Charleston, WV

Shofar_gboro_header_2Left my house at 7:30am to pick up Joe Thorn on our way to the Southern Baptist Convention in Greensboro, NC.  It rained until we got a bit South of Indianapolis, but God delivered us from the deluge.

Along the way, somewhere in Indiana, we stopped at Burger King for a couple of kids' meals (well, we weren't all that hungry but needed a shot of something before getting to Louisville, plus we got cool G.I. Joe toys!).  We stopped in Louisville for a staple of mine, Stevens & Stevens Deli (the Woody Allen-pastrami, garlic roasted potatoes, cole slaw, Sobe Energy).  We also hit my second staple, ear X-tacy, the world's coolest indie music store.  I picked up the new Espers, Beirut, Alexi Murdoch, and Constantines. All very good, but the first two had us dropping our jaws.  Fantastic. Much more fantastic than needing to stop every 6 miles for Joe's atom-sized bladder.

We made it out of Louisville, through Lexington, and onto Charleston, WV where we are now comfortably enjoying the night in a Country Inn & Suites.  Sharon is behind the desk and has been very friendly and helpful.  By the way, I had to break my rule to stay here (my rule states that I can't eat or sleep in a place with the word "country" or "famous" in the name, and Famous Dave's gets a pass). They have free wi-fi, which is sufficiently fast, and smoking rooms that smell like, well, smoke.  There out of the fresh smelling kind.

We walked across the parking lot for a very late dinner at the Texas Steakhouse & Saloon. It was very good, we both had sirloin.  And Brooke was a very fun and conversational waitress, though a little slow getting our checks taken care of.  But she didn't charge us for our drinks so, we forgive you Brooke! 

Now we are writing on our blogs and still fielding emails from some of you who want to meet up while in Greensboro.  It's been a long but very good day.  God has given us strength and kept our families in order while we are away.

A New Kind of Urban Christian

Tim Keller's article from Christianity Today is up: "A New Kind of Urban Christian."  A must read if you are urban or not.  I've also added it to my Keller resource page.

(HT: Justin Taylor, who emailed me in order to shame me since he found it first)

A few blurbs...

Once in cities, Christians should be a dynamic counterculture. It is not enough for Christians to simply live as individuals in the city. They must live as a particular kind of community. Jesus told his disciples that they were "a city on a hill" that showed God's glory to the world (Matt. 5:14-16). Christians are called to be an alternate city within every earthly city, an alternate human culture within every human culture, to show how sex, money, and power can be used in nondestructive ways.

[...]

This is the only kind of cultural engagement that will not corrupt us and conform us to the world's pattern of life. If Christians go to urban centers simply to acquire power, they will never achieve cultural influence and change that is deep, lasting, and embraced by the broader society. We must live in the city to serve all the peoples in it, not just our own tribe. We must lose our power to find our (true) power. Christianity will not be attractive enough to win influence except through sacrificial service to all people, regardless of their beliefs.

[...]

So we must neither just denounce the culture nor adopt it. We must sacrificially serve the common good, expecting to be constantly misunderstood and sometimes attacked. We must walk in the steps of the one who laid down his life for his opponents.

Review: Breaking the Missional Code

A couple of nights ago I finally finished Breaking the Missional Code, a new book by Ed Stetzer and David Putman.  I found it to be a worthy read and I wanted to offer a somewhat brief review of it.

I expected this to be a good intro to missional thinking.  I'm not sure that's what I'd call it.  I would call it a good intro to the outworking of some missional thinking.  It's not about the "missional code" but about "breaking" it.  That's why it's a book of stats, helpful stories, charts, and plenty of simple, practical ideas based on solid missional foundations. 

I must admit that I'm a little concerned that some guys who don't get missional theology could apply much of this book as church growth advice.  Joe Thorn seems to make similar observations.  It's hard to break the missional code if you don't get "missional."  So I wish the book had a little more space dedicated to something more foundational in explaining "missional." 

One of my favorite aspects of the book is the pervasive help concerning thinking on culture and contextualization.  The church should "spring forth out of the soil in which it is planted" (p 91).  "We must look for those cultural bridges to every people group, population segment, and cultural environment" called "redemptive analogies" (p 97).  All good stuff.

There's plenty on planting, on models and methods.  Lots of good questions on vision, networking, and readiness.

I really liked Chapter 12 on emerging networks.  It's mirrors much of what I've been personally desiring and encouraging among Southern Baptists.  They have recognized the backwards work of denominations and parachurch ministries and recommended a helpful approach to getting denominations thinking about their role in a healthier way.  My favorite advice is that denominational agencies need to "learn to 'dance' with other organizations."  Can I get a witness?

For me the chapter on the practices of leaders who break the code was crucial to the book.  Maybe it's just because of where I am and what I'm wrestling with in ministry, but it's very helpful nonetheless.  They said we need to ask the right questions of the right people to understand the culture we are in.  We must be willing to pay the price physically, emotionally and in so many other ways.  Getting culture and making an impact will take real risk.  According to the authors it will also take great teams, so leaders need to "inspire people to take overwhelming risk" (p 201).  We need focused visionaries who work on their churches and not just in it.  These are not just brief statements, but all thought out and explained.  Very helpful.

The absolute best thing to me about this book is you don't get through it and think there is one way to "do church."  It's a book about asking the right questions based on the right biblical principles and hopefully seeing an indigenous church raise up that reflects the culture in the right ways and is different than the culture in the right ways. 

When we talk about missional churches we are not referring to a certain form, expression, model, type, or category of church.  We are talking about a church that seeks to understand its context and come to express that understanding by contextualizing the gospel in its community.  Over time the church becomes an indigenous expression of the gospel within that culture, eventually removing all extrabiblical barriers.  The truest expression of this mission church is that is fully represents Christ in its context, maintaining biblical integrity so that gospel moves unhindered. (187-188)

I really enjoyed and recommend Breaking the Missional Code.  For biblical/theological foundations many of us will need Bosch, Guder, Newbigin, Van Gelder and others.  But for the how-to outworkings of missional theology, Breaking the Missional Code is very worthwhile and has already caused me to make some plans this summer to implement a few great ideas.  I see this book as mainly helpful for practitioners and those in training, but it is also the most accessible book for local church leaders.  May it find a wide readership.

Artist Community at The Journey

A couple of weeks ago I was perusing the website of The Journey Church in St. Louis, where Darrin Patrick pastors.  They had a video up that was produced by their community of artists in the church.  Brilliant idea.  But I couldn't find an easy way to link it, until now.  Here's the link to "Sacrifice."  Check it out. 

If you go to the church website, a popup video is linked on the front page.  It's the same thing, a little smaller, and a little better quality.

SBC Greensboro Outcomes

(I also posted this at Missional Baptist Blog.)

I was emailed recently by the Florida Baptist Witness for a comment on this question: "What do you hope will be the single, greatest outcome of the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting in Greensboro?"

You can read the responses of Bobby Welch, Frank Page, Ronnie Floyd, Wade Burleson, Jerry Rankin, Al Mohler and other big names at the FBW website.

Here's my response at the end of the article.  Obviously they were saving the best for last. ;)

Steve McCoy, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Woodstock, Ill., and owner of Missional Baptist Weblog: "My greatest hope for Greensboro is that I will continue to build a personal network of missional pastors and thinkers, and encourage others to do the same. My second greatest hope is that the shofar won't work."

What's Changing Steve's Life?

Things that are changing my life right now...

1. Rereading (I think for the 3rd or 4th time) Jerry Bridges The Pursuit of Holiness.  It's such a simple/profound book.  I just need it.

2. Shearwater's Palo SantoHonkin' geez.  Wonderful.

3. I just finished and will soon blog on the new Ed Stetzer/David Putman book Breaking the Missional Code.  I read the last 6 or 7 chapters yesterday and they were really good.  The book wasn't quite what I expected it to be, but there were some very important things for me and my ministry inside.  And God put me in the right place at the right time to read the right chapters of that book. 

4. This video.  It cheers me up daily.

5. David Allen's Getting Things Done is going to get a HUGE thumbs up review from me soon.  Revolutionary and simple.  It's a very important book on practical productivity and organization issues.  Props to Kevin Cawley for preaching Allen's message to me before I read the book.

6. The Fisher Space Pen (Bullet).

Praying With The Church

There is a blog tour (interesting idea) for Scot McKnight's new book Praying With The Church.  I hope to have a review up on the book in the not too distant future (I've been sent a copy), but I'm too bogged down with stuff right now to take part in the tour which begins Monday. 

Other books I'm reviewing soon...
Breaking the Missional Code by Stetzer and Putman (I hope by next week)
Pocket Guide to the Bible by Jason Boyett
Bonhoeffer Speaks Today by Mark Devine

Phriday is for Photos 6.2.06

KaPOW!

As you noticed, this is also my new blog header.  But the whole picture is too cool to pass up.  I was out driving about a few nights back and I noticed a thunderstorm approaching.  So I drove out of Woodstock to a lonely place and took 600+ pictures over the next 1 1/2 hours.  Getting a picture of lightning is no easy task.  I also like this lightning picture, and this one.

My Photography  |||  My Photoblog

Other Friday photos: Joe Thorn

Webber & Story

I really enjoyed Robert Webber's article in the Spring 2006 Criswell Theological Review: "Narrating the World Once Again: A Case for an Ancient-Future Faith."  If you get a chance and can find a copy of the CTR, read it.  My "tight" evangelical readers may shiver at all the uses of the word "story" or "narrative," but hey, our existence and ministry is rooted in, concerning, and continuing The Story.  So there. :) 

A couple of quotes...

I want to articulate three very specific paths for the Emerging church to follow in order to restore the ancient biblical and historical narrative from which to minister in a post Christian world: 1) deconstruct the current accommodation of ministry to the cultural narrative, 2) recover the story-formed nature of the good news, and 3) re-situate ministry in the divine narrative. (p 16)

Evangelicalism is so thoroughly conditioned by the culture in which it seeks to minister, that it has the appearance of the commonplace.  It has become what people want to hear, not what it is that God wants to say and do.  This indictment of evangelical Christianity--that it is culturally conditioned--is only the surface problem.  The deeper problem is that by allowing itself to become conditioned by the "surface culture," it missed the point of the deeper cultural crisis.  This crisis is that our world has become storyless.  There is no unified story that gives meaning to life and history.  Everything has been reduced to "my" story.  But there is no universal story in which my story is situated. (p 19)

The task of the next generation of leaders is to disassociate themselves from the culturally conditioned practices of the evangelical church, and recover the divine narrative in which all ministry is situated. (p 20)

Hendry, Dusty, and Stupidity

Ugh.  The Cubs are themselves...again.  Sportsline has this for us from the Cubs GM, Jim Hendry...

Dusty is going to get every opportunity to manage the club and get us out of this hole, and he's going to get an opportunity to manage this club when we get healthy the next couple of weeks also.

An open letter to Jim Hendry...

Dear Jimmy,

If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. (Will Rogers)

Love,

Steve

Phriday is for Photos 5.26.06

Wet Path

We had a beautiful Spring day yesterday.  It was in the mid 70's with an every couple of hours heavy downpour.  I took this around dusk in our backyard.  It's obviously a path made from stones and it was just after a rainfall.  The temps are supposed to get in the mid 80's by Saturday, 90 by Sunday, and stay in the mid 80's early next week.  Very cool for Memorial Day weekend.

My Photography  |||  My Photoblog

Other Friday photos: Joe Thorn, Alex, Joe K

Living in Woodstock, IL

I've started a new blog.  Yeah I know, but it's not what you think.  I've started this blog to bless and encourage the blessing of my city.  It's called Living in Woodstock, IL and it's all about life in Woodstock (go figure).  Actually, it's a non-political, non-advertisement, and completely pro-Woodstock, IL site that intends to spark conversation about and enjoyment of our city.

It's really just about my experiences (personal and family).  I'm not really sure how it will work, IF it will work, or what exactly it will become in the days ahead.  But I figured it was worth a try.

So check it out and let me know what you think.  But please, don't comment there.  That's for locals and Woodstock lovers only.  Thanks.