FREE BOOK GIVEAWAY: “An Army of Ordinary People”

May 19th, 2010 21 comments »

- Leave a comment or email me to enter the drawing and get your chance to win a free copy of the book -

- Tweet a link to this post, and earn a second entry in the drawing -


Almost 1 year ago, I reviewed the book “The Rabbit and the Elephant.” Felicity Dale has written another book and Tyndale House Publishers asked me if I would again review this book.  Since the book fits in with so much of what I blog about, I agreed.  ”An Army of Ordinary People” shares the story of church using narrative, so in sticking with that theme, I decided to share this Q&A with the author, Felicity Dale.

Interview

Question: What is the main message that An Army of Ordinary People seeks to communicate?

Felicity: All around the world, God is giving His people a vision of church that is simpler—a group of friends gathered around a meal table, a vibrant community of Jesus followers reaching out to the world around them. These groups are known as simple, organic or house churches and in many nations, movements of these churches are seeing explosive growth because of new believers. This book explores the main principles involved in these movements using examples from here in the West.

Question: An Army of Ordinary People is essentially a book of stories. Why did you choose this way to communicate?

Felicity: Stories are powerful. Jesus used them all the time to communicate truths to his followers. There’s a saying: “The longest journey a man must take is the eighteen inches from his head to his heart.” A person may be convinced intellectually, but that doesn’t necessarily translate into action. The reverse journey from the heart to the head is way shorter. If you can capture a person’s heart, their belief system catches up very quickly. Stories tug at our hearts and are more likely to produce change.

A generation is rising up for whom stories are a vital way to communicate. They often read little, and for them, books are only associated with academic learning. If you ask them what they remember from a talk, they are more likely to remember the illustrations than the theory. I know people who would never read a theoretical book on church planting, but have read Army in a few short days.

The principle that each story illustrates is explored more fully at the end of each chapter.

Question: What other important principles come out in the book?

Felicity: I describe the story of two men who started a prayer movement—any move of God has to be bathed in prayer; I look at Sam, who most people would have written off, but who reaches out to the marginalized of society. I explore the transition process using the journey of a traditional church pastor who discovers simple church. The story of Elizabeth shows the importance of reaching out into the community rather than asking others to come to our church. Other chapters look at what you do when you come together, and how to meet under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.

Question: Tell me about the process of writing the book?

Felicity: My husband, Tony, and I have been involved in simple/organic churches in this country since the mid 1990s, and before that in similar groups in the U.K. In 2000, two couples approached us and asked if we would consider helping them start a magazine for the house church movement. We agreed, and House2House (www.house2house.com) was born. People frequently contacted H2H with questions, and rather than trying to answer each person individually, I decided to produce a written work exploring the principles of simple/organic church. This developed into a manual that has been used all over the world.

The stories in An Army of Ordinary People embody the principles in the manual. Once I had decided whose stories to use, I spent a long time, often several hours, interviewing each person. I transcribed each interview and then wrote the story.

So the book is really a “how-to” guide on discipleship and simple/organic churches but using stories as the primary means to communicate this, followed by an exploration of the principles involved. Most of the stories are about ordinary people, not spiritual superstars, whom God has used, often in remarkable ways. The hope is that anyone reading the book would be able to identify with one of the stories and say, “I could do that!”

Question: This is the second version of the book to come out. How did the Lord use the original version?

Felicity: Tony and I self published the first version. (We did have an offer from a major publisher who offered us “fame and fortune” for the original manuscript, but that seemed so contrary to the principles of simple/organic church that we turned them down!) I am very grateful that this updated version is being published by Tyndale House Publishers within the Barna imprint. Tyndale has been a pleasure to work with, and of course, George (Barna) adds huge credibility. I deeply appreciate his integrity and input.

I am always humbled when I hear of how God uses anything I’ve written. I’ve heard of mega churches, simple/organic churches and, of course, individuals who used the older version of Army to think through the principles of simple/organic church and learn how to work more effectively with communities of not-yet-believers. Other churches have used it to revitalize their small groups and make them more missional. Army was written for ordinary people (rather than theologians or trained professionals) who want to follow the Lord into the harvest.

Question: When you went back to everyone to update the book five years after originally writing their stories, what did you find?

Felicity: To be honest, I approached this with some trepidation. Would it invalidate what I had written if everything I described in the original book had imploded? But I found that all but one or two of the people whose stories I told were still pressing on with the simple church journey. God is continuing to use them. Where relevant, I’ve included updates on their stories in the new version.

Question: How typical are the stories you have written?

Felicity: I could take you to literally dozens of stories that illustrate each of the principles I describe in Army. Our other book, The Rabbit and the Elephant has a number of these stories in it.

Question: You originally wrote this book in 2005. What has happened to the house church movement in the United States since then?

Felicity: Amazing growth! According to research done by George Barna (who has written the foreword to the new book), there are now around 11 million people in this country involved in simple/house churches. Obviously many of these people originally went to a more traditional form of church (what we like to call a legacy church), but one of the most encouraging things we are currently seeing is the number of these churches that are multiplying through new believers.

Question: What do you see for the future?

Felicity: Jesus is building His church, a beautiful bride. Organic/house church is part of the journey, but we are kidding ourselves if we think this is the only thing God is doing. I also see other important issues developing momentum within the movement—for example, an emphasis on the Kingdom of God, another on the role of women within the Kingdom. But what a privilege to be involved in the Kingdom at such a time as this! We’re no longer sitting wistfully on the sidelines watching God move elsewhere in the world. He’s working here too! And house/simple church is one of the things He is doing.

The Giveaway

If this book sounds like a good read, leave a comment or email me and I will do a drawing for the winner.  You have until Monday May 24th to post a comment and enter the drawing.  If I get enough comments, I may just be willing to give away 2 copies of the book :-)

Also, tweet a link to this post, and earn a second entry in the drawing.

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Walking With The Risen Jesus – Final Week

May 18th, 2010 No comments »

This is our final week before Pentecost. I am asking my church family to fast and pray with me starting tonight at Sunset through Wednesday Sunset. We will use this time of prayer and fasting to ask the Holy Spirit to give us direction. We are asking for direction in our personal life and in how we are called to serve the church. The following devotional from Bill Bright talks about fasting and gives some Scripture references for further study.

Devotional

In more than fifty-four years of walking with Christ, the greatest discovery I have made to encourage revival and accelerate the Great Commission is fasting with prayer. In fact, our Lord Jesus Christ did not begin His earthly ministry until He had fasted and prayed for forty days. Further, in the Great Commission He instructed His disciples to “teach what I taught you.” True believers who look to Jesus as their model and mentor will want to follow His example of an extended fast before beginning their ministry.
These are troubling times. The newspaper, evening news, and even events in our neighborhoods help us realize our desperate state as a people and a nation. Television portrays lust, greed, violence, and many other sins in an alluring way. Crime, immorality, economic disasters, and a loss of faith are rampant everywhere. We face corruption in government, business, the media, and even the church. Only God has the answer to sin and rebellion. His holy Word, the Bible, gives us hope for the future.
This hope involves a spiritual renewal. Many times in the past, fasting with prayer has been the key for releasing God’s power on a personal and national scale. Centuries ago, a young woman faced a desperate situation in her country. The king had passed a law that decreed death for her friends and relatives. In fact, her entire race was threatened. That young woman was Esther, queen of Media-Persia.
God had miraculously raised Esther from an obscure life as a Jewish orphan to her position as queen of the most powerful ruler of that time. Yet she did not have free access to the one person who could help, her husband, the king. If she came before him uninvited, she risked her life.
The clock was ticking; time was running out. What could Esther do? Esther called the Jewish people to prayer and fasting. Esther 4:16 records her words:
“Go and gather together all the Jews of Shushan and fast for me; do not eat or drink for three days, night or day; and I and my maids will do the same; and then, though it is strictly forbidden, I will go in to see the king; and if I perish, I perish” (TLB).
As Esther approached the king, he held out his royal scepter to her—she would not be put to death for entering his presence without an invitation. Esther soon asked the king for the life of her people, and he granted her request. Because of her courage and the fasting and prayer undertaken by the Jews, Queen Esther’s people were saved.
Although our nation is not facing the same threat that Esther’s people faced, we are in a battle for the heart and soul of our country. Our problem is a moral, ethical, and spiritual catastrophe that affects believers and nonbelievers alike. This fact deeply concerns me. For more than fifty years, I have prayed for revival for our nation and its people. The need for revival is even more urgent today. Our society has an appetite for immorality and corruption that seems insatiable.
In 1994, I began experiencing a growing awareness of the moral and spiritual decadence of our country and felt deeply burdened over America’s rapidly disintegrating values. I was gripped with an increasing sense of urgency to call upon God to send revival to our beloved country. I had a growing conviction that God wanted me to fast and pray for forty days for a revival in America and for the fulfillment of the Great Commission, given by our Lord Jesus Christ in Matthew 20:18–20.
At first I questioned God’s call. Forty days is a long time to go without solid food, and I was sure fasting would not be the most pleasant experience of my life. Yet over a period of several months, God’s call grew stronger and more clear. Finally, I was convinced: I was to seek God’s face through fasting for forty days. That fast was truly the most wonderful, life-changing forty days of my life. Since 1994, God has led me to fast at least forty days each year with remarkable blessing.
You may wonder why so long a fast. I believe this was a sovereign call of God because of the magnitude of America’s sins and the sins of the Church. The Lord also impressed upon me the great need to help accelerate the fulfillment of the Great Commission in this generation.
Fasting with prayer is the only spiritual discipline that meets all the conditions of 2 Chronicles 7:14:
“If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”
Through earnest fasting, we humble ourselves and seek God’s face, which ultimately produces repentance and spiritual renewal. That opens the way for God to bless us.
With great anticipation, I began my first forty-day fast on July 5, 1994. During the fast, I was reading 2 Chronicles chapters 29–31 when God’s holy Word spoke to my heart in a most unusual way. As you may recall, Hezekiah invited the Israelites to join him in celebrating the reopening of the temple. As I read that passage, God impressed upon me to invite several hundred of our country’s influential Christian leaders to join me in Orlando, Florida, for a time of fasting and prayer.
More than six hundred Christian leaders, representing more than a hundred denominations and religious organizations, gathered in Orlando from December 5–7, 1994. Never in the history of our great country had leaders from so many different denominations and Christian organizations come together to fast and pray, to cry out to God for a mighty awakening for our country, to beseech the Lord to visit us from heaven with miracle-working power so that we may once again be a “nation under God.”
During that time, God met with us in a supernatural way. In light of what God did for me and all who attended, this was the most world-changing event that most of us have ever experienced. From that event sprang an annual Fasting and Prayer Gathering.
Fasting and prayer help us focus on God’s will for our personal concerns. Kay Arthur of Precepts Ministries explains how fasting can affect each one of us: “Fasting shows the seriousness of our commitment. When we step into fasting, we say, ‘God, You’ve got to move. You’ve got to do it.’” And it is only as you and I join with millions of others in renewing our commitment to God, humbling ourselves before Him, that He will begin to change our country.
That brings us to our 5 Steps study. Perhaps you or your group members are concerned about personal issues in your lives. Fasting and prayer are powerful tools to seek God’s will for these matters. As you will see through several real-life examples, fasting and prayer can touch the most private and intimate parts of our lives.
Perhaps you have deep personal burdens or concerns for your community or our country. Once again, fasting with prayer is a spiritual discipline that allows us to intercede in a mighty way for our city, state, nation, and world.
Ultimately, we experience personal revival when we surrender our lives totally, completely, and irrevocably to our Lord Jesus Christ. He is revival! We have Christ and He has us. We are filled with His Holy Spirit and true revival results.
As we approach the new millennium, I believe that God is raising up an army totally surrendered to our Lord Jesus Christ—an army that knows how to fight on its knees. I invite you to join with me in seeking God’s face in a new and fresh way. Together, we can change our world for Christ!

Bill Bright, 5 Steps to Fasting and Prayer : Leader’s Guide (Orlando, FL: NewLife Publications, 1998), 5-8.

This Sunday, our church will pray for each person, lay on hands, and commission them for God’s service. I hope those of you reading along will plug into your own church family and receive their blessing for God’s call upon your life.

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Mountaintop Church is What We Need

May 13th, 2010 6 comments »

When I was a teenager, One Way Camp at Jumonville was the highlight of my summer.  Those summer camps gave me the most vivid experiences of God in my entire life.  I remember at the end of every camp we were treated to the message, “This is a mountaintop experience.  When you get back to the ‘real’ world you need to stay strong in your faith because your church is not like summer camp.”

But why?  Why wasn’t my church like summer camp?

What made Jumonville so special that it could not be experienced at home?

Why was summer camp a powerful encounters with God and why was church so dry?

The answer is simple… summer camp was community as God designed it to be.

After all these years, I have come to the conclusion that these so called, “Mountaintop” experiences should have been held out as my ideal for church.  I should not have been told to go home and settle for the same dry and boring church community.  Those Jumonville camps should have been held-out as my model for “real” world church… instead they were set-aside as fond memories of warm summer days.

Each summer on that mountaintop we ate together.  We played together.  We sang songs of worship together.  We prayed and studied God’s word, together.  We laughed and cried… together.   Every day, we experienced God together!

The message at the end of summer camp should never be, “your experience here with God is only a mountaintop experience”.

The message should be, “this is the way God designed you to live out church.”

“You experienced God at camp because you experienced His community of Faith in action.”

“Don’t go home and settle for a Sunday morning faith.”

“Don’e go home and settle for the self-centered life that typifies the average Christian experience.”

“Go home with faith like a mustard-seed and move this mountaintop community into your church.”

My days at summer camp should not have been the exception to my Christian life, they should have been the model for how to live my Christian life.. with, in, and around the community of saints!

After too many decades of status quo church, I have come to believe that “Mountaintop Church” is what we need every day.

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REVIEW: “Corinthian Elders”

May 10th, 2010 9 comments »

Review

"Corinthian Elders" by Jack Fortenberry

Jack Fortenberry is the author of a short essay entitled, “Corinthian Elders”.   His book was published in 2008 and Fortenberry recently emailed me and asked if I would read his book and review it for my readers.

The premise of Fortenberry’s book is that leaders in the Church can harm, not help, our relationship with Christ and hinder the Church’s ability to make disciples. Fortenberry supports this thesis by citing Paul’s admonition in 1 Cor 1-4 to not follow after a gifted speaker, but instead on the wisdom of Christ given to each follower through the Holy Spirit (17). Fortemberry writes:

For the church to present one or a few preachers to a passive audience who attend services because they enjoy the sermon or preaching style is a violation of Paul’s commandment to the Church.  Do we know better than Paul? (15)… Giftedness, as some consider oratory skills in professional preachers, may in fact be detrimental to a demonstration of the Spirit’s working as indicated by Paul in 1 Corinthians 2:4… (23)

Fortenberry’s main concern is that the system of hiring professional speakers or Elders encourages people to follow after “favorite” speakers instead of the leadership of the Spirit among the saints (32-33) .

Fortenberry’s book goes on to say that consensus leadership is the New Testament model of how the church should be governed (46).  Additionally, he concludes, that no Elder should ever receive any money in support of their ministry to the flock (55-56).

Summary

I have some points of disagreement on the topics of giving financial support to Elders (read more),  and I would like to read a more thorough treatment from Fortenberry on how he is using the term “leader” (read more).   Overall, “Corinthian Elders” is a good contribution to the ongoing reformation of the church in the West and the emphasis on following Christ and allowing the Holy Spirit to teach us is a much needed reminder to the church at large.

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