Hudson Taylor

This man has got to be one of the most courageous and inspiring Christians of the modern missionary movement.

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While I was at my in-laws place last year I discovered his two volume biography

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written by his son – around 1400 pages in all! It was like stumbling on a gold mine.

I raced thru the first volume, despite its rather poor narration and recently finished the second volume. I’d like to read some other HT bios because while this one may have been historically accurate it was not well written and thus will get ignored by many.

If you’re a missionary and want inspiration then make sure you tap into this guy’s story, but you may like to try an easier read first!

2006 Top Reads

I use the ‘book’ section of the blog as a way of keeping track of what I have read over the year. You can see what I got thru last year in the column on the left.

I’m not a superfast reader nor a slow one. I think I average a book a fortnight.

So here are last year’s top reads:

Fiction: The Kite Runner – a brilliant story of an Afghani child who grows up and goes back to his old home 20 years later. It narrowly gets iin ahead of The Turning but only because it was a ‘re-read’.

Biography Bruchko – a great stroy of a young missionary forced to ask what it means to love a community of tribal people.

‘Christian’– A tie between Organic Church – which I love for its simplicity and profundity as well as Church Without Walls, a text for the acom unit I taught, but a classic on missional engagement and allowing mission to shape church.

There’s not much very deep or theological there… Might need to stretch my diet a little in the year ahead!

Part of my reason for choosing to blog less is that I want to free more time for actual reading of books. I find I read online quickly and easily – which is fine – but sometimes it involves sifting the quality from the dregs as well as not getting drawn off on sidetracks… like ebay!

Treasure!

When you send your kids to Grandma’s house you never know what treasure they will find hidden away…

This time though it wasn’t the kids – it was me that found the treasure!

Pete just happened to mention that they had the complete two volume set (1200 pages) of Hudson Taylor’s biography written by his son Howard back in the early 1900’s.

‘You have what?!’ I responded…

‘Would you like to borrow them?’

‘Would I ever!’

Part 1 is entitled ‘the growth of a soul’ and part 2 ‘the development of a work of God’. Part 1 actually begins with Taylor’s great grandparent’s story and we eventually start to hear about him by page 200.

There are many journal/diary quotes that give a great insight into the character of this man. I am almost finished part 1 and looking forward to the story of the development of the mission work.

What is most amazing is that when he left England on a 5 month boat ride to Shanghai he was 21. Yes 21!…

Is he a rare breed or are there other Hudson Taylors out there today? I find myself constantly challenged and confronted by the old missionaries who lived lives of great sacrifice and risk at times when it was so much harder to do so.

Pure treasure!

Those Old Mishos!

I have just spent the last two days in Moore River hanging out with Danelle and the kids and doing some reading. (Moore River is a tiny beachside town of 80 people where Danelle’s folks have just built a their retirement home)

Danelle’s mum Val has a stash of books about missionaries of all sorts, but the one I picked up yesterday grabbed me because it was a little unusual. It was entitled Reluctant Missionary and was written by Edith Buxton, the daughter of the much better known CT Studd who was an English cricketer (not that you want to admit to that!) and early pioneer missionary to the Belgian Congo and later Ethiopia.

It was her story of how she reluctantly followed the call of God to Africa, struggled most of the way and for much of the time resented what God had called her to. While she shared some of the victories they experienced she was also very honest (especially for her era) with regard to the difficulties of being pioneers in a tough land.

Her father, while something of a hero, also sounded like quite a difficult man to get on with and missionaries were regulalry shooting off to join other mission societies because he was so hardline.

She made some incredible sacrifices to do what she did and her story is inspiring in its raw honesty. If you get a chance then you should dig it up somewhere and have a read!

Credible Witness

Daz Cronshaw of Forge Vic has just produced an excellent book that looks at different metaphors for mission here in Oz. It is entitled Credible Witness and is available thru UNOH.

In it Daz looks at mission as:

– spiritual companionship for the journey

– chaplaincy for the convicts

– shepherding for the settlers

– advocates for the marginalised

– servants for the needy

– hosts for a multicultural community

I am almost finished it after getting stuck into it on the flight on the way home. There is a fair bit of Oz history and culture right throughout as well as some of Daz’s own story. I love the title which is a wonderful way of describing effective mission in an Oz context. If we need anything then we need credibility as we witness to who Jesus is.

I also discovered our own story in there at the start of a chapter.

So here’s your challenge…

Can you guess which chapter from the list above best describes our mission in Brighton?

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That’s More Like it!

Ah – about time…

Finally a revised Bible for those who don’t like all the icky bits about dying to self, trusting God, forsaking wealth etc in the original Bibles. This’ll fly much better in suburbia!

Here is a quote from the developer:

“According to Chairman Mr. De Rijke the foundation has reacted to a growing wish of many churches to be market-oriented and more attractive. “Jesus was very inspiring for our inner health, but we don’t need to take his naïve remarks about money seriously. He didn’t study economics, obviously.”

According to De Rijke no serious Christian takes these texts literally. “What if all Christians stopped being anxious, for example, and started expecting everything from God? Or gave their possessions to the poor, for that matter. Our economy would be lost. The truth is quite the contrary: a strong economy and a healthy work ethic is a gift from God.””

Thanks to Grendel for the tip.

Now all we need is a Bible that replaces church attendance with coffee drinking and we can welcome you back in 🙂

3 Decent Books!

I have re/read a few beauties lately. I find reading a good book twice is a valuable practice as you see so much more the second time around.

While on holidays I re-read HughMackay’s Winter Close, the story of a street in Sydney and how the neighbours interact, as told thru the eyes of Tom one of the residents. Mackay is great in that he really pays attention to how relationships form in suburbia and the different ways we see one another. He writes a lot about ‘intimacy’ and the fact that it is a rare commodity in the burbs. If you’re serious about mission in suburbia then this is a book you must read.

After that I got stuck into Christianity Rediscovered by Vincent Donovan, an old classic that I was also reading for the second time. (Yes – it is yours Phil and I loved it so much I have ordered my own off Amazon!) Its the true story of a Roman Catholic missionary who went to the Masai people. The book begins with the missionary lamenting the fact that despite many hospitals, schools and community development initiatives they haven’t seen too many folks convert to Christianity.

He decides that maybe it would be easiest if he just goes and tells them about Jesus… (how novel) so he does and the results are often very positive. The real rub of the book comes in the way he goes about entrusting the churches to the new believers and allowing them to indigenize the gospel. For anyone exploring issues of contextualisation this is a great read.

And finally I have just finished Dave Goetz’s Death by Suburb. Its not a hard read at all, but it does contain some gems on how we ought to live in the burbs and remain faithful followers of Jesus. I have recommended that as a team we work thru it in the new year as I believe it will spark a lot of great discussion. Goetz identifies what he calls 8 environmental toxins in the burbs and recommends 8 spiritual practices to overcome these. It is simple and by no means an indepth exploration of suburban discipleship, but its a book that busy suburbanites might actually read!

Hirsch’s New Book is Out

The genius of Alan Hirsch is finally in print again. This is a great book. I have only read the drafts, but I’d recommend it to anyone serious about missional activity in the west.

I couldn’t make a thumbnail pic for some reason so if you want to see the other half of the image right click on it and then choose view. Then you can see all the nice things people have said about the book!

You can pre-order online now.

Exiles Part I

I’m now about half way thru Mike Frost’s new book Exiles and finding it a fantastic read. I think I’ll review it in several parts as there is a fair bit to reflect on, both in terms of content and personal engagement.

Mike’s thesis is that the church in the west no longer holds a position of dominance or influence but rather is increasingly a marginalised body – and needs to see itself as such. It’s the whole ‘post-Christendom’ idea.

He quotes Stuart Murray who says “post-Christendom is the culture that emerges as the Christian faith loses coherence within a society that has been definitively shaped by the Christian story and as the institutions that have developed to express Christian convictions are in decline.”

When you have lived for so long with the church as the centre of society it can be difficult to conceive of operating in any other way, but in his opening paragraph Mike highlights the fact that there are plenty around the world who are falling between the cracks.

This book is written for those Christians who find themselves falling into the cracks between contemporary secular western culture and a quaint old fashioned church culture of respectability and conservatism. This book is for the many people who wish to be faithful followers of the radical Jesus but no longer find themselves able to fit into the bland, limp, unsavoury straitjacket of a church that seems to be yearning for a return to the days when ‘everyone’ used to attend church and ‘Christian family values’ reigned. This book is for those who can’t remain in the safe modes of church and who wish to live expansive, confident Christian lives in this world without have to abandon themselves to the values of contemporary society. This book is for those Christians who feel themselves ready (or yearning) to jump ship but don’t want to be left adrift in a world where greed consumerism, laziness and materialism toss them about endlessly and pointlessly.

‘Exiles’ is written to help those of us who resonate with the term consider how we live in world where the balance of power has shifted, but where the call to follow Jesus is still the motif that shapes our lives.

The ‘exiles’ theme works well as in the biblical world exiles were often allowed to carry on functioning within society but did not hold any privileged place – a great metaphor for the current location of church. In contrast to those who would suggest our task is to regain power and establish a ‘Christian state’, (think Christian political groups) Mike suggests that its in this place as exiles that we can really begin to transform society in a very powerful, but subversive way.

Having heard Mike speak on this theme at the start of the year I found the book a fairly easy read and a chance to reflect more deeply on the 4 primary themes

Dangerous Memories – where he calls us back to the gospel stories to re-connect with the real Jesus, rather than the sanitised ‘spooky’ Jesus we often seem to encounter

Dangerous Promises – where we as the church live out the values of the kingdom in tangible visible ways in our host communities

Dangerous Criticism – where we boldly speak for the issues that concern the heart of God even if they are unpopular or bring us suffering.

Dangerous Songs – where he argues for songs of passion and inspiration that evoke revolutionary action from people rather than a warm fuzzy glow.

I’ll begin to flesh these out a bit next time and hopefully whet your appetite for the book…

A Heretic’s Guide to Eternity – Final

Ok here goes… my final take on Spencer Burke’s new book.

I have really enjoyed this whole process as it has moved my mind into gear theologically more than I have had to for a little while. The book is not a hard read by any stretch, but it does call you to think about what you believe and why

The last 70-80 pages are essentially focused on the concept of grace and how it impacts on us.

He begins by suggesting Jesus may have been a heretic because he chose to live contrary to Jewish standards. I don’t think anyone would question the fact that Jesus was a rule breaker and status quo annihilator! But a heretic?… Again, this gets down to definitions. What is a heretic?…

Maybe Jesus was a heretic by first century Jewish standards?…

I agree with Spencer that an obsession with the afterlife has dominated much of evangelicalism’s take on salvation. It become a heaven or hell proprosition rather than anything to do with the here and now, a distortion of what the Bible does actually teach. This is pretty tragic and something we starting to move away from.

Spencer’s solution to the current dilemma of religion / institutionalism as he sees it, is a shift towards what he calls ‘mystical responsibility’. He asserts that he ‘is no longer sure if he believes in God exclusively as a person anymore’ p.195 In that he has chosen to incorporate a panetheistic worldview into his thinking so that he now sees us as being ‘in God’ while here on earth, a philosophy he says is more accessible to people who are thinking about faith today.

This is where I tack back the scriptures and the ancient creed which speak of ‘father’, ‘son’ and holy spirit as 3 persons.

The very next section is entitled “I’m a universalist who believes in hell”. He goes on to describe what he means by that:

“When I say I’m a universalist, what I really mean is that I don’t believe you have to convert to any particular religion to find God. God finds us and it has nothing to with subscribing to any particular religious view”

That’s a tricky statement!

Because in part I agree. God is beyond religion. Jesus can be met in a Muslim context as well as a Hindu context, but ultimately there is a religious view that Jesus espouses that we are called to conform to. I don’t believe we can follow Jesus and hold the Koran as our holy book. It just doesn’t make sense.

There is definite appeal in universalism because as Spencer says ” there is a certain madness to the idea that members of only one religious group can make it into heaven because they happen to know Jesus or some other religious figure.”

But…

But…

I can’t get away from the biblical teaching on the exclusivity of Christ. I can’t see how Spencer does. Acts 4 is the ‘no other name’ passage and Paul speaks repeatedly of Jesus death and resurrection as our only hope.

Spencer finishes this section by stating that we need to go one step further and realise that ‘grace is bigger than any religion’. Again I would agree, but I am happy to live with the mystery of ‘what happens to those who have never heard?’ rather than choosing the universalist option.

I really appreciate that Spencer tells us where he sits. One of the common critiques of Brian McClaren’s work is that he doesn’t nail his colours to the mast on tricky subjects, but seems to avoid them. Whether we agree or disagree I like to know what it is we are discussing.

Ironically I liked Spencer’s take on evangelism and conversion because it focused on what God does rather than our effort, as well as noting that conversion is a multi-faceted process.

This is already long enough so I will wrap it up.

There is much that I like in Spencer’s book, but there is also plenty that I take issue with (see previous posts). Perhaps one of the biggest concerns is that there is virtually no attention paid to the place of the cross and Jesus’ death & resurrection in his thinking. Perhaps this is congruent with a more universalistic world view?

I feel this is a huge ommission for a book of this nature and one that will come back bite him on the bum. While he does provoke some good thinking, to avoid discussion of the single most critical event in human history does bear some serious concern. The cross was the focal point of much of Paul’s writings and integral to this gospel, so you would expect that in a discussion on eternity it would feature.

It doesn’t.

I still feel a bit fuzzy on terms like grace and spirituality. I ‘get’ religion, but I find the other two a bit unfamiliar and not easy to digest. I sense we may use them in different ways.

So is Spencer Burke a heretic?

He would say so, and if I read him right then I think I’d agree with his own assessment, but it feels like he is talking heretic in the same way that Patch Adams was a heretic.

Is he onto stuff that maybe we need to hear?

I think he says some great stuff, but you do need a discerning mind to read it all. I would be concerned for a young Christian reading Spencer’s book with no faith grounding.

I actually reckon it’d be a great book to put on the evangelism and theology booklists of our Bible colleges because it does get students to think outside the square and it challenges them to weigh Spencer’s point of view alongside their own. It’d do a lot of them good to be faced with a text like this one.

So – thanks Spencer for the opportunity to review your book. I have really enjoyed it, but as you are aware we do disagree on some core stuff. I wish you well in your own journey of following Christ and look forward to reading whatever else you write.