Imagine Church – releasing whole-life disciples

Imagine Church book cover
Imagine Church book cover

About 18 months ago I spent a week with London Institute of Contemporary Christianity (LICC) in London on their Toolbox course. It was probably one of the most equipping things I’ve done for living as a Christian in a western consumerist culture.

As part of the week we heard a short presentation from Neil Hudson about the Imagine Project. Neil had been working with 16 churches around the country, asking how they could create ‘whole life’ disciples. Christians who realised that their whole life mattered to God, not just the few hours that they devoted to gathered church activities.

For me, a guy who has spent most of his life in and around one church or another, this gave language and context to a problem that I’d seen but couldn’t articulate. I was excited, enthused and completely stuck to know what to do next.

Well, in part, the answer is finally here in this book. Rather than personal reflections on the history of the Imagine Project, Imagine Church is really an outcome. A book to give background and some direction to churches and church leaders that have noticed a disconnect between what we say we mean (‘yes, your whole life matters to God’) and the way that we act (‘I missed you at the prayer, members, home group, meeting this week’).

Fortunately, Neil doesn’t just launch into a list of new ideas and programmes to get your church working towards whole-life discipleship. The vision and values need to come before the actions, otherwise, come the first painful challenge, the slide back to the old familiar ways will occur before you’ve got very far at all. So a good proportion of the early part of the book looks at culture change, our motivation and some of the practicalities of moving a group of people forward on a journey.

The second part looks more at the practicalities and give some good examples, from churches that were involved with the pilot project, about how change can be implemented. Now, before you run away thinking, the last thing we need is more to do, Neil walks us through the idea of ‘one degree shifts’. Meaning, you don’t need to change everything in one go, instead it’s by incremental changes working their way into the fabric of church life that big impacts can be made.

The best bits…

…of this book are the real life examples that come from a range of churches that still do things very differently. This isn’t about becoming a new denomination, changing service styles, playing louder music and installing a new AV system, it’s about how the gathered church can have an impact throughout the community.

The worst bits…

…are the references to LICC resources. This may seem like a strange criticism simply because, as far as I’m aware, LICC are the only organisation devoted to revolutionising the church in this way. But, for some reason, references to LICC resources in the body text seem cumbersome and would have been better placed in the Further Reading sections at the end of each chapter.

Conclusion

Quite simply, this is an excellent, must read, book for any church leader. I reckon I’ll be sending a few out over the summer.

In case anyone is interested. LICC are currently recruiting for a Training and Development Director to work on the Imagine Project. More info on their vacancies page.

Chris Wrights new book – The Mission of God’s People

HT Kouya

Chris Wright’s new book, ‘The Mission of God’s People’ is due out this summer. First release is today, on Kindle, then the paperback appears 1st September.

If it’s anywhere near as good as his previous book ‘The Mission of God’ it’s going to be extremely good indeed.

Order it through Amazon

Servolution book review on CMS

ServolutionJust before I went away on holiday I was sent a copy of Servolution, a new book by Dino Rizzo, lead pastor of Healing Place church in Louisiana.

I’d been asked by the website Church Marketing Sucks to read and review the book for them. So on the flight out to the US I got down to it and had finished an initial read through before getting off the plane in Boston. It took a few more days to make the time to write up my comments but I eventually got there and you can read what I had to say in two posts on the CMS website.

Servolution: Starting a church revolution through serving

Hands on advice from Servolution

Ethnologue, 16th edition: reveals the alarming rate at which languages are dying

ethnologueIt’s mind expanding to even take one moment to think about what is involved in mapping every language group in the world.

In the UK we rarely come into contact with established groups that speak anything other than English. When we do we probably start by thinking about the Welsh or Scots languages, but even here there are enclaves of our cities where English would not be the first language and where large groups of people have imported their own dialect from another part of the world.

In other countries, national borders do not necessarily have to define the boundaries of the languages. Once there may have been a tribal group with a significant number of people speaking one language. However, due to an internal fight some members of the tribe went to settle somewhere else, still speaking that language. Time passes and they still have the basic language that they arrived with, but due to different experiences and a need to communicate in a different way with people outside of the tribe, their language has developed in a different way to the original language still spoken by the members of the tribe that stayed put.

Have I lost you now?

Well, I’ll make it short. Trying to work out where languages start and end isn’t as easy as geography and national boundaries, but the Ethnologue tries to do it.

I’ve just listened to a presentation by a couple that work on this publication. The 16th edition is out this month and if you want to buy an impressively large book then it’s the publication for you. However, if you’d just like to get an idea of what’s inside it’s worth visiting Wikipedia or the Ethnologue website itself, where there’s the following table of Nearly Extinct Languages.

ethnologue__nearly_extinct_languages

Image taken from Ethnologue website