Self Portrait
coffee%20spill.jpg
Search
Contact Me

86108-584373-thumbnail.jpgThe book presents the best of the first year of Today at the Mission. It is very much like the blog - a record of an emotional and spiritual journey undertaken in the kitchen of an anonymous homeless shelter that could be anywhere, or everywhere. It's not always 'light' reading but it's every bit as real as it is honest. This book captures a few miles of the journey I've been on, and I hope you'll join me along the way.

Buy the book here: Lulu.com

And yes - every cent of the profit goes to the Mission.

Nota Bene
This area does not yet contain any content.
  • The Dirty Little Secret: Uncovering the Truth Behind Porn
    The Dirty Little Secret: Uncovering the Truth Behind Porn
    by Craig Gross, Carter Krummrich

    Tells the stories of those ensared by pron,and one pastor's work to make a difference, told with sensitivity and grace.

  • Jesus for President: Politics for Ordinary Radicals
    Jesus for President: Politics for Ordinary Radicals
    by Shane Claiborne, Chris Haw

    Claiborne and Haw collaborate for the Magnus Opus of Social Justice. Whimsical, delightful, profound.

  • The Shack
    The Shack
    by William P. Young

    This self-published book has become wildly popular among Christian readers and with good reason - Young draws you into an encounter with the Trinity that is simply extraordinary.

  • Road
    Road
    by Angie Palmer

    Angie is clearly the best singer-songwriter I've heard in a decade - or two. Lyrical, haunting, beautiful.

  • Divine Nobodies: Shedding Religion To Find God (And The Unlikely People Who Help You)
    Divine Nobodies: Shedding Religion To Find God (And The Unlikely People Who Help You)
    by Jim Palmer

    Jim's journey from mega-pastor to Jesus follower. Every chapter is a great story that carries you along on a beautiful journey.

  • Messy Spirituality
    Messy Spirituality
    by Michael Yaconelli

    Mike Yaconelli was a true original. I never met him, but I read this book, and loved him like a brother. You will too.

  • Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion
    Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion
    by Sara Miles

    Sara stretched my thinking and my understanding of the Kingdom of God, and I'm grateful. We all hunger for god, for friendship and for food. The dinner table is the only place these three needs can be met simultaneuously. I should have known that, but didn't. I learned it from Sara. She rocks.

  • Blue Like Jazz: Can You Love a God Who Doesn't Make Sense?
    Blue Like Jazz: Can You Love a God Who Doesn't Make Sense?
    by Donald Miller

    Donald Miller started me on a journey, mostly because this book made me realize I wasn't crazy. When I first read this book I realized I wasn't the only one that thought this way. You have no idea. If you haven't read this - you must. That's all I can say - you must!

  • So I Go Now: Following After the Jesus of Our Day
    So I Go Now: Following After the Jesus of Our Day
    by Jeff Jacobson

    This is the story of a minvan-driving family man who encounters Jesus on a Harley. Is he safe? 'Course he isn't safe. But he is good. Buy this book - your inner wildness will thank you.

  • God in the Alley: Being and Seeing Jesus in a Broken World
    God in the Alley: Being and Seeing Jesus in a Broken World
    by Greg Paul

    Greg Paul sees the bible come to life in the men and women of the homeless sanctuary he operates. You'll be amazed and in awe. Trust me. Amazed and in awe.

  • The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical
    The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical
    by Shane Claiborne

    It's already a must-read classic. All my horizons got pushed back after reading this book.

Powered by Squarespace
« What to do? | Main | Question of the Day »
Monday
22Oct2007

Well, Duh.

The Out of Ur blog tells us that Willow Creek has now realized that a multitude of programs does not necessarily create a church full of mature Christians.

Imagine that.

My guess is that there's an absolutely huge amount of infrastructure at Willow Creek devoted to the Program Driven Church (tm) and that it will be next to impossible for them to engage in any real and meaningful change. Instead, look for a whole bunch of new and improved programs rebranded with words like "incarnational" and "missional". Y0ur church will then be ripe for the picking resourcing. Willow Creek is, after all, an industry. (As an aside, a Google search of the Willow Creek website yielded more than 10,000 pages - 10,000! -  including this one, with a quote from Bill Hybels on the sidebar: "Growing the church is the hope of the world." Now, I don't want to s0und all holier and thou and stuff, but isn't Jesus Christ the hope of the world? Forgive me the sarcasm but... no, wait. Don't forgive me. I don't care. Crap like that deserves sarcasm).

I'm looking for something else in a church. I'm looking for a place where a community of believers can grapple with scripture, can wrestle with what it means to be a Christ-follower in this sin-wracked, broken world of ours. I'm looking for a place where it's all right to doubt, to worry, to fear, to celebrate, to dance and to sing - or not sing; where prayer is what we do, and not what we listen to someone else doing, where art is shared, where contemplation is possible, where worship is lived, where healing happens. I guess I'm really looking for a place where all the odd people like me who don't fit anywhere else can be welcome and loved - which has to be said because wanting what I described.... well, that pretty much guarantees your dissatisfaction with The Program Driven Church (tm); it pretty much guarantees you'll be the odd one out Sunday morning.

Tonight a bunch of Christians in our city housed some men and women who were homeless. They were fed a hot, nutritious meal. Some will be given clothes, all will have a safe place to stay while they get their lives back on track. In our dining room tonight we fed about eighty people. I talked tonight about how when we share our fears and anxieties with Jesus we will still have our problems, but we're no longer alone in the world. Some folks left with groceries, I gave a diabetic lady some large packages of artificial sweetener and she began giving some of this precious stash out to others she knew were diabetic. Another lady asked for a take-out container so she could take her piece of pie home to a friend who wasn't well. They have so little, and what they do have they give away. Before supper tonight I prayed with the volunteers, one of whom prayed that the churches in our city would finally 'get it' as to their God-given responsibilities to the poor, to the orphan and widow, the leper, the lost. What if Jesus isn't looking for leaders? What if he's looking for followers? Followers who are content to treasure and value the folks right in their own neighbourhood, folks who are not statistics on the way to something bigger and better, who are not program fodder? What if being the most influential church in America is actually not the way to live out the Kingdom of God? What if the way to destruction is broad, and there's lots of folks on it, and the way to life is narrow, and only a few find it? 'Cause if that's the case, perhaps we may want to see what Willow Creek does next, and then do the exact opposite.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (14)

**What if the way to destruction is broad, and there's lots of folks on it**

like 10,000 hits on a google search broad?

**and the way to life is narrow, and only a few find it?**

like "she began giving some of this precious stash out to others she knew were diabetic. Another lady asked for a take-out container so she could take her piece of pie home to a friend who wasn't well..." kind of narrow?

i love the way your rhetorical questions are already answered within your posts. you are brilliant, my friend.

you *get it*.
October 23, 2007 | Unregistered Commenterm2
RWK:

What can I say? You said much of what I think. Thanks

October 23, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJohn Lunt
And as we wind on down the road
Our shadows taller than our soul
There walks a lady we all know
Who shines white light and wants to show
How everything still turns to gold
And if you listen very hard
The tune will come to you at last
When all is one and one is all
To be a rock and not to roll.

And she's buying the stairway to heaven

Led Zeppelin
October 23, 2007 | Unregistered Commenternancy
I agree. You are simply brilliant. For all your questions, you have a remarkable number of answers as well.
October 23, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterHennHouse
Ho boy. Preach it, Bro.
October 23, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterMike
Amen.
October 23, 2007 | Unregistered Commenterwilsonian
.

"I'm looking for something else in a church. I'm looking for a place where a community of believers can grapple with scripture, can wrestle with what it means to be a Christ-follower in this sin-wracked, broken world of ours. I'm looking for a place where it's all right to doubt, to worry, to fear, to celebrate, to dance and to sing - or not sing; where prayer is what we do, and not what we listen to someone else doing, where art is shared, where contemplation is possible, where worship is lived, where healing happens. I guess I'm really looking for a place where all the odd people like me who don't fit anywhere else can be welcome and loved."

RWK, if I believed in mission statements for churches or plaques or walls for that matter, I'd make this a mission statement for the church and put it on a plaque on the wall. I guess I'll just have to try to remember it. Thanks.
October 26, 2007 | Unregistered Commenterdsheff
Amen.

Amen again.
October 26, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterTonya
do you think that we will ever understand?

i think that the best we can do is to Love and follow Jesus.

i hope that all the people in each gathering can have Love and patience for eachother. and encourage one another to have faith in God.

the something that you are looking for in a church is...you. you are the church, and you are that place. it is within you..and me.

i love you.
October 28, 2007 | Unregistered Commenternancy
"What if Jesus isn't looking for leaders? What if he's looking for followers?"

Of course you already knew that he's looking for followers. He told us. "Follow me."

Amen.
November 2, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterBill
I've been reading here for some time and am always touched. Thanks for living the life and sharing it here.
November 4, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer
Man I loved that Blog! My sister reads your blog a lot and she told me about it and now I am hooked! My family and I live in Boise Idaho and we are planting a church here. We have been here 4 months and we are just trying to love people and become a "follower". Thanks for the words and we look forward to reading more. I am glad that I am not the only one that wants to puke at that comment about the "church being the hope of the world".
It's a honor to be in the Kingdom with yall- josh
www.gilbertsjourney.com
November 11, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJosh Gilbert
oh so true...hey, we're looking for the same church! Let me know when you find it...
December 2, 2007 | Unregistered Commentergracie
Gracie: I refuse to belong to any church that would have me as a member. :)
December 2, 2007 | Registered Commenter[rhymes with kerouac]

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.