One More Thing

Hi Five Oakers, The weekend's coming and I have a few things I want to share with you.

INVITE_Main-Slide

The Weekend

Have you ever wanted to share your faith with someone and you didn't want to blow it? We're going to look at one of the most powerful ways to share your faith this weekend as we conclude our "Invite" series through the book of Acts. It sometimes feels counterintuitive, but it works.

I can hardly believe this journey "Invite series is over this weekend. What began for most two months ago started for our staff in the summer. Writing The Story of Acts even goes back farther. But it has been a great journey. And with the Invite challenges there is a sense in which we're just getting started.

FYI

Gerald R. McDermott on "Why You Can't Read Scripture Alone: Studying the Bible in light of the Great Tradition"

The real question is not whether tradition influences our interpretation of the Bible, but which tradition does so. And the best way to judge that tradition is to regularly compare it to the Great Tradition—another name for the great “cloud of witnesses” (Heb. 12:1) down through the centuries. It’s what C. S. Lewis called “mere Christianity,” the consensus on belief and behavior that the historic church has agreed on for the past 2,000 years.

Guillaume Bignon on "How a French Atheist Becomes a Theologian: Inside my own revolution"

If French atheists rarely become evangelical Christians, how much rarer it is for one to become an evangelical Christian theologian. So what happened?

One More Thing

Check out this great INVITE video. (If you are looking at this in an email, go to my website here.)

One More Thing

Hi Five Oakers, The weekend is here and there are a few things I want to share with you:

INVITE_Main-Slide

The Weekend

Tim is preaching this weekend as we continue our series in Acts. Here's what he says about the sermon

As you read the account of Paul's life in Acts and his letters to churches, you can't miss the incredible warmth and depth of his relationships with other believers. I think we all long for those kinds of friendships. But is that realistic - or even possible - for us today?

As we look at Acts 20-21 this weekend, I hope you'll see that there's nothing quite like the kind of friendships that we can have in Christ, and that the obstacles to getting there aren't as insurmountable as we may think.

FYI

Ruth Moon on "Segregated Surveys: How Politics Keeps Evangelicals White"

You can disbelieve in God, never go to church, and still identify as "evangelical" in most polls. But if you're black and evangelical, you literally don't count.

Susan Wunderink on "A Survey Can Make You Less Moral: What behavioral economics has to do with scary statistics"

Research shows that statistics have a life of their own. They’re not just reports on what is happening; they change what is happening. ...Basically, people tend to move closer to the behavior they perceive as normative, whether it's worse or better than their current behavior. This is called social proof. When people change for the worse, it's called a boomerang effect.

One More Thing

Australian pastor and author Mark Sayers has been known for missional innovation but has this to say (in a recent interview) about the kind of leadership needed in today's culture, a culture which eats away at foundations and leaves individuals without a place to stand:

You need leaders who identify the safe rocks on which to stand—the biblical foundations of wisdom, faith, justice, holiness, family, and communal life. You need leaders who can differentiate between the genuine prophetic biblical voice, which calls culture back to God, and the deconstructive impulse within modernity, which wants to return to the chaotic and primal. In a culture powered by individualism, you need leadership rooted in Jesus’ sacrifice upon the cross. And in a time when people either run from power or abuse it, you need the servant leadership modeled by Christ.