Review: Fight Clubs by Jonathan Dodson

FightClubs I remember reading the article, Fight Club, from Jonathan Dodson when it was published by Boundless back in 2008. I read it several times. It's great to see this made into a fuller-length treatment, though it's still only just over 40 pages of text. Jonathan is pastor of Austin City Life.

Fight Clubs is about re-centering discipleship on the gospel in community, not merely individuals. It's a messy, tenacious struggle with honesty and authenticity. Dodson describes the biblical case for the fight, where we go wrong (legalism or license) and how to keep from extremes, the community focus of the fight (fighting with the church instead of against her), and practical advice for applying the gospel to everyday life through fight clubs: "small, simple, biblical, reproducible groups of people who meet together to regularly help one another keep the gospel at the center of their discipleship."

This book is really just a simple book on Gospel transformation, and the means and goal God gives us to fight together the good fight of faith. I love that. The only novel idea in Fight Clubs is the name itself. The concepts are soundly Scriptural. From the book/movie we know that "fight clubs" are about feeling alive again. Dodson picks up on this: 

Our spiritual war is a war against the flesh, that lingering vestige of our pre-Christian lives that must be beat to death so that we can live in the fullness of life given to us in Jesus.

Dodson defines "fight clubs" as "2-3 people that meet regularly to help one another beat up the flesh and believe in the promises of God." These groups have 3 rules: "1) Know Your Sin. 2) Fight your Sin. 3) Trust your Savior." For each rule he gives helpful questions and advice for these groups. He describes the group time as working through Text-Theology-Life - a very helpful, practical way to discuss Scripture together.

I really enjoyed Fight Clubs and will be reading it again soon with some in my church as we consider something similar. I want this kind of discipleship for my church. I need this kind of discipleship for my own soul.  

Go download and/or buy Fight Clubs. I highly recommend it.

Music Monday 10.26.09

Quick hits...

A thoughtful and woeful video for the gorgeous song "Charlie Darwin" from The Low Anthem. Their album, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin is outstanding. (Download)

I just can't say enough about Brandi Carlile's newest album, Give Up the Ghost. This is Molly's favorite song that she keeps on repeat: "Pride and Joy"...

Review: Counterfeit Gods

Counterfeit I have a thing for Tim Keller. You've noticed? Cool. Just wanted to make sure you know. :)

When I heard that Dr. Keller was publishing Counterfeit Gods (OUT TODAY, October 20th) many months ago I was pumped. Pumped because I like nearly everything he says and writes and one more thing is a good thing. This book has exceeded my highest of expectations, especially after Dr. Keller's excellent talk, The Grand Demythologizer, at The Gospel Coalition this spring.

In Counterfeit Gods, Keller defines idolatry for us...

It is anything more important to you than God, anything that absorbs your heart and imagination more than God, anything you seek to give you what only God can give.” (xvii)

Or as Keller gets from De Tocqueville, idolatry is "taking an 'incomplete joy of this world' and building your entire life on it." (p xi) 

Keller says that anything can be an idol, idols are often the best things in life, and that all idols will disappoint/lead us to despair because we've lost an "ultimate thing."

Keller deals with some of the biggest idols in individual chapters: love, money, success and power. He also talks about hidden idols that are harder to spot like idols in our culture and religion. 

The angles Keller takes toward each idol is worth noting. Just as in The Prodigal God Keller takes a familiar biblical story and explains it in a fresh way, here he retells stories like Abraham and Isaac, Nebuchadnezzar, Jonah and Jacob afresh. His insights to familiar Scriptures are one of Keller's greatest gifts to the Church and very helpful in Counterfeit Gods.

As you would expect if you have read or heard Dr. Keller before, this book is thoroughly Gospel-centered. Jesus is our great hope in the middle of a world of idols, and a heart of idols. 

Jesus must become more beautiful to your imagination, more attractive to your heart, than your idol...If you uproot the idol and fail to 'plant' the love of Christ in its place, the idol will grow back. (p 172)

I have been reading this book in pieces as I have been preaching on idolatry this autumn. I've referenced it numerous times. A few quotes I've used...

We never imagine that getting our heart's deepest desires might be the worst thing that can ever happen to us. (p 1)

If we are not willing to hurt our career in order to do God's will, our job will become a counterfeit god. (p 14)

The idol of success cannot be just expelled, it must be replaced. The human heart's desire for a particular valuable object may be conquered, but its need to have some such object is unconquerable. (p 93)

The normal response to our sense of powerlessness is to deny it, to find people to dominate and control in order to live in that denial. (p 124-125)

I have to be honest...Counterfeit Gods has brought some serious conviction in my heart. A part of it is the sermons I've prepared with the book as a foundational resource (though I haven't preached through this book). But mostly it's been the words of Keller, who knows how to take biblical truth and deliver it to the heart in practical and profound ways. My idols have been exposed.

Counterfeit Gods will be sitting on our church book table, given to those in leadership, and recommended to any number of people. It will have great benefit for both Christians and non-Christians. I can't recommend this book enough. Buy it and read it. Also check out the review by Trevin Wax.

Music Monday 10.19.09

Bon Iver is on indefinite hiatus. Steve is in definite depression.

Check out The Swell Season's new album streaming for free.

Saw Where the Wild Things Are on Saturday with the family. We enjoyed the movie and the kids loved it even more having heard several times the excellent soundtrack from Karen O and the Kids. You should own it.

Dave Grohl, John Paul Jones, Josh Homme = Them Crooked Vultures. They can play rock music, like this. This would be a good time to crank it up.

Hope you didn't miss the $0.99 album (The Second Gleam) I mentioned on Twitter yesterday from The Avett Brothers. You can still pick up Emotionalism for $5.

Built to Spill was excellent on Letterman recently with "Oh Yeah"...

Music Monday 10.12.09

As people listened to music "The inner lining of the blood vessel relaxed, opened up and produced chemicals that are protective to the heart." Call me the music doctor. Here we go...

Where the Wild Things Are soundtrack is still streaming free. I've probably heard it 5 times and the movie doesn't come out until Friday. The soundtrack is by Karen O of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs.

The Avett Brothers performance on Craig Ferguson was fun. It is exactly what I love about the Avett's.

Brandi Carlile's new album, Give Up the Ghost, is out and it's outstanding (download for $9.99, buy CD).

I just found this April performance of Manchester Orchestra on Letterman. When these guys rock out, they ROCK OUT! Love it...and the fact that Letterman can barely talk.

Music Monday 10.5.09

Good, cheap music... 

White Rabbits: It's Frightening for $5
Avett Brothers: Emotionalism for $5
Josh Garrels: Over Oceans for $6.99

Stream the entire new Brandi Carlile album, Give Up the Ghost before the release tomorrow. It. Is. Outstanding. So then you should go buy it tomorrow. Brandi is one of our family's favorite singer/songwriters. Also out tomorrow is the new Built to Spill album, There Is No Enemy.

Thom Yorke doing a live, acoustic version of "Reckoner." Very cool. "Because we separate like ripples on a blank shore//In rainbows." At the end, Thom gives you his thoughts on economics. :)

I recently posted the REN3W Campaign video from Redeemer Presbyterian Church in NYC (which seems to be missing at the moment). I love the video, and this song is at the center. Here's Carla Bruni (yes, that Carla Bruni) with "Quelqu'un m'a dit"...

Music Monday 9.28.09

The Avett Brothers' new album, I and Love and You (download), is out tomorrow. My CD is on its way in the mail. If you haven't heard it yet, you can stream the entire album at NPR. Are the Avetts on the verge of stardom? Here's the official video for the song "I and Love and You"...

Ran across this cover of Beyonce's "Single Ladies" from Pomplamoose (also see YouTube & MySpace for more songs). Don't just shrug it off. It's very fun. (via)

Paper Route popped up on my radar recently, and I'm really digging it. Their album Absence is only $7.99 to download. Here's their song "Carousel"...

Music Monday 9.21.09

Some good-n-cheap music...
Out tomorrow: Volcano Choir -- streaming free at NPR. Very excited for this one. Also check out some new music streaming from Built to Spill, J. Tillman. Download a few free songs from Glass Ghost's Daytrotter session.


New, odd & interesting video from Grizzly Bear for "While You Wait for the Others"...

So excited for the new Avett Brothers album, I and Love and You. Releases next week on Tuesday (Sept 29th). A handful of short videos are linked at TheAvettBrothers.com to get us ready for the album. Here's a live version of the song, "I and Love and You"...

Justin Taylor Needs More Blog Readers

JT Header

At the 2009 Band of Bloggers event, held during the Gospel Coalition conference, I tried my best to encourage Justin Taylor through public shaming to get off of Blogger and get a domain name for crying out loud (since his blog is like, you know, the #2 church blog in the universe*). Just mere months later Justin has taken my advice** by moving his 23 character "theologica.blogspot.com" address to the 41 character "thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/justintaylor" address. I can't believe there isn't a hyphen or underscore in there.***

*I'm jealous.

**Not really, as you will see if you keep reading.

***I'm pretty sure Justin Taylor is the only guy to ever intentionally lengthen and complicate his web address who will immediately pick up a few thousand readers.

Honestly, great to see a new and much improved Between Two Worlds blog which should also mark the expansion and improvement of The Gospel Coalition website and resources. Looking forward to more.

Lots-o-Links 9.16.09

Brief Molly Update: Molly has no issues on her new MRI/xrays according to her surgeon. So no surgery at this point. Symptoms will be treated medicinally, but it's a guessing game as to what to try and we aren't sure if the medicines will help. I should add that her symptoms, generally speaking, have improved a bit on their own over the last 6-8 days. We are very thankful things aren't continuing to get worse, and that no surgery is needed. But living with sypmtoms may be a permanent thing. Thanks for your prayers. I'll let you know if anything changes.

I hope in the next day or two to finally review Fight Clubs by Jonathan Dodson. I've been putting it off, and I've been rethinking some small group stuff in my own church and was doing some processing. If you haven't read this great gospel-centered book (55 pages) you can download it free and/or buy it at Resurgence.

Hopefully you are becoming very familiar with the great new missional resource, Rethink Mission, from Jonathan McIntosh. Check out his roundtable discussion on Leading from the Second Chair.

Stream the album from Volcano Choir: Unmap (including Justin Vernon, the voice of Bon Iver). It's really good. Also worth checking out is the Monsters of Folk album, streaming in full.

Always thankful when people write about how to help your pastor. A series of posts at Resurgence: Healthy Pastors.

Review: Deep Church by Jim Belcher

6a00d83452063969e20120a574ee7d970c-800wi Deep Church - Jim Belcher (@jimbelcher) (Buy)

Let me give you a part of my story: Six and a half years ago I had finished my education at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY and was living in Lexington, KY, working as missionary to international students. I started to hear about something I know now as the "emerging church" (EC in this review). 

At the time I was already concerned about how "locked in" traditional churches were to a programmatic mindset, a cold orthodoxy, professional pastoring. I was reading my Bible and seeing something different. I started reading books by people in or around the "emerging church conversation" and found the same hunger for community, authenticity, and church vitality. 

About five years ago, after coming to northern Illinois to pastor a 45 year old SBC church, I started a blog called "Emerging SBC Leaders" (later called Missional Baptist Blog) with the intention of creating a place for young SBC'rs (especially pastors and seminarians) who wanted to enter the emerging conversation. I considered myself to be in the conservative side, strongly tied to the foundations of my faith including traditional elements. But I also saw a need for great changes in the "traditional" church. My goal for the blog was to encourage young leaders to stay in the convention and work for change rather than leave. What I found through the blog was a number of younger evangelicals who like me were dedicated to Scripture, solid theology and a love for Jesus, but who were also troubled at the state of the church (including traditional, reformed and contemporary/seeker).

Today, five years later, the blog is no more. It served its purpose. But I'm still a part of a larger conversation, or movement, of younger evangelicals who are working to see the church move in a more missional and biblical direction. I feel my thinking is headed where the always reforming church should be headed. 

-----

When I saw Deep Church by Jim Belcher was coming out, I had to get my hands on it. I too have been looking for "a third way beyond emerging and traditional." Without using those words, that's the place where I already considered myself to be. This book showed me exactly where I am on the map and why I'm there, how I got there, and why this is where the church needs to be.

The difficulty in discussing Deep Church is that I didn't merely read the book. I experienced it. It kept me up one night. It had me giddy on another. Rather than give a typical review, I want to give you four things that came to mind first when processing this helpful book. I'm still processing.

I should start by saying there are two main sections of the book: 1. How Jim Belcher took a journey in both the traditional and emerging church to get to the Deep Church, and 2. The Deep Church explained through the seven protests of the emerging church (issues of truth, evangelism, gospel, worship, preaching, ecclesiology & culture). 

1. You had me at "hello" -- It only took about 10 minutes to know I was going to love this book. Belcher's story resonated with my own story in many ways, and my own longing as a pastor now. If you have a story somethign like mine, I think you will quickly attach to Deep Church. In chapter 1 Belcher wrote about his longing to discard the superficial and "develop geniune family" among Christians. He started a weekly meeting that grew to a couple hundred within a few years. These were 3-4 hour meetings of in depth discussion - and it wasn't a church plant. 

It's easy to hold up remarkable examples and expect it to be the norm when they will never be. But I think Belcher is on to something, born out of a love for the gospel and sharpened by the dissatisfaction of the EC to the current state of evangelicalism. It's where I am.

2. Amazing analysis -- While I'm not an expert on the "emerging church, I don't think I'm going too far to say that this is probably the best analysis of it to date. Scot McKnight, who has spoken much on the EC, has a blurb on the back cover saying the same thing. I think Belcher gets Emergent/EC issues right, McLaren right, and several other EC voices right. He has not just read their books, but gives great detail from experiences talking with EC leaders and visiting their worship services. A great resource for all interested in the good and bad in the EC.  

But Belcher isn't just an analyst-critic of the EC. He's living with a foot in the EC world and the traditional church world. He speaks to both with grace and restraint. Where there is true criticism, he goes to great lengths to explain how he gets there. Deep Church isn't just a guide toward a "third way," it's also an example of speaking from a truely "generous orthodoxy." He tries to understand first, and then offers critique.

3. The Well - Born out of Frost and Hirsch's The Shaping of Things to Come, it's the idea that what we need is a centered-set church. A bounded-set (traditional) church builds fences, much like a farm would for livestock. But for Belcher a better approach is a centered-set where a well is in the middle of a farm without fences, knowing that cattle will only stray so far because they are dependent upon clean water from the well. The Well for the church is Jesus Christ.

This is a key idea from the book, from the chapter Deep Truth. And it's crucial to the approach of Belcher to these very divisive issues, as well as to the "third way" he is describing. Though this idea isn't totally new to me, it has hit me afresh and affected my thinking about my church deeply. It works well with the conversation lately about being "gospel-centered." 

4. Restrained application -- Far from a "how-to" book, Deep Church carefully threads the needle with practical advice. Often it's not merely advice, but rather a "how we do it" explanation of Belcher's church, which allows us to see the "third way" in a context rather than as an abstract. If you want a book about quick, superficial changes for your church so that you can baptize more people asap, look elsewhere. Belcher makes you think and rethink so that your conclusions will be reasoned and deeply rooted.

Conclusion -- I think the bottom line is that Deep Church is about the roots of the traditional church, the helpful questioning and critique of the emerging church, and better answers than many in the EC could deliver. You could say that Belcher (as one in the EC) finally found the answers to the EC's questions while staying thoroughly biblical and theological, solidly traditional and historical. These are the answers so many of us have been looking for and only finding in bits and pieces along the way. They aren't new answers. But they have never been explained better as they pertain to the emerging church and the traditional church. 

This book needs to be read by those in or interested in the EC. It needs to be read by pastors in traditional churches who see the need for change. I think it will be very helpful for those who see "missional" as a key term for our churches, a key correction for the traditional church. 

I highly recommend Deep Church to you. But it at Amazon. If you've read Deep Church, I'd love to hear your thoughts on it.

Check other reviews from Scott Armstrong at Common Grounds Online and lukefourteenthirtythree.

Music Monday 8.31.09

Last day for some good $5 album downloads at Amazon. Get them tonight or the deals will be gone!

Come O Spirit, the first album of Bifrost Arts, is taking pre-orders. Been looking forward to this for a while now.

The New Bluegrass: Five Acts to Watch

Eli "Paperboy" Reed & The True Loves have a cool, throwback sound. You need to check them out.  Their album, Roll With You, is only $5 right now. Here's a great performance on Jools...

Matt & Kim (album - Grand) are an acquired taste. I liked their recent, live performance on Kimmel...

Books I'm Reading

I'm into three books right now that really have me excited. Wanted to encourage you to check them out. I have reviews coming soon.

3716 1. Deep Church - Jim Belcher (@jimbelcher) (Buy: Westminster, IVP, Amazon: out of stock)

I'm 140 pages in and just love this book. It's analysis and critique of both the emerging and traditional church with a compelling "third way" beyond those two. The analysis of the emerging church as well as Brian McLaren has really been outstanding. Belcher's understanding of the third way resonates very strongly with me.

Fightclubscover1 2. Fight Clubs - Jonathan Dodson (download for free, buy copies at Resurgence)

Jonathan is a friend and I've been looking forward to this booklet for a while. "Fight Clubs are about promoting gospel-centered discipleship, groups of two to three men or women fighting the fight of faith." It's fairly short and is an easy read. Practical and helpful advice from a Gospel-rich author and pastor.

39227286 3. Counterfeit Gods - Tim Keller (releases on Oct 20th - Amazon)

Have you heard of Tim Keller? :) I am preaching a series on idolatry starting on September 6th and will be using this book as a resource. I can't say much yet as I've only gotten a little of the way in and so far haven't seen much beyond what I've read or heard from Dr. Keller in other places. But I'm pumped about this book and can't wait to get deeper into it.

Music Monday 8.24.09

Black_River_Killer-Blitzen_Trapper_480 Some good stuff for you today.

New, out tomorrow, is Blitzen Trapper's new EP Black River Killer. It sounds outstanding from the first track, "Black River Killer" (also on the Furr album, video), and the samples of the other songs. Six songs only available on CDR at BT's live shows until now. Buy it tomorrow on Amazon.

Coldplay's Viva La Vida - Prospekt's March Edition is only $2.99 for an Amazon download. Go get it.

I've posted plenty of Manchester Orchestra here before, including this song, "Shake It Out." At about the 2:35 mark starts one of the coolest 2 1/2 minutes of music that I've ever heard with some heavy, religious thoughts...

I felt the Lord begin
to peel off all my skin
and i felt the weight within
reveal a bigger mess
that you can't fix

Just love it. TURN IT UP!

Anyone else wish they stumbled upon The Avett Brothers and an impromptu live song? Thought so...

If you are interested in songwriting this is a must-watch, vintage video looking into the world of an amazing songwriter...