage – as long as they have access to someone who can instill in them some of the essential building blocks for healthy development.” (72)
The principles presented by these authors are easily transferable, and I have already begun implementing these solid concepts in mentor training sessions, leadership team meetings, and monthly mentor meetings. I have experienced an overwhelming response to the need for these types of resources in providing ongoing support for mentors involved in working with all types of adolescents.
Scott Larson and Larry Brendtro
National Education Service (2000)
Scott Larson and Larry Brendtro present a case for moving away from traditional ineffective approaches used in connecting with at-risk youth in order to implement more appropriate strategies with a particular focus on the spiritual, or heart, level of young people. This book is timely because many books written about programs and philosophies designed to impact troubled youth often bypass the importance of the spiritual development of adolescents. These authors clearly articulate strategies that are appropriately designed to address the multitude of complex youth development in our modern society.
The book is divided into two sections. The first section focuses on the problem, or what has gone wrong with wayward youth in modern society. The first chapter presents a new type of adolescent. According to the authors, “teenagers of the twenty-first century are worlds apart from the youth of a century earlier or from those being raised in more traditional cultures.” (5) This is because of three major shifts in our modern society: adolescents have become segregated from adults, they are being raised in a spiritual vacuum, and they are being nurtured by the media. In the second chapter the authors turn to the parable of the prodigal son, which “provides us with a fresh understanding of how we can reclaim wayward youth, regardless of the cause of their dilemma.” (11) The third, fourth, and fifth chapters focus on the brokenness in troubled adolescents, and the causes present in families, communities, and broader society which contribute to the brokenness.
The second section of the book focuses on fresh strategies that are needed to support the development of adolescents. The authors clearly outline the basic concepts of reclaiming troubled adolescents through reparenting, redirecting, reconciling, and redeeming. The reparenting concept was very strong, defined as “providing a youth who is not closely attached to adults with bonds to a positive adult.” (99) This represents the heart of mentoring, and the authors demonstrate the huge need for this type of mentoring because “contemporary society is faced with scores of underparented kids.” (99)
This was probably the most applicable book of any of the assigned readings for Overture I to my work with LAMP. I am a strong advocate for mentoring because I understand the unique power of individual relationships in supporting a wide variety of problems experienced by young people today. The authors outlined the need to develop courage in young people in order for them to thrive in society, and they said that “disadvantaged youths may actually have an advantage when it comes to developing the attribute of courage – as long as they have access to someone who can instill in them some of the essential building blocks for healthy development.” (72)
The principles presented by these authors are easily transferable, and I have already begun implementing these solid concepts in mentor training sessions, leadership team meetings, and monthly mentor meetings. I have experienced an overwhelming response to the need for these types of resources in providing ongoing support for mentors involved in working with all types of adolescents.
Missional Church
Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America
Darrell L. Guder
Eerdmans Publishing Company (1998)
This book examines problems within the North American church from a spiritual and theological perspective. Central to this focus is mission, or sending, which the authors describe as “the central biblical theme describing the purpose of God’s action in human history.” (4) The authors argue that the Western church has lost sight of this missional focus, and the only way it can be rediscovered is through reshaping our theology.
While the first chapter gives a general overview of the main thesis, chapters two and three give an absolutely amazing historical portrait of the North American church and Western culture since the Enlightenment period. I would highly recommend this book to any person because these two chapters alone are so significant to understanding the nuances of the make-up of the modern, and now postmodern, church. The authors point out that “the churches in both the United States and Candad have developed a type of functional Christendom in the form of a churched culture… Therefore today we find churches seeking a public voice but finding that they are no longer taken seriously. There voice in the United States has been marginalized into a highly personalized and privatized practice of faith.” (60)
Since the second and third chapters provide such a great context, chapters four through six focus on how the church should express itself in terms of evangelization and missional efforts. The remaining chapters focus on framing this vocation of the church in tangible terms. As such, leadership and structures are listed as important components of a modern missional church. The section on contextual leadership was of particular importance to me. The authors describe how Christendom and modernity have shaped current leadership efforts in the church, and they argue that “the shape of leadership in any particular location is a matter of historical antecedents and deep cultural values.” (190)
I feel as though I am unable to describe in words the powerful impact of this book on my worldview. Modern Christian leaders really need to have a solid understanding of historical understanding and a grasp of the modern context. God is always moving, and He really desires for his church to be fully immersed in a missional vocation. The great surprise for many North Americans is that due to the influences of modernism and postmodernism, massive missional efforts are now needed in our own areas. This is a shift away from the sending model of previous generations, which focused on sustaining church health at home while sending missionaries over sees.
As a person who is involved in mobilizing a large North American church out into the local community through efforts aimed at impacting troubled youth, orphans, seniors, and the homeless population in Pittsburgh, this book helped me to grasp that the problems faced in these mobilization efforts might have less to due with strategic program planning or implementation and more to do with the spiritual and theological base of our congregation. This is due in part to the larger cultural phenomenon known as postmodernism which has a grip on contemporary culture, but church leaders should be aware and ready to meet this challenge within an effective theological framework.
Darrell L. Guder
Eerdmans Publishing Company (1998)
This book examines problems within the North American church from a spiritual and theological perspective. Central to this focus is mission, or sending, which the authors describe as “the central biblical theme describing the purpose of God’s action in human history.” (4) The authors argue that the Western church has lost sight of this missional focus, and the only way it can be rediscovered is through reshaping our theology.
While the first chapter gives a general overview of the main thesis, chapters two and three give an absolutely amazing historical portrait of the North American church and Western culture since the Enlightenment period. I would highly recommend this book to any person because these two chapters alone are so significant to understanding the nuances of the make-up of the modern, and now postmodern, church. The authors point out that “the churches in both the United States and Candad have developed a type of functional Christendom in the form of a churched culture… Therefore today we find churches seeking a public voice but finding that they are no longer taken seriously. There voice in the United States has been marginalized into a highly personalized and privatized practice of faith.” (60)
Since the second and third chapters provide such a great context, chapters four through six focus on how the church should express itself in terms of evangelization and missional efforts. The remaining chapters focus on framing this vocation of the church in tangible terms. As such, leadership and structures are listed as important components of a modern missional church. The section on contextual leadership was of particular importance to me. The authors describe how Christendom and modernity have shaped current leadership efforts in the church, and they argue that “the shape of leadership in any particular location is a matter of historical antecedents and deep cultural values.” (190)
I feel as though I am unable to describe in words the powerful impact of this book on my worldview. Modern Christian leaders really need to have a solid understanding of historical understanding and a grasp of the modern context. God is always moving, and He really desires for his church to be fully immersed in a missional vocation. The great surprise for many North Americans is that due to the influences of modernism and postmodernism, massive missional efforts are now needed in our own areas. This is a shift away from the sending model of previous generations, which focused on sustaining church health at home while sending missionaries over sees.
As a person who is involved in mobilizing a large North American church out into the local community through efforts aimed at impacting troubled youth, orphans, seniors, and the homeless population in Pittsburgh, this book helped me to grasp that the problems faced in these mobilization efforts might have less to due with strategic program planning or implementation and more to do with the spiritual and theological base of our congregation. This is due in part to the larger cultural phenomenon known as postmodernism which has a grip on contemporary culture, but church leaders should be aware and ready to meet this challenge within an effective theological framework.
Transforming Mission
Transforming Mission
David J. Bosch
Orbis Books (1993)
In this book the author describes a major paradigm shift that is needed in the context of the current state of Christian missionary efforts. He argues that the Christian church is experiencing a major crisis that is not reversible, and it is one that is also reflective of the challenges of postmodern society. This book examines the contemporary missional crisis through the lens of two thousand years of missionary history in the church.
The author of the book is David Bosch, an expert on Christian missionary efforts from South Africa who died tragically in an automobile accident in 1992. He broke the thirteen chapters of the book up into three sections. In the first section he clearly outlines the mission models found in the New Testament. Churches in the New Testament era are often held up as model versions of effective church activity, but the churches from that time period did not employ one specific type of missional model. They utilized a wide variety of models based on the context of the geographic regions and the movements of the Holy Spirit. In this sense, the author argues that “the New Testament witnesses to a fundamental shift when compared with the Old Testament. In surveying the paradigm shifts in missionary thinking I wish to suggest that the first and cardinal paradigm change took place with the advent of Jesus of Nazereth and what followed after that.” (15)
In the second section, Bosch describes several historical paradigms of mission. He describes many reasons for Christian leaders to be creative in bringing the message of the gospel to the modern context. He says that “one of the basic reasons for having to do this, lies in the fact that the Christian faith is a historical faith. God communicates his revelation to people through human beings and through events, not by means of abstract propositions. This is another way of saying that the biblical faith, both Old and New Testament, is ‘incarnational’, the reality of God entering into human affairs.” (181)
In the third section the author presents various aspects of relevant missiology including the paradigms of postmodernism, ecumenical missions, and the contemporary diversity in missional approaches within the church. Most importantly, all previous attempts at Christian missiology, especially those attempted during the Enlightmenmnet period of human history, will not be influential anymore. The modern pitfalls such as purposeless individualism and overconfidence in one’s self have given way to what Bosch describes as the need to “reaffirm the indispensableness of conviction and commitment.” (362) and the need to connect with other humans relationally for survival.
God is moving anew in today’s modern society, and I feel that He has placed me uniquely in this situation at North Way for the purpose that He has called me to. In many ways, the externally focused efforts at North Way are not understood as anything new in terms of the historical context of the church and the body of Christ. However, this book has taught me that while God may have moved in many different forms missionally in the past, He is up to something new in the postmodern context of history. This new form of missiology will require me to be multifaceted and multidimensional in my leadership approaches. The postmodern era is complex, and as Bosch put it, “our mission has to be multidimensional in order to be credible and faithful to its origins and character.” (512) As I see it, I need to lead with diverse strategies because I live and lead in a diverse world.
David J. Bosch
Orbis Books (1993)
In this book the author describes a major paradigm shift that is needed in the context of the current state of Christian missionary efforts. He argues that the Christian church is experiencing a major crisis that is not reversible, and it is one that is also reflective of the challenges of postmodern society. This book examines the contemporary missional crisis through the lens of two thousand years of missionary history in the church.
The author of the book is David Bosch, an expert on Christian missionary efforts from South Africa who died tragically in an automobile accident in 1992. He broke the thirteen chapters of the book up into three sections. In the first section he clearly outlines the mission models found in the New Testament. Churches in the New Testament era are often held up as model versions of effective church activity, but the churches from that time period did not employ one specific type of missional model. They utilized a wide variety of models based on the context of the geographic regions and the movements of the Holy Spirit. In this sense, the author argues that “the New Testament witnesses to a fundamental shift when compared with the Old Testament. In surveying the paradigm shifts in missionary thinking I wish to suggest that the first and cardinal paradigm change took place with the advent of Jesus of Nazereth and what followed after that.” (15)
In the second section, Bosch describes several historical paradigms of mission. He describes many reasons for Christian leaders to be creative in bringing the message of the gospel to the modern context. He says that “one of the basic reasons for having to do this, lies in the fact that the Christian faith is a historical faith. God communicates his revelation to people through human beings and through events, not by means of abstract propositions. This is another way of saying that the biblical faith, both Old and New Testament, is ‘incarnational’, the reality of God entering into human affairs.” (181)
In the third section the author presents various aspects of relevant missiology including the paradigms of postmodernism, ecumenical missions, and the contemporary diversity in missional approaches within the church. Most importantly, all previous attempts at Christian missiology, especially those attempted during the Enlightmenmnet period of human history, will not be influential anymore. The modern pitfalls such as purposeless individualism and overconfidence in one’s self have given way to what Bosch describes as the need to “reaffirm the indispensableness of conviction and commitment.” (362) and the need to connect with other humans relationally for survival.
God is moving anew in today’s modern society, and I feel that He has placed me uniquely in this situation at North Way for the purpose that He has called me to. In many ways, the externally focused efforts at North Way are not understood as anything new in terms of the historical context of the church and the body of Christ. However, this book has taught me that while God may have moved in many different forms missionally in the past, He is up to something new in the postmodern context of history. This new form of missiology will require me to be multifaceted and multidimensional in my leadership approaches. The postmodern era is complex, and as Bosch put it, “our mission has to be multidimensional in order to be credible and faithful to its origins and character.” (512) As I see it, I need to lead with diverse strategies because I live and lead in a diverse world.
Globalizing Theology
Globalizing Theology
Craig Ott and Harold Netland
Baker Academic (2006)
These essays examine the impact of globalization on Christianity, and more specifically, various aspects of Christian theology. The editors of this book argue that “globalization and the emergence of world Christianity have profound implications on how we do theology.” (15) The essays were written to develop an understanding of the fusion between local trends in Christianity and universal perspectives that may transcend cultural norms.
The chapters in the book are grouped into three sections. The first section outlines the significant challenges to theology brought about by the process of globalization and a new, worldwide Christianity. The second section focuses on several key methods utilized to understand globalizing theology. The third section presents more comprehensive viewpoints into a range of issues connected to the church, theology, and globalization. All of the sections work well together in the construction of a foundation in which to examine global theological concepts, from both a historical and a modern perspective.
Andrew Walls argued that the “Christian life and thought, taking as its norm the incarnation of the divine Word, requires incarnation, embodiment in the cultural specifics of a particular time and place. Generations may be utterly diverse, therefore, in their understanding and experience of the grace of God and yet belong together in the ultimate purpose of God.” (76) This was great insight into the seemingly complicated realm of context in the spread of worldwide Christianity.
I thought Kevin Vanhoozer made some great points in his essay entitled “One Rule to Rule Them All?” He described in depth the importance of embracing context during the process of theological study. He argued that “the most insidious effect of globalization is homogenization – of culture, of religion.” (101) Many forms of Christianity in America are a homogenous blend of culture and religion, or beliefism. Christian theologians must be careful to avoid the negative factors associated with globalization.
In the section on methodology, Lois McKinney Douglas argued that “in doing global theologizing, it is important for committed Christian theologians from around the world to develop a metatheological framework that enables them to understand, compare, and evaluate local theologies, the questions each is seeking to answer, and the sociocultural contexts in which each must define the gospel.” (302) Christians can be easily led astray as a result of globalization if they are unable or unwilling to develop a solid framework with which to study scripture.
This book had some major impact on the perspectives I take into my work on a daily basis. I often feel terribly ill-equipped to navigate through cross-cultural issues related to LAMP’s suburban/urban relationships, church/state partnerships, and racial reconciliation. The material presented in these essays has helped me to build a foundation to be confident in understanding globalization and cross-cultural issues related to Christianity. Many of the authors provided historical overviews of the nature of the relationship between theology and many differing global worldviews. A major takeaway for me was the importance of understanding context as I work with LAMP families and their mentees.
Craig Ott and Harold Netland
Baker Academic (2006)
These essays examine the impact of globalization on Christianity, and more specifically, various aspects of Christian theology. The editors of this book argue that “globalization and the emergence of world Christianity have profound implications on how we do theology.” (15) The essays were written to develop an understanding of the fusion between local trends in Christianity and universal perspectives that may transcend cultural norms.
The chapters in the book are grouped into three sections. The first section outlines the significant challenges to theology brought about by the process of globalization and a new, worldwide Christianity. The second section focuses on several key methods utilized to understand globalizing theology. The third section presents more comprehensive viewpoints into a range of issues connected to the church, theology, and globalization. All of the sections work well together in the construction of a foundation in which to examine global theological concepts, from both a historical and a modern perspective.
Andrew Walls argued that the “Christian life and thought, taking as its norm the incarnation of the divine Word, requires incarnation, embodiment in the cultural specifics of a particular time and place. Generations may be utterly diverse, therefore, in their understanding and experience of the grace of God and yet belong together in the ultimate purpose of God.” (76) This was great insight into the seemingly complicated realm of context in the spread of worldwide Christianity.
I thought Kevin Vanhoozer made some great points in his essay entitled “One Rule to Rule Them All?” He described in depth the importance of embracing context during the process of theological study. He argued that “the most insidious effect of globalization is homogenization – of culture, of religion.” (101) Many forms of Christianity in America are a homogenous blend of culture and religion, or beliefism. Christian theologians must be careful to avoid the negative factors associated with globalization.
In the section on methodology, Lois McKinney Douglas argued that “in doing global theologizing, it is important for committed Christian theologians from around the world to develop a metatheological framework that enables them to understand, compare, and evaluate local theologies, the questions each is seeking to answer, and the sociocultural contexts in which each must define the gospel.” (302) Christians can be easily led astray as a result of globalization if they are unable or unwilling to develop a solid framework with which to study scripture.
This book had some major impact on the perspectives I take into my work on a daily basis. I often feel terribly ill-equipped to navigate through cross-cultural issues related to LAMP’s suburban/urban relationships, church/state partnerships, and racial reconciliation. The material presented in these essays has helped me to build a foundation to be confident in understanding globalization and cross-cultural issues related to Christianity. Many of the authors provided historical overviews of the nature of the relationship between theology and many differing global worldviews. A major takeaway for me was the importance of understanding context as I work with LAMP families and their mentees.
Street Signs
Street Signs: A New Direction in Urban Ministry
Ray Bakke and Jon Sharpe
New Hope Publishers (2006)
Ray Bakke has said that people seem to be more interested in how he learns than in what he has actually learned over a lifetime of urban ministry involvement. In this book, the authors present many of the tangible strategies they have utilized in city consultations all over the world so that modern Christian leaders might be more equipped to lead in a global environment that is rapidly urbanizing and globalizing.
The authors break this book up into two sections. In the first section, Ray Bakke gives an overview of his journey in urban ministry over the past fifty years. He also provides some basic urban ministry concepts that will surely guide contemporary Christian leaders in areas such as the processes of urbanization, embracing the city as a parish, the importance of searching for signs of hope in modern cities, and a basic overview of the urban consultation process in community development. Jon Sharpe briefly describes his journey of involvement in urban ministry, followed by an overview of the leadership style of Barnabas and the process of completing effective consultations that is applicable to urban environments all over the world.
Ray Bakke argues that “fundamentally, for Christians, especially for church and mission leaders, we need a new way of thinking about missions, a new worldview or paradigm, if you please.” (83) He goes on to state that “missions is no longer across the ocean and geographically distant: it is across the street and is culturally distant, in our cities and in cities on all six continents.” (83) Christian leaders need to adjust their worldview to “incorporate thinking globally while living globally.” (83)
Jon Sharpe describes a powerful process of city consultations, in which “the best consultations come as a result of a long-term networking effort by trusted facilitators and the input of an outsider. The outsider brings a listening ear, a desire to learn from the city, and his or her power to convene the leadership of a city – social, political, and religious.” (216) In essence, Christian leaders in cities all over the world need to understand who needs to be at the table, what will be consulted upon, and how will the strategies be implemented. The whole process is very clearly articulated.
I was very encouraged by this book. One of the things I have learned about urban ministry in Pittsburgh is that many leaders are willing to partner for the betterment of the city. Organizations from all over the city, including the Pittsburgh Leadership Foundation, the Pittsburgh Board of Education, nonprofit organizations, and churches have displayed a willingness to work together for positive outcomes on the overall development of the city.
With so many people willing to partner, including organizations that are non-Christian, there are many opportunities for city consultations. I have been intimidated by this process at times, in which I often find myself in the position of building relationships in order to partner more effectively for the common good of the city. Inevitably, this process which I often shy away from is actually the process which might end up having the most impact in terms of community development and empowerment of the folks who are benefiting from services and support.
Ray Bakke and Jon Sharpe
New Hope Publishers (2006)
Ray Bakke has said that people seem to be more interested in how he learns than in what he has actually learned over a lifetime of urban ministry involvement. In this book, the authors present many of the tangible strategies they have utilized in city consultations all over the world so that modern Christian leaders might be more equipped to lead in a global environment that is rapidly urbanizing and globalizing.
The authors break this book up into two sections. In the first section, Ray Bakke gives an overview of his journey in urban ministry over the past fifty years. He also provides some basic urban ministry concepts that will surely guide contemporary Christian leaders in areas such as the processes of urbanization, embracing the city as a parish, the importance of searching for signs of hope in modern cities, and a basic overview of the urban consultation process in community development. Jon Sharpe briefly describes his journey of involvement in urban ministry, followed by an overview of the leadership style of Barnabas and the process of completing effective consultations that is applicable to urban environments all over the world.
Ray Bakke argues that “fundamentally, for Christians, especially for church and mission leaders, we need a new way of thinking about missions, a new worldview or paradigm, if you please.” (83) He goes on to state that “missions is no longer across the ocean and geographically distant: it is across the street and is culturally distant, in our cities and in cities on all six continents.” (83) Christian leaders need to adjust their worldview to “incorporate thinking globally while living globally.” (83)
Jon Sharpe describes a powerful process of city consultations, in which “the best consultations come as a result of a long-term networking effort by trusted facilitators and the input of an outsider. The outsider brings a listening ear, a desire to learn from the city, and his or her power to convene the leadership of a city – social, political, and religious.” (216) In essence, Christian leaders in cities all over the world need to understand who needs to be at the table, what will be consulted upon, and how will the strategies be implemented. The whole process is very clearly articulated.
I was very encouraged by this book. One of the things I have learned about urban ministry in Pittsburgh is that many leaders are willing to partner for the betterment of the city. Organizations from all over the city, including the Pittsburgh Leadership Foundation, the Pittsburgh Board of Education, nonprofit organizations, and churches have displayed a willingness to work together for positive outcomes on the overall development of the city.
With so many people willing to partner, including organizations that are non-Christian, there are many opportunities for city consultations. I have been intimidated by this process at times, in which I often find myself in the position of building relationships in order to partner more effectively for the common good of the city. Inevitably, this process which I often shy away from is actually the process which might end up having the most impact in terms of community development and empowerment of the folks who are benefiting from services and support.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Transforming Power
Transforming Power: Biblical Strategies for Making a Difference in Your Community
Robert C. Linthicum
InterVarsity Press (2003)
The main idea of this book is relational power, especially as it relates to the engagement of Christians in urban ministry and community development. The first part of the book provides a foundation for a theology of power through such biblical examples as the lives of Nehemiah and Jesus. The second part of the book is more practical with strategies clearly outlined for people who want to make a difference in developing their communities.
The author argues that Christians must engage in the proper understanding and usage of power through relationships, although many evangelical Christians have tended to shy away from the use of power in the world over the past century. The first couple of chapters present the various dynamics of healthy and dysfunctional communities. The next section focuses on specific ways that Christians utilize relational power to engage broken systems, with Jesus and Paul serving as guides. Linthicum says that Paul was “very sophisticated in his understanding of and use of power, and that use of power was built upon a highly developed theology of public life.” (113) From the material that is presented, the reader gathers that Christians have a crucial role to play in public life in our modern society. In fact, many aspects of a healthy community, or what the author describes as shalom in the city, become broken when Christians fail to engage in the use of power.
The remaining chapters in the book focus on the exchange of relational power through individual meetings, which lead to the mobilization of the broader church, or body of Christ, en mass in the engagement of relational power. The author also presents strategies for strengths and weaknesses that can occur when the church becomes powerful. For instance, Linthicum cites accountability, confrontation, civil disobedience, negotiation, and agitation as five biblically-based strategies that the church can use to take on corrupt systems. Of all of these actions, the author argues that confrontation is the most difficult for the church to utilize because they “believe it to be inconsistent with a loving, Christ-like faith. But… you can’t hope to bring about change – in a church or in a Christian organization or the world – and avoid confrontation.” (171)Linthicum’s main points are very timely in a modern climate in America where Christians are disengaging from systematic power issues in order to pursue a more individualized brand of spirituality apart from the inconveniences and messiness of power struggles. I believe that this generates a huge void that many government and social service agencies are more that willing to jump in to. Unfortunately, a healthy society will never be fully restored if the church disengages. However, one common misconception that I hear from people is that the church, defined by some as the people located in a building on Sunday mornings, must be the only source of power to rise up in order for communities to be transformed. I’m learning about the power of a theology of work, which outlines the need to build relational power with Christians who are leaders in the business world, politics, and other “secular” systems in society. These leaders also must be considered in the mobilization of the church toward issues of systemic change.
Robert C. Linthicum
InterVarsity Press (2003)
The main idea of this book is relational power, especially as it relates to the engagement of Christians in urban ministry and community development. The first part of the book provides a foundation for a theology of power through such biblical examples as the lives of Nehemiah and Jesus. The second part of the book is more practical with strategies clearly outlined for people who want to make a difference in developing their communities.
The author argues that Christians must engage in the proper understanding and usage of power through relationships, although many evangelical Christians have tended to shy away from the use of power in the world over the past century. The first couple of chapters present the various dynamics of healthy and dysfunctional communities. The next section focuses on specific ways that Christians utilize relational power to engage broken systems, with Jesus and Paul serving as guides. Linthicum says that Paul was “very sophisticated in his understanding of and use of power, and that use of power was built upon a highly developed theology of public life.” (113) From the material that is presented, the reader gathers that Christians have a crucial role to play in public life in our modern society. In fact, many aspects of a healthy community, or what the author describes as shalom in the city, become broken when Christians fail to engage in the use of power.
The remaining chapters in the book focus on the exchange of relational power through individual meetings, which lead to the mobilization of the broader church, or body of Christ, en mass in the engagement of relational power. The author also presents strategies for strengths and weaknesses that can occur when the church becomes powerful. For instance, Linthicum cites accountability, confrontation, civil disobedience, negotiation, and agitation as five biblically-based strategies that the church can use to take on corrupt systems. Of all of these actions, the author argues that confrontation is the most difficult for the church to utilize because they “believe it to be inconsistent with a loving, Christ-like faith. But… you can’t hope to bring about change – in a church or in a Christian organization or the world – and avoid confrontation.” (171)Linthicum’s main points are very timely in a modern climate in America where Christians are disengaging from systematic power issues in order to pursue a more individualized brand of spirituality apart from the inconveniences and messiness of power struggles. I believe that this generates a huge void that many government and social service agencies are more that willing to jump in to. Unfortunately, a healthy society will never be fully restored if the church disengages. However, one common misconception that I hear from people is that the church, defined by some as the people located in a building on Sunday mornings, must be the only source of power to rise up in order for communities to be transformed. I’m learning about the power of a theology of work, which outlines the need to build relational power with Christians who are leaders in the business world, politics, and other “secular” systems in society. These leaders also must be considered in the mobilization of the church toward issues of systemic change.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Renewing the City
Renewing the City: Reflections on Community Development and Urban Renewal
Robert Lupton
InterVarsity Press (2005)
In this book Robert Lupton retells the story of Nehemiah through a process called midrash, which is an ancient Jewish teaching method using imagination and imagery to add context to Scriptures. The first part of the book focuses on adding depth to the study of the Biblical book of Nehemiah. The second part of the book draws parallels between Nehemiah’s community development work in Jerusalem and modern day development efforts in American inner cities. Contemporary urban ministry principles are compared to ancient urban ministry principles.
The author argues that the dilemmas facing urban ministry leaders long ago are relevant in resolving similar dilemmas today. One highlight of the book was a chapter about gentrification with justice, which argued that what is needed in cities is gentry “who will use their competencies and connections to ensure that their lower-income neighbors have a stake in their revitalizing neighborhood.” (124) Christians are called to care for the poor, and those who move back into the city from the suburbs need to think strategically about also caring for justice for their new neighbors.
The book has another great chapter about vision and risk taking. Lupton speaks clearly and with credibility about need for strong visionary leadership from urban leaders. He argues that “Vision that is divinely authored – the kind that extends me far beyond my own abilities – requires a frightful level of risk taking. It is fundamentally different from strategy planning and goal setting. It requires me to let go of the security of predictable outcomes and venture into uncharted waters with little more than an inaudible internal voice as a guide. Such vision is not a product of human creativity; it is divinely conceived and implanted in the spirits of those who are willing to trust miracle over plan.” (151) Nehemiah was a visionary risk taker, and this is what is needed for all urban ministry leaders today. This is one of the author’s strongest points.
The final chapters focus on different aspects of incarnational living. Cities may have a romantic appeal on people from an outside perspective (with their violence, noise, and drama), but everything becomes much more meaningful once the inner cities issues begin impacting one’s family and home. Programs are important, but good neighbors are much more important to the renewing of the city.
I had been wrestling with many questions directly related to the content in this book before I started reading it. How can I be more effective as an urban ministry leader? Robert Lupton ministered in inner cities with living there for about ten years prior to moving incarnationally to the city. In this book he describes the process of how his ministry became much more effective once he moved to where he was serving. I have been wondering how much more effective I would be as a leader if I moved to inner city Pittsburgh. I also have had many questions about how this would impact my family, and Lupton gives some very unique perspectives on this subject in this book. I am grateful for the principles and stories he outlines in this book, which are in many ways timeless due to the midrash process he utilized to pull out applicable information from events that happened thousands of years ago. The most important principle I learned was that it matters where the people of God choose to locate themselves.
Robert Lupton
InterVarsity Press (2005)
In this book Robert Lupton retells the story of Nehemiah through a process called midrash, which is an ancient Jewish teaching method using imagination and imagery to add context to Scriptures. The first part of the book focuses on adding depth to the study of the Biblical book of Nehemiah. The second part of the book draws parallels between Nehemiah’s community development work in Jerusalem and modern day development efforts in American inner cities. Contemporary urban ministry principles are compared to ancient urban ministry principles.
The author argues that the dilemmas facing urban ministry leaders long ago are relevant in resolving similar dilemmas today. One highlight of the book was a chapter about gentrification with justice, which argued that what is needed in cities is gentry “who will use their competencies and connections to ensure that their lower-income neighbors have a stake in their revitalizing neighborhood.” (124) Christians are called to care for the poor, and those who move back into the city from the suburbs need to think strategically about also caring for justice for their new neighbors.
The book has another great chapter about vision and risk taking. Lupton speaks clearly and with credibility about need for strong visionary leadership from urban leaders. He argues that “Vision that is divinely authored – the kind that extends me far beyond my own abilities – requires a frightful level of risk taking. It is fundamentally different from strategy planning and goal setting. It requires me to let go of the security of predictable outcomes and venture into uncharted waters with little more than an inaudible internal voice as a guide. Such vision is not a product of human creativity; it is divinely conceived and implanted in the spirits of those who are willing to trust miracle over plan.” (151) Nehemiah was a visionary risk taker, and this is what is needed for all urban ministry leaders today. This is one of the author’s strongest points.
The final chapters focus on different aspects of incarnational living. Cities may have a romantic appeal on people from an outside perspective (with their violence, noise, and drama), but everything becomes much more meaningful once the inner cities issues begin impacting one’s family and home. Programs are important, but good neighbors are much more important to the renewing of the city.
I had been wrestling with many questions directly related to the content in this book before I started reading it. How can I be more effective as an urban ministry leader? Robert Lupton ministered in inner cities with living there for about ten years prior to moving incarnationally to the city. In this book he describes the process of how his ministry became much more effective once he moved to where he was serving. I have been wondering how much more effective I would be as a leader if I moved to inner city Pittsburgh. I also have had many questions about how this would impact my family, and Lupton gives some very unique perspectives on this subject in this book. I am grateful for the principles and stories he outlines in this book, which are in many ways timeless due to the midrash process he utilized to pull out applicable information from events that happened thousands of years ago. The most important principle I learned was that it matters where the people of God choose to locate themselves.
The Lexus and the Olive Tree
The Lexus and the Olive Tree
Thomas Friedman
Anchor Books (2000)
This book is about understanding globalization as an international system that is shaping the modern world. Although globalization is not new to humanity, this modern version is much more essential to understand than in the past because technology has accelerated it at a pace never before witnessed in human history. Friedman argues that globalization also has a wider societal impact now than ever before in the major facets of life such as economics, geography, politics, and the environment.
The early chapters of the book focus on introducing globalization as the major global system replacing the Cold War system. The remaining sections of the book focus on the major systems in society and how they have been impacted, for better or worse, by globalization. One of the key arguments of the author is that nobody is charge of the globalization system, so accountability and influence over the system are difficult to achieve. For instance, Friedman gives examples of economic collapses in remote, third world countries that now send huge shock waves throughout the entire global economic community via the connectedness of what he calls the Electronic Herd.
The complexities of globalization generate many questions, which are clearly outlines by the author. However, concrete solutions are presented to many of the questions. Friedman asserts that countries can compete in the modern globalization by implementing what he calls the Golden Straitjacket, which has many different pieces that are clearly outlined in the content of this book. In basic terms, when a country “puts on the Golden Straitjacket, two things tend to happen: your economy grows and your politics shrinks.” (105) Countries need to see the globalization system, plug into the system, and continually deal with the backlash of the system.
Friedman argues that “if there is a common denominator that runs through this book it is the notion that globalization is everything and its opposite. It can be incredibly empowering and incredibly coercive.” (406) Globalization as a system has the power to destroy itself or do great good for humanity. He published this book about ten years ago, but the concepts are remarkably applicable to the global economic crisis that is plaguing the world today. The globalization system has caused great economic harm recently, but it may also be just the thing that lifts the world out of the current troubles. Leaders in all sectors of life must seek to understand the globalization. That is the only way that we will recover.
I was appreciative of the understanding that I gained from reading this book on globalization. I believe it has profound implications for the local and universal church, in particular mission efforts. Church leaders must learn to understand systems, but unfortunately many Christian leaders today are shying away from systematic justice issues. When the church fails to fulfill her societal role, the world suffers. When Christians sink back from involvement in the complex issues, it creates a huge void in any society. I have conversations with Christians all of the time who throw their hands up in the air and say things like, “This whole world is going down the drain, I’ve lost all hope, and I’m just biding my time until Jesus comes back.” Although I hope for Jesus to come back just as much as the next person, I am amazed at how people disengage at complex systematic injustices. Our society needs Christian leaders to engage!
Thomas Friedman
Anchor Books (2000)
This book is about understanding globalization as an international system that is shaping the modern world. Although globalization is not new to humanity, this modern version is much more essential to understand than in the past because technology has accelerated it at a pace never before witnessed in human history. Friedman argues that globalization also has a wider societal impact now than ever before in the major facets of life such as economics, geography, politics, and the environment.
The early chapters of the book focus on introducing globalization as the major global system replacing the Cold War system. The remaining sections of the book focus on the major systems in society and how they have been impacted, for better or worse, by globalization. One of the key arguments of the author is that nobody is charge of the globalization system, so accountability and influence over the system are difficult to achieve. For instance, Friedman gives examples of economic collapses in remote, third world countries that now send huge shock waves throughout the entire global economic community via the connectedness of what he calls the Electronic Herd.
The complexities of globalization generate many questions, which are clearly outlines by the author. However, concrete solutions are presented to many of the questions. Friedman asserts that countries can compete in the modern globalization by implementing what he calls the Golden Straitjacket, which has many different pieces that are clearly outlined in the content of this book. In basic terms, when a country “puts on the Golden Straitjacket, two things tend to happen: your economy grows and your politics shrinks.” (105) Countries need to see the globalization system, plug into the system, and continually deal with the backlash of the system.
Friedman argues that “if there is a common denominator that runs through this book it is the notion that globalization is everything and its opposite. It can be incredibly empowering and incredibly coercive.” (406) Globalization as a system has the power to destroy itself or do great good for humanity. He published this book about ten years ago, but the concepts are remarkably applicable to the global economic crisis that is plaguing the world today. The globalization system has caused great economic harm recently, but it may also be just the thing that lifts the world out of the current troubles. Leaders in all sectors of life must seek to understand the globalization. That is the only way that we will recover.
I was appreciative of the understanding that I gained from reading this book on globalization. I believe it has profound implications for the local and universal church, in particular mission efforts. Church leaders must learn to understand systems, but unfortunately many Christian leaders today are shying away from systematic justice issues. When the church fails to fulfill her societal role, the world suffers. When Christians sink back from involvement in the complex issues, it creates a huge void in any society. I have conversations with Christians all of the time who throw their hands up in the air and say things like, “This whole world is going down the drain, I’ve lost all hope, and I’m just biding my time until Jesus comes back.” Although I hope for Jesus to come back just as much as the next person, I am amazed at how people disengage at complex systematic injustices. Our society needs Christian leaders to engage!
The Call
The Call
Os Guinness
W Publishing Group (1998)
This is a powerful book about the purpose of life and discovering God’s call. The author first gives a foundation of the reason for pursuing meaning to life through a relationship with God. He gives an overview of the many different aspects of calling which are often confused or misrepresented in modern society.
The author argues that we can only find our purpose in life by responding to the call of Jesus Christ. This is the only way that we will ever find our true selves. He argues that most of everything that our modern, Western culture directs us to in the area of life purpose is false. He also argues that this is true amongst secular and Christian movements in our modern culture such as the prosperity gospel that is being preached in many American churches. He also goes into great detail about what he calls the Catholic distortion and the Protestant distortion. He argues that both of these distortions are crippling followers of Christ from fulfilling the roles that they were meant to fill in a society. Followers of Christ must first and foremost be called into life purpose for the Audience of One (God).
Most of the chapters in the body of the book cover the aspects of calling such as listening to God, giftedness, passion, heroism, morality, personal calling, corporate calling, journeying, vision, embracing the ordinary, gratitude, suffering, rejection, timing, and finishing well as a follower of Christ. Also, the chapters cover the various pitfalls of the pursuit of calling such as the temptations of conceit, envy, greed, sloth, secularization, privatization, and pluralization.
This book is strong in the deep insights that the author gives to the subject of calling. The stories at the beginning of each chapter are very interesting, and they provide a solid foundation for the main points. I honestly found no limitations in the content. Many profound points are clearly presented on each topic in each chapter (and seemingly in each paragraph).
I actually had to reread much of this book over and over again. It seems at the first read as though the author is presenting fundamental information that should be relatively basic. However, the fundamental information is presented in such a profound way, and with such unique anecdotes, that I was forced to wrestle with my own calling and worldview during the reading of each chapter. It took me a long time to read this book because I really slowed down to process everything that the author was trying to say.
My favorite chapter was about how calling impacts vision. Guinness provided a quote from T. E. Lawrence that I will never forget. Lawrence wrote about vision, “All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible. This I did.” I would absolutely love to life a life with that kind of vision and purpose!
Os Guinness
W Publishing Group (1998)
This is a powerful book about the purpose of life and discovering God’s call. The author first gives a foundation of the reason for pursuing meaning to life through a relationship with God. He gives an overview of the many different aspects of calling which are often confused or misrepresented in modern society.
The author argues that we can only find our purpose in life by responding to the call of Jesus Christ. This is the only way that we will ever find our true selves. He argues that most of everything that our modern, Western culture directs us to in the area of life purpose is false. He also argues that this is true amongst secular and Christian movements in our modern culture such as the prosperity gospel that is being preached in many American churches. He also goes into great detail about what he calls the Catholic distortion and the Protestant distortion. He argues that both of these distortions are crippling followers of Christ from fulfilling the roles that they were meant to fill in a society. Followers of Christ must first and foremost be called into life purpose for the Audience of One (God).
Most of the chapters in the body of the book cover the aspects of calling such as listening to God, giftedness, passion, heroism, morality, personal calling, corporate calling, journeying, vision, embracing the ordinary, gratitude, suffering, rejection, timing, and finishing well as a follower of Christ. Also, the chapters cover the various pitfalls of the pursuit of calling such as the temptations of conceit, envy, greed, sloth, secularization, privatization, and pluralization.
This book is strong in the deep insights that the author gives to the subject of calling. The stories at the beginning of each chapter are very interesting, and they provide a solid foundation for the main points. I honestly found no limitations in the content. Many profound points are clearly presented on each topic in each chapter (and seemingly in each paragraph).
I actually had to reread much of this book over and over again. It seems at the first read as though the author is presenting fundamental information that should be relatively basic. However, the fundamental information is presented in such a profound way, and with such unique anecdotes, that I was forced to wrestle with my own calling and worldview during the reading of each chapter. It took me a long time to read this book because I really slowed down to process everything that the author was trying to say.
My favorite chapter was about how calling impacts vision. Guinness provided a quote from T. E. Lawrence that I will never forget. Lawrence wrote about vision, “All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible. This I did.” I would absolutely love to life a life with that kind of vision and purpose!
Orthodox Alaska
Orthodox Alaska: A Theology of Mission
Michael Oleska
SVS Press (1992)
The author wrote this book because two centuries of Christian mission in Alaska have produced unique truths and principles that are significant, not only locally in relation to Alaskan societal issues, but also globally for the universal body of Christ. He presents a unique historical overview of issues that have many unique applications to contemporary missional contexts. Oleska says about the book, “There is much history in this volume, however its focus is not the past but the future. Its primary purpose is to remind the Church that her mission extends beyond human concerns and issues, beyond politics, economics and even beyond “religion,” as the subject is popularly understood.” (12)
Context is an important theme in this book. In the Alaskan history of mission efforts, early Orthodox mission leaders understood that the Holy Spirit was moving in the region before they arrived. They were careful to maintain the integrity of local values, traditions, and symbols in seeking a common understanding through valuable relationships with the indigenous population. In more years, the author argues, Protestant missionaries and the U.S. government have caused tremendous harm to the people in the Alaskan region through their lack of cultural sensitivity and overbearing impositions of religion and law. Many programs and missionary efforts in recent years have been well intentioned, but they have actually created a cycle of oppression for many Alaskan people. As Oleska puts it, “Indigenous peoples whose cultures have been disrupted and denigrated by technologically superior societies inevitably suffer traumatic demoralization and almost irreparable spiritual damage.” (194)
Other chapters in this book focus on the value of creation and relationships. The indigenous Alaskan population has traditionally valued these things as inseparable from their spirituality. However, the author argues that the rise of modernism and its secular fragmentation or compartmentalization have proven to be detrimental to their spirituality which places such a high value on creation and relationships. Thus, assimilation to the mainstream American modern society (and many Western religious norms) is counterintuitive to native Alaskan spirituality. The church has a crucial role to play in the world. The body of Christ “must condemn and renounce all cultural imperialism, within itself first of all, and then in society.” (214)
This book really gets to the heart of many things that are wrong in the Church today. People all over the world with good intentions are causing great harm, both in the church and in broader societies, through what Oleska describes very well in this book as cultural imperialism. Sometimes when I am in church or having discussions with other Christians, I get a check in my spirit about certain ideas or suggestions that are culturally insensitive. I operate in a world of urban/suburban partnerships. I also operate in a world of racial tension and misunderstandings related to class perspectives. A great deal of my time is spent helping well-meaning Christians navigate through these issues. On a personal level, an important aspect of this program at BGU is the focus on equipping me to understand context in engaging culture as a Christian leader.
Michael Oleska
SVS Press (1992)
The author wrote this book because two centuries of Christian mission in Alaska have produced unique truths and principles that are significant, not only locally in relation to Alaskan societal issues, but also globally for the universal body of Christ. He presents a unique historical overview of issues that have many unique applications to contemporary missional contexts. Oleska says about the book, “There is much history in this volume, however its focus is not the past but the future. Its primary purpose is to remind the Church that her mission extends beyond human concerns and issues, beyond politics, economics and even beyond “religion,” as the subject is popularly understood.” (12)
Context is an important theme in this book. In the Alaskan history of mission efforts, early Orthodox mission leaders understood that the Holy Spirit was moving in the region before they arrived. They were careful to maintain the integrity of local values, traditions, and symbols in seeking a common understanding through valuable relationships with the indigenous population. In more years, the author argues, Protestant missionaries and the U.S. government have caused tremendous harm to the people in the Alaskan region through their lack of cultural sensitivity and overbearing impositions of religion and law. Many programs and missionary efforts in recent years have been well intentioned, but they have actually created a cycle of oppression for many Alaskan people. As Oleska puts it, “Indigenous peoples whose cultures have been disrupted and denigrated by technologically superior societies inevitably suffer traumatic demoralization and almost irreparable spiritual damage.” (194)
Other chapters in this book focus on the value of creation and relationships. The indigenous Alaskan population has traditionally valued these things as inseparable from their spirituality. However, the author argues that the rise of modernism and its secular fragmentation or compartmentalization have proven to be detrimental to their spirituality which places such a high value on creation and relationships. Thus, assimilation to the mainstream American modern society (and many Western religious norms) is counterintuitive to native Alaskan spirituality. The church has a crucial role to play in the world. The body of Christ “must condemn and renounce all cultural imperialism, within itself first of all, and then in society.” (214)
This book really gets to the heart of many things that are wrong in the Church today. People all over the world with good intentions are causing great harm, both in the church and in broader societies, through what Oleska describes very well in this book as cultural imperialism. Sometimes when I am in church or having discussions with other Christians, I get a check in my spirit about certain ideas or suggestions that are culturally insensitive. I operate in a world of urban/suburban partnerships. I also operate in a world of racial tension and misunderstandings related to class perspectives. A great deal of my time is spent helping well-meaning Christians navigate through these issues. On a personal level, an important aspect of this program at BGU is the focus on equipping me to understand context in engaging culture as a Christian leader.
A Theology as Big as the City
A Theology as Big as the City
Ray Bakke
InterVarsity Press (1997)
The main concept of this book is to present both the need for an urban theology and also Ray Bakke’s search for a theology of the city based on his life experiences. God values cities, although most systematic theologies are developed through a rural lens. After an overview of the need for an urban theology, the author addresses urban theology from Genesis all of the way through the Bible to Revelation.
The author argues that the primary challenge to effective urban ministry in the 21st century is theological, although other challenges are demographic, missiological, ecclesiastical, and financial. Christian leaders will not be effective in addressing global urban issues unless they are solidly grounded and equipped with an urban theological base. An important aspect of urban theology is a sense of place, a concept that has been lost on many Protestant churches in recent years. Power is also a theme often addressed by the author.
The chapters of this book actually present the information along the lines of the chapters in the Bible. For instance, the second chapter entitled “God’s Hands Are in the Mud” presents an overview of the urban theological concepts found in the book of Genesis. God demonstrates in Genesis that He values His creation, and that He partners with us to steward its resources. From an urban perspective, many Christians “throw away” deteriorated city neighborhoods even though God values their redemption.
In a chapter called “Two Letters, Two Urban Spiritualities,” Bakke presents Philippians and Colossians as two different and unique perspectives on community development and spiritual transformation. He presents insight into the public spirituality of Colossians and the personal spirituality of Philippians. The author argues that both forms of spirituality are crucial to the fabric of a healthy urban community. This concept is great, but one limitation of this book is that much more could have been written about each of the concepts covered in the chapters. A great foundation has been put in place by this book, and perhaps future authors will expand on Bakke’s arguments which would expand the field of urban theology.
This book was most valuable to my work in the area of urban and suburban partnerships. The ideas also carried over very well to the L.A.M.P. partnerships between churches and schools. Although the social gospel concepts were emphasized, I also gleaned a great deal of practical application toward my personal spirituality. I was forced to ask myself, “What biases do I have toward reading and understanding the Bible?” Because of my life experiences, I would definitely say that I have always read the Bible through a rural, white, middle class, American lens. Reading this book encouraged me to expand my view of scripture.
Ray Bakke
InterVarsity Press (1997)
The main concept of this book is to present both the need for an urban theology and also Ray Bakke’s search for a theology of the city based on his life experiences. God values cities, although most systematic theologies are developed through a rural lens. After an overview of the need for an urban theology, the author addresses urban theology from Genesis all of the way through the Bible to Revelation.
The author argues that the primary challenge to effective urban ministry in the 21st century is theological, although other challenges are demographic, missiological, ecclesiastical, and financial. Christian leaders will not be effective in addressing global urban issues unless they are solidly grounded and equipped with an urban theological base. An important aspect of urban theology is a sense of place, a concept that has been lost on many Protestant churches in recent years. Power is also a theme often addressed by the author.
The chapters of this book actually present the information along the lines of the chapters in the Bible. For instance, the second chapter entitled “God’s Hands Are in the Mud” presents an overview of the urban theological concepts found in the book of Genesis. God demonstrates in Genesis that He values His creation, and that He partners with us to steward its resources. From an urban perspective, many Christians “throw away” deteriorated city neighborhoods even though God values their redemption.
In a chapter called “Two Letters, Two Urban Spiritualities,” Bakke presents Philippians and Colossians as two different and unique perspectives on community development and spiritual transformation. He presents insight into the public spirituality of Colossians and the personal spirituality of Philippians. The author argues that both forms of spirituality are crucial to the fabric of a healthy urban community. This concept is great, but one limitation of this book is that much more could have been written about each of the concepts covered in the chapters. A great foundation has been put in place by this book, and perhaps future authors will expand on Bakke’s arguments which would expand the field of urban theology.
This book was most valuable to my work in the area of urban and suburban partnerships. The ideas also carried over very well to the L.A.M.P. partnerships between churches and schools. Although the social gospel concepts were emphasized, I also gleaned a great deal of practical application toward my personal spirituality. I was forced to ask myself, “What biases do I have toward reading and understanding the Bible?” Because of my life experiences, I would definitely say that I have always read the Bible through a rural, white, middle class, American lens. Reading this book encouraged me to expand my view of scripture.
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