Lots-o-Links 2.9.10

Brief Molly Update: Molly has been having some rough symptoms from her Chiari I Malformation the last 2 weeks. Day to day she doesn't know how she is going to feel. For the most part she keeps living and enjoying life and serving others as much as she usually does. In lots of ways she is looking to do more. What a lady! We are hoping the symptoms will just go away, and we believe they will in time. Thanks for praying for her.

I'm reviewing Gospel-Centred Life this week, Lord-willing. Already reviewed Gospel-Centred Family and Gospel-Centred Church.

Jonathan Dodson: 10 Tips for Missional Community Leaders

Jonathan McIntosh introduces us to the vision of Christ City Church in Memphis, his new plant. Maybe you or your church could help support this plant by my friend.

Christ City Church Vision Video from Rethink Mission on Vimeo.

Verge-alicious Stuff...

Francis Chan's animated video played at Verge: The Big Red Tractor...

The Big Red Tractor from Jacob Lewis on Vimeo.

Music Monday 2.8.10

Buy some good music today...

let your kingdom come
let your will be done
and all the earth will say
and echo angels' praise
that you are God

Other good stuff...

If you haven't heard/downloaded Peter Gabriel's cover of Bon Iver's "Flume," you are missing out. Just trust me (even if "Sledgehammer" is stuck in your head). If you missed my posts on the videos of Scott Avett or Vampire Weekend, go check'm out. Free Beach House live tracks at the ever-awesome Daytrotter. Beach House: Teen Dream is really good and just $7.99. Dave Rawlings and Gillian Welch play some Tiny Desk Concert. And stream the new Massive Attack album in full.

Jonsi, of Sigur Ros, has a new solo album on the way in April and a concert I hope to catch in Milwaukee. Listen to this audio of Jonsi interview and acoustic set from WNYC. And check out his first video, "Go Do"...

Spoon with "Written in Reverse" from their excellent new album, Transference.

Verge: Day Two

*Updated as WiFi holds out. 

    Main Session II

Neil Cole

Gospel is...the kingdom has come.

*Sorry, having a rough run with WiFi here at Verge. Hard to find the connection to keep this up. 

    Breakout Session 1

Jeff Vanderstelt & Caesar Kalinowski of Soma Communities 

(*break out stuff below will be more quotes and content than my thoughts on them)

Notes at Soma School - here's the PDF.

Missional Community (MC) is a gospel community - being formed by the gospel, living life by the gospel. 

The shift needed is to start thinking of people as family.

MC sent by missionaries to a people group by demonstrating the gospel in tangible forms. and then declaring the gospel to others both to those who believe and those who don't believe. 

   MC - Not primarily a small group, not primarily a Bible study. 

We do one Bible study then another, but what was the last one? Are we living what we are learning or just moving on to another study. We need to be faithful to what we've learned.

"I'm not going to prep up another deep study of the word to disobey." -Caesar

Study the Bible in proximity of relationship, and live it out together.

   MC - not primarily a support group.

We aren't just mummys all wrapped up.

   MC - not primarily a social activist group.

If we become about one particular cause, we miss the mission.  

MC - must have a people group they are sent to, called to.

Be the peculiar people.

   MC - not primarily a weekly meeting

You may well get together weekly, but you don't define your family that way. People are prone to dualistic thinking in the church. When I'm at the church, I'm the church. When I'm at home, I'm at home. 

Sunday morning: If you came to church this morning, we're glad you're here. You're never going to get to do that again. -- (because this isn't the church, we are the church)

We don't go to missional community, we meet with the community. Reorganize our lives around the gospel in community.

Always training on the gospel, who we are in Christ, and how to live with gospel intentionality.

*I know my notes are sketchy and hard to follow. Sorry. Doing my best to get as much of it down as possible without misstating what's being said. 

-- Caesar jumps in with some Prophet, Priest, King perspectives on shared leadership (bit of a semi-reluctant rabbit trail)

Every missional community is under the leadership of an elder. Start with 6-8 people. Typically kingly types are your leaders. Starts to cap out at about 20. 

*Lots of questions now. I think the specifics and dynamics of what MC's do/should look like are hard to imagine. Folks are trying to see more concretely. 

We invite people into our lives.

Story-formed - Only answer from where you are in the story

    Breakout Session II (part 2 with Jeff Vanderstelt and Caesar Kalinowski)

What We Do - these are all rhythms, not events

  • Story-formed - story of people/culture around me and story of God. Help people find place where their story intersects with God
  • Listen - Listen to people. Listen to one another.
  • Bless - Who are 3 ppl a week you could bless. Bless in rhythm. 
  • Eat - Rhythms of eating in culture. Parties. Lord's Supper. Eat 3 meals a week with others. 
  • Celebrate - If we're going to be good missionaries, bring the best wine to the party. If you are a Baptist, clean up afterwards. :) We get to live forever. Let's be a celebrating people. We should be the most celebratory people in our city.
  • ReCreate - Rest and create. Rhythm of sabbath. 

Don't add more to your life. Just do what you do with gospel intentionality.

We have no programming at Soma. What Missional Communities do we are doing.

Identity: Family, Missionaries, Servants, Learners

Recommended: You Can Change by Tim Chester

I don't invite people to things because they are already a part of my life. An open door policy in our houses. We teach people constantly to understand relationships by how they are invited in and when they are told we are busy. 

Stop trying to get everybody. Get one.

*Lots of questions coming now. Honestly, the ideas from these breakouts have stirred me up. It's hard to concentrate on the questions while I'm stewing on my own, and my context, and our need to BE the church.

Realign your life around the mission. Radically reorient your life around the mission. As leaders, every pushback with Christians is an opportunity for discipleship. We will not stop calling you to what you were created to be.

Reactive Mission - Proactive Mission

  • Reactive - The Good Samaritan, I come across them, along my way
  • Proactive - plan, strategize, pray over, ask God to lead us in

Be on mission in such a way that if God doesn't show up we are ruined. We need to be overwhelmed.

Great QnA time during this session. I feel like it's all possible. Biblical, gospel community. Check out more at the Soma links above. Dinner time.

Verge: Day One

My post for the day. For quotes and such go to Twitter #verge10. Updated regularly here are my personal thoughts, reflections, etc. 

    Main Session I

Matt Carter - Pastor, The Austin Stone

Carter challenged us to not be about the mission, but about Jesus. Comes from Revelation 2. If we are about Jesus we will properly be about mission. If we are about mission (primarily, or ultimately) we will lose track of Jesus. 

Francis Chan - Pastor, Cornerstone Church

Chan does theology. His style is engaging and winsome. He's funny. But he drops bombs. Simple lit fuses leading to truth and theology and mission. Good stuff.

We meet on the Lord's Day. He is risen indeed. Why aren't we living like people who know the radical resurrection of our Savior?

You will try and fail to start movements. Movements come from Jesus, from the Holy Spirit. If you try to go surfing and there are no waves, you send your buddy out to start splashing and try to make waves. We can't do it.

Think about the book of Acts, and how unstoppable they were. This is Holy Spirit powered. 

In Austin for Verge

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I flew out of O'Hare in Chicago at 10:15am after an hour delay. Arrived in Austin at about 1:30pm. Hitched a ride with Brent Thomas and three other guys. Got lost because of my navigational issues. And have now arrived at the Aloft Hotel in Austin. Looking forward to tonight's first main session.

I'm not really sure how I'm going to approach blogging/Twittering Verge. I don't want to just overload Twitter with a zillion quotes of everything said. Especially since all of you can get the live stream for free!

Follow @VergeConference on Twitter. Keep up with the verge hashtag for everyone's tweets: #Verge10. Follow the social media team here for a variety of different takes and angles and responses. Should be a great time for all interested. 

Catholics Come Home Initiative

I've been studying the Catholic Church recently: books, audio, attending Mass, etc. I ran across this video and wanted to share it. It's the Catholics Come Home Initiative that you and your church needs to know about. Best quote: "The Saints were sinners. They had problems. But when they found God everything was cool, and they were God's BFF's. That's what I want to be."

Music Monday 2.1.10

Ipod guyAmazon is now listing a new 100 albums for $5. As usual, some come Reformissionary Recommended...

Check out the rest of Amazon's $5 albums.

Charlotte Gainsbourg's new album, IRM, is getting some serious playing time on my iPod. 

Seth Godin on spreading music and selling intimacy.

Frontier Ruckus put on a great show last year in Dekalb. I like their album, The Orion Songbook. Another should be coming soon. Here is a live version of "Mona and Emma" from Paste...

Midlake's 2006 album, Trials of Van Occupanther, was excellent. You can listen to their new album in full for free, and I love it so far. Check out The Courage of Others, which goes on sale tomorrow.

Last Chance $5 Albums

Amazon's 800+ $5 albums ends tonight. Some great albums on this list. Here are a few I recommend...

  • 99 Most Essential Masterpieces of Bach, Tchaikovsky, Vivaldi, Mozart, Beethoven
  • The 50 Greatest Pieces of Classical Music
  • 99 Most Essential Baroque Masterpieces
  • Vampire Weekend: Contra
  • Russian Circles: Geneva
  • Cut Copy: In Ghost Colours
  • The Album Leaf: Into The Blue Again
  • Thad Cockrell: To Be Loved
  • The Decemberists: The Crane Wife
  • Rodrigo Y Gabriela: 11:11
  • John Coltrane: The Ultimate Blue Train
  • The Weepies: Say I Am You
  • Great Lake Swimmers: Lost Channels
  • Matt and KimGrand
  • Pink FloydDark Side of the Moon
  • ColdplayRush of BloodParachutes
  • J TillmanLong May You RunYear In The Kingdom
  • RadioheadThe BendsOK Computer
  • Sara GrovesFireflies and Songs
  • Yeah Yeah YeahsIt's Blitz
  • The Beach Boys: Pet Sounds
  • Gillian WelchRevival
  • Volcano ChoirUnmap
  • The Avett Brothers: Four Thieves GoneMignonetteEmotionalism
  • Okkervil RiverThe Stage Names & The Stand Ins
  • Bon Iver:  For Emma, Forever Ago
  • White Rabbits: It's Frightening
  • Bowerbirds: Upper Air
  • Antony & The Johnsons: The Crying Light
  • The Zombies: Odessey & Oracle
  • Pelican: Fire In Our Throats Will Beckon the Thaw
  • Review: Gospel-Centred Family

    G-C FamilyA few weeks back I reviewed Gospel-Centred Church, a workbook by Steve Timmis and Tim Chester. I found it very helpful and I'm using it with some guys at Doxa Fellowship. I have two more reviews of similar resources on the way. In the next week or so I hope to review Gospel-Centred Life by Steve Timmis and Tim Chester. Today it's Gospel-Centred Family by Ed Moll and Tim Chester. All of these books came to me for review from the good folks at The Good Book Company. FYI, I review and promote resources that I like and don't just give everyone a shout-out. If I don't like stuff I won't review it. 

    Onto my review of Gospel-Centred Family (GCF). The book, running just over 90 pages, is broken up into twelve lessons/chapters in four main sections.

    • Part 1: A Gospel-Centred Family
    • Part 2: A Grace-Centred Family
    • Part 3: A Word-Centred Family
    • Part 4: A Mission-Centred Family

    Like Gospel-Centred Church, each lesson is roughly 5-6 pages long and moves through six segments. The first is a principle--the core of the lesson. A scenario is introduced to raise a dilemma in gospel ministry. Then we consider Scripture (only a reference given so you can use your own Bible) with questions, a section discussing the theology and application of the principle, discussion questions, and actionable items are finally suggested (see the lesson titles).

    I enjoyed the workbook a lot and think it will be helpful for the church. Let me start with a few weaknesses in GCF. 

    I would have liked if the book dealt early on with God's created purpose for the family. Why do we have families in the first place? Why are we to "be fruitful and multiply"? In some ways this workbook drops in on parents in the middle of where they are and works out of it rather than laying a foundation in the biblical story and then building on it. That's still good, but one chapter on creation foundations would have been nice.

    I occasionally disagreed with something, though nothing of great significance. One practical recommendation in GCF is to teach kids obedience by counting to five. The goal is to make it "clear that our children had to obey now" by teaching them to obey by the time we get to "five." But counting to five teaches your kids that they don't have to obey until you are almost done counting. Why not teach them to obey now by teaching them to obey now? Most of the advice is excellent and this one isn't a deal-breaker. But I still think it's odd advice.

    Now for the strengths, and there are many more than I will list. I really like this workbook. GCF deals with several crucial issues of parenting with a bunch of helpful, practical advice. I particularly liked the "Grace for a Child's Heart" chapter. We can easily train our children to be legalists if we aren't careful by comparing them to other children, holding grudges against them, humiliating them in public, bribing them to obey, etc. The authors stay cross-focused...

    Above all, bring your children to the cross. Teach them about the cross Extol the cross. Thank God with them for the cross. Sing about the cross.

    The next chapter is about seeing children as a gift. This is so important right now in our culture. I know few people who truly act like children are a gift from the Lord we enjoy more than a burden to bear. College can't come soon enough for these folks! Sad. And GCF is helpful. Simple changes will change everything: time, conversation, meals, creating things together, games, etc. My favorite is the advice to tell stories. I have so many stories and songs in my head from grandparents and parents. My generation of parents isn't as good at telling stories. Good advice. 

    One piece of advice I've just done poorly for too long is to "include the people from the church family in your family time." We used to do that, especially when working with college students. Too infrequently now. Family isn't just about what we do together for ourselves, but on mission to others. How can we be hospitable together? Support single-parents together? Model good family life together? And then GCF encourages us to lead our children to be servants, givers. Simple & concise, yet continually helpful advice throughout this workbook.

    I like what the authors said early on in the book, which expresses what we should want for our families...

    We're not calling our children to a life of obligation and hardship that they must tough out. We're calling them to treasure! We're calling them to treasure Christ.

    Let's do it. 

    I can see Doxa parents working through GCF together or on their own. I can see how hitting one chapter here and there in small groups might be helpful. 

    GCF sells for $9.99 with discounts in bulk. I highly encourage you to use it with families in your church. 

    Music Monday 1.25.10

    4304025259_2f6667ed68The Brandi Carlile concert at The Pabst was outstanding Thursday night. I caught most of her cover of Johnny Cash's "Folsom Prison Blues." You need to get Brandi's album Give Up The Ghost. Katie Herzig opened for Brandi. Her music is fairly new to me, and delightful. Live music is a great way to discover new music. Check out Katie Herzig's albums, especially Apple Tree. The folks at The Pabst posted a bunch of photos from the concert you can check out. 

    I watched It Might Get Loud on DVD with Jack White, The Edge and Jimmy Page this week. Great fun. Gained a lot of respect for Jack White in particular. After he played his favorite all time song, "Grinnin' In Your Face," from Son House, I just had to download his Father of the Delta Blues: The Complete 1965 Sessions.

    Check out The Low Anthem's Tiny Desk Concert. Molly and I will see them open for The Avett Brothers in March at The Riverside in Milwaukee.

    The XX have a new video for "VCR." Cool, mellow, creative...

    Good, cheap music...