All entries by this author
Nov 7th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Culture, Features, Formation, Leadership, Theology
Did the modern youth ministry movement create the Emerging Church? That’s the question Tony Jones addresses in a recent blog post. While presenting a paper at an academic conference, Jones fielded questions from professors of youth ministry primarily from evangelical colleges and seminaries.
Jones said to them, “You all have strong feelings about the emerging church movement, most of them negative. Well, you are directly responsible for the emerging church movement.”
He went on to describe how contemporary youth ministry shuns the “accoutrements of power (vestments, titles, special roles and rites). Instead, youth are encouraged to engage all of the practices of the community equally.” In other words, the rejection of structural authority and the focus on a flat structure of relational authority which has marked the…
Tags: Church, emerging church, Formation, generations, Kara Powell, kitchen table, Tony Jones, youth, youth group, youth ministry
Posted in Church, Culture, Features, Formation, Leadership, Theology |
12 comments
Nov 4th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Just For Fun
General Zod would like to remind everyone to have a great weekend, don’t drink and drive, and of course…kneel!
Posted in Just For Fun |
No Comments »
Nov 2nd, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Faith, Justice, Mission, Theology
Read part 1
3. Social action is a partner of evangelism. This, finally, is where Stott lands on the matter. He believes that social justice and evangelism “belong to each other and yet are independent of each other. Each stands on its own feet in its own right alongside the other. Neither is a means to the other, or even a manifestation of the other. For each is an end in itself.”
Here is where John Stott not only reveals his theological brilliance, but also his Christ-formed heart. He recognizes that forcing every facet of the Christian life to fit into a mission/evangelism framework is untenable, and insisting that social action somehow justify itself in relation to evangelism is to ask the wrong question. In other words, we…
Tags: atonement, debate, evangelism, gospel, Justice, Mission, mohler, social action, stott, vocation, wallis
Posted in Faith, Justice, Mission, Theology |
1 Comment »
Oct 31st, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Culture, Faith, Features, Justice, Mission, Theology
Is social justice an essential part of the gospel? The question has been raging for decades, and in some circles the matter was settled long ago. But a new generation of evangelicals with a strong inclination toward social engagement is reviving the debate. But I’m increasingly convinced that we are framing the debate incorrectly, and missing the point as a result.
The latest example came last week when Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (my alma mater) hosted Jim Wallis and Al Mohler to debate the role of justice in the mission of the gospel. Wallis, the president and CEO of Sojourners, affirmed the centrality of social justice in the gospel, while Mohler, president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, said it was an implication of the gospel but not…
Tags: atonement, debate, evangelism, gospel, Justice, Mission, mohler, social action, stott, vocation, wallis
Posted in Culture, Faith, Features, Justice, Mission, Theology |
1 Comment »
Oct 6th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Faith, Features
Our local PBS station broadcasts a show on faith and religion every Sunday. 30 Good Minutes has been on the air in one form or another since 1956, and many influential and thoughtful faith leaders from around the world have been featured on the program. This Sunday it’s my turn. I was invited by my friends Eboo Patel and Dan Pawlus on the program to talk about evangelicals engaged in interfaith dialogue and cooperation.
Watch the full 15 minute interview online, or this Sunday at 5pm on channel 11 in Chicago. Check out more about the history of 30 Good Minutes on the program’s website, and watch past interviews on their YouTube Channel.
Tags: channel 11, Eboo Patel, evangelical, Interfaith, Interfaith dialogue, interview, Muslims, St. Francis, with, WTTW
Posted in Faith, Features |
1 Comment »
Sep 27th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Faith, Movies
Tags: book, consumerism, desiring God, legalism, life with God, postures, treasure, vision, with
Posted in Faith, Movies |
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Sep 13th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Preaching, Theology, Worship
Ingredient Five: Illuminating Worship
Now I’m venturing into dangerous water–worship. Opinions are strong about what kind of worship is best, right, and even permissible in the church. And we all have our cultural and personality-based preferences. But I can best describe my bent as illuminating. By that I don’t mean theatrical lighting and lasers. I mean worship that illuminates a vision of who God is and the reality of his presence with us.
Ideally worship at Church365 would not be where people come to be “filled up” for the next six days, but where we gather to see the cosmos as it really is–a God-with-us world in which Christ is reigning. Everything would be positioned to help us see this reality and diminish the false visions we’ve ingested…
Posted in Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Preaching, Theology, Worship |
3 comments
Sep 13th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Theology
Ingredient Four: Decentralized Service
Over the last few years my travels have been taking me more regularly to Portland, Oregon. Portland is weird, and that’s how they like it. But it’s also inspiring. I’m thinking of Rick McKinley and his church Imago Dei. Rick and the leaders at Imago have done a great job inspiring their people to serve the community in Portland. But when members of the church approach a pastor about starting a new ministry, Rick has trained them to always say the same thing: “No.”
I know, it sounds counter-intuitive, but there is brilliance behind the madness. Leaders at Imago Dei know that in most cases there is another church, agency, or non-profit already engaged in the work. So rather than reinventing the wheel…
Posted in Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Theology |
2 comments
Sep 13th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Theology
Ingredient Three: Vocational Discipleship
Last month I met with David Kinnaman, president of The Barna Group, to discuss our new books. He wanted to talk about how the themes in my book With: Reimagining The Way You Relate To God fit with the research he lays out in You Lost Me: Why Young People Are Leaving Church…And Rethinking Faith. Central on David’s mind was rediscovering a theology of vocation. Here’s a quote from his book that articulates the problem:
For me, frankly, the most heartbreaking aspect of our findings is the utter lack of clarity that many young people have regarding what God is asking them to do with their lives. It is a modern tragedy. Despite years of church-based experiences and countless hours of Bible-centered teaching, millions
…
Posted in Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Theology |
2 comments
Sep 13th, 2011 |
By Skye Jethani |
Category: Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Theology
Ingredient Two: Cultural Flourishing
As I discussed in my first book, The Divine Commodity, when church institutionalism grows out of control, we come to believe that programs rather than people are the vessels of God’s Spirit and mission in the world. When this occurs we begin to honor people for their involvement in, or service for, the church. But what they do with the remainder of their time gets little attention. When this assumption is reinforced over decades, a hierarchy of importance is established with church leaders (pastors and missionaries) at the top. Others are then only celebrated when they behave like pastors or missionaries, or when they leave their “worldly” professions to devote themselves to “full-time Christian service.”
What I’m describing is the contemporary Western church’s abandonment…
Posted in Church, Culture, Faith, Formation, Leadership, Mission, Theology |
1 Comment »