Creation Project

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Christian “License” is Actually Legalism

Read this helpful excerpt from an interview with Tullian Tchividijian regarding his new book: Jesus + Nothing = Everything.

Legalism: The Enemy of the Gospel

There’s a common misunderstanding in today’s church, which says there are two equal dangers Christians must avoid. On one side of the road is a ditch called “legalism”; on the other is a ditch called “license” or “lawlessness.” Legalism, they say, happens when you focus too much on law, on rules.

Lawlessness, they say, happens when you focus too much on grace. Therefore, in order to maintain spiritual equilibrium, you have to balance law and grace. If you start getting too much law, you need to balance it with grace. If you start getting too much grace, you need to balance it with law. This dichotomy exposes our failure to understand gospel grace as it really is; it betrays our blindness to all the radical depth and beauty of grace.

2 Legalisms

It’s much more theologically accurate to say that there is one primary enemy of the gospel–legalism–but it comes in two forms. Some people avoid the gospel and try to “save” themselves by keeping the rules, doing what they’re told, maintaining the standards, and so on (I call this “front-door legalism”). Other people avoid the gospel and try to “save” themselves by breaking the rules, doing whatever they want, developing their own autonomous standards, and so on (“back-door legalism”). In other words, there are two “laws” we can choose to live by apart from Christ: the law which says, “I can find freedom and fullness of life if I keep the rules,” and the law which says, “I can find freedom and fullness of life if I break the rules.” Either way, you’re trying to “save” yourself, which means both are legalistic because both are self-salvation projects. So what some call “license” is just another form of legalism.

Get the book    Read Rest of Interview



Update on Gospel-Centered Discipleship (the book)

Things are warming up for the release of Gospel-Centered Discipleship. This book has turned out to be a blend of theology and practice of discipleship. While retaining the core elements of my self-published Fight Clubs, GCD is certainly a new book in many respects.

This Fall, I’m testing out some of the new material on the road (while working out new material at home for a follow up book). I’ll be speaking on discipleship in Georgia and Florida over the next two weeks. So, hopefully these ideas will get good traction for the gospel in those churches and ministries.

For now, I thought I’d throw up some of the promo design Crossway has put together. I really like it. Hope you do too!

 



GLOW: Our New Worship EP!

I am thrilled to announce the arrival of Austin City Life’s 2nd Worship EP: GLOW on November 13!

These four songs are rich in theological depth and diverse in musical arrangement. From indie folk of “Beautiful Love” to the pop of “You are God and I am Not”, these songs also share a common theme of reflecting the glory of Christ. Drawing on the riches of the gospel, we hope these songs will provoke you to glow with Jesus’ glory.



How to Keep Missional Communities Healthy

One of the questions I’m asked most is: “How do you keep missional communities healthy?” “How do you help them grow?” At Austin City Life, we’ve learned this one the hard way. Among the many mistakes we’ve made, you can include:

  • Installing (unqualified) leaders too fast
  • Multiplying without vision or a clear process
  • Making mission a project and unclear in focus
We’ve rectified these failures through listening to our leaders, developing several tools, and then training them accordingly. Before pointing to the tools we’ve found helpful in nurturing healthy missional communities, I’d like to stress two key things.

Missional Communities Talk About Missional Community

If church really is a family, then there’s no taboo topic. Healthy families hash out problems, confront challenges, resolve conflict, reflect on their relationships, and plan to be better families. Healthy missional communities must do the same. Growing missional communities talk about their missional community (not theoretical ones). They celebrate the evidences of grace, encourage one another in their strengths, affirm growth in grace, and they talk about their areas of growth. We talk about the growth of our relationships and collective mission in terms of how we’re doing at having gospel conversations, practicing steady state community, and living around our identified mission. These conversations keep legalism from creeping in, or help us ferret it out, where we’ve come to judge one another based on missional community performance. These conversations also create space for repentance over selfishness or indifference.

Missional Communities Talk to God Together

Missional Communities that don’t pray practice a kind of missional self-righteousness. Prayerless MCs believe the lie that they can handle mission on their own. If they have the right conversations, do the right planning, and identify the right mission, then “Boom” they can have missional success. Last time I checked Luke 10, Jesus is the Lord of the harvest, not me, my missional community, or my strategies. As Lord, he calls us, not just to pray, but to plead with him. He instructs his groups of disciples to plead for more workers in his ripe harvest field, to pray for more people to turn from merciless lords to the one, true Merciful Lord.

Even Jesus prayed for the harvest. He asked the Father for strength, guidance, and grace throughout his ministry. Most of all, he prayed to the Father because, quite simply, he loved the Father (John 17). If it’s true that Jesus prayed a lot because he was the most dependent human being that every lived, then doesn’t it follow that we, not only imitate his practice, but also join him in prayer in pursuit of the harvest of his death?

If it is also true that he prayed because he enjoyed the Father’s presence, then shouldn’t love compel us to pray? And wouldn’t it be love that would compel us to go, to share the gospel when we are embarrassed, to serve the poor when we are tired, and to life up the name of Christ in the fellowship of the Father, Son, and Spirit? Jesus put it like this: “If you love me, you will keep my commands.” Love gets white-hot in prayer. It glows. That’s what happened in the Transfiguration. Jesus glowed with white-hot joy in the presence of God, and then turned his face toward Jerusalem to secure God’s mission with his very own blood.

Prayerless mission is the height of self-righteousness. Plus, its pretty loveless. Its saying to God, “I’ve got your mission covered. I can handle hardened hearts. Why don’t you do something more important, like applaud at my missional ingenuity.” I don’t need your love; i’ll just use your mission to love myself. Get a whole group of prayerless people on mission together, and we’re asking for it. We’re asking for failure, humility, and sickness. Unhealthy missional community results from loveless, prayerless missional community. The good news is that the Father is waiting, not with his arms crossed, but with them wide open to receive our repentance and to hear our pleas! What a gracious God we serve!

3 Tools God Can Work Through

Here are three tools for the three issues I listed up top. They are imperfect but God has a history of working through imperfect people, especially when they bank on his perfection.

Lord, help us. Lord, use us. Lord forgive us. Lord reap your Harvest. Lord, be glorified. Amen.



Music for the City – Album Release Party (friday!)

I’m excited to announce the Music for the City Album II Release Party this Friday at the Parish. The line-up includes some of the best and upcoming artists in Austin such as: Cowboy & Indian, Black Books, & Miranda Dodson.

Proceeds go to support the great work of Mobile Loaves & Fishes in clothing, feeding, and housing the homeless! Buy your tickets in advance, get an extra for a friend, and come to support a great cause and enjoy great music this Friday!

Friday, October 7th @ The Parish
8 PM
All Ages
$8.00 / $13.00 day of show (All Ages – 3$ Minor Surcharge)
Pre-Order Tickets Here

Featuring music by:

Miranda Dodson
Jason Poe
Courrier
Cowboy and Indian
Black Books



Making the Gospel Viral (via discipleship)

I’m incredibly excited about what is happening in our church right now. We’re really dialing in on discipleship, more than ever, in a variety of ways. As we assessed the health of our church, we evaluated the four “selfs” of a viable church plant.

  • Self-Governing – a church led by a plurality of elders
  • Self-Sustaining – a church financially supported by its own people
  • Self-Reproducing – a church that multiplies disciples, missional communities, and church plants
  • Self-Gospeling – a church that is equipped to apply the gospel to itself and to its own cultural context
Our Steps towards Viral Discipleship
After sharing our progress on each “self” on a Sunday morning, we have focused in on Self-reproducing. In order to avoid becoming a church that has a shelf-life, we need to reproduce on a micro and macro level. We need reproductive gospel DNA. Although our staff and some of our leadership were practicing reproductive discipleship; it was not viral. Therefore, I wrote a paper on “The Missing Ingredient of Reproductive Discipleship” and discussed it with our elders and staff. Then, after refining our thoughts, we then turned our attention to practical steps for cultivating reproductive discipleship. Those steps included:
  1. Casting Vision to our Leaders about Reproductive Disciple-making
  2. A message on The Mission of Making Disciples
  3. Working through a Gospel/Community/Mission Primer in our missional communities.
  4. Our MCs making a missional commitment to disciple-making.
  5. Identifying & training disciples through 12: Making the Gospel Viral [audio]
We’re hopeful that this will lead to viral discipleship and missional faithfulness in passing the gospel of Jesus on. Pray for us if you think about it.


GCD Resources for Discipleship (& What’s Coming!)

I am very pleased to announce the launch of www.gospelcentereddiscipleship.com (GCD). The mission of GCD is to promote resources that make, mature, and multiply disciples of Jesus. Currently, all our content is free! This week we launched with:

GCD will be posting new resources every single week. We have a stash of great articles, some eBooks, more articles currently being written, and curriculum should be available down the road. If you have a topic you’d like to see covered, feel free to drop us a line on our contact form.


Alan Hirsch on Missional Discipleship

At our inaugural PlantR Microconference, we are hosting Alan Hirsch on the topic of Missional Discipleship. Session 2 is on Incarnational Mission (how to make disciples).

Incarnation As Mission

  • We are sent like the Father sent the Son–incarnation.
  • Jesus is in the neighborhood for 30 years and nobody knew.
  • This way of incarnating the gospel is the most profound way God has ever engaged the world.
  • If the incarnation is the way God sends, then we must become incarnational.
  • The apostles worked with the message Jesus is Lord and that was enough.
  • You don’t commute to your mission.
Incarnating the Gospel via Discipleship (6 Ps)
  • Presence – God is with you on mission not just for you.
  • Proximity – Context is everything. Take your “small group” and put it out in public.
For more on Alan’s work on Missional Discipleship see my 3 posts on his book Untamed or just buy the book!


6 Conferences I’m Going To

Here are some event & conferences I am looking forward to speaking at this Fall. I’ll be presenting fresh material at a lot of these. In particular, I’ll be focusing on what I’m calling Integrated Discipleship (theology meets practice big time), the Challenges of Missional Community (stories of failure, difficulty, and struggle to make MCs work).

Most of these are currently live for Registration!

 

 

 



The Gospel Untwists Things

If we do not know the gospel and continue in the gospel, we will be dragged away by the love of other things: “I know that after my departure fierce wolves will come in among you… from among your own selves will arise men speaking twisted things, to draw away the disciples after them” (Acts 20:29-30). These things, Paul says, are twisted.

Twisting Things

What happens when something is twisted? Its natural shape becomes misshapen, plied into an unnatural form. Men twist the natural order of things quite often. We take naturally good things and adjust them to suit our preference. We take things like a high quality of life, a great career and success, a family, or community and we bend them. We try to make them serve the wrong end–our ultimate happiness. When we bend quality of life, career, family, and community, pushing them to make us happy, we disfigure them. The quality of life has to get higher. The career has to be better. The family more present, never-failing. Our relationships are taken to the point of breaking, where they cannot offer us the love, acceptance, worth, and meaning we long for. Then, snap, they break and we decry their failure. Out with wealth, career, family, and community. But this is twisting! It is plying a ordinary thing into an extraordinary thing. It is placing the weight of the world on the wrong shoulders.

When we twist, we try to make good news out of ordinary news. When the news of movies, bands, food, family, promotions, homes, and personal freedom become our truly good news, what we get excited about, we twist those good things into ultimate things that they were never meant to be. We make them out into a kind of salvation, demanding they save us from our woes (even the greatest spouse cannot meet these demands), and eventually we twist them out of shape, where they are unable to bear the weight of our otherworldly, extraordinary longings.

Untwisting Things

The antidote to twisted things is the gospel of grace. When we replace things with Jesus, when we work his majesty, forgiveness, and grace back into them, they straighten out, and drop a step or two below God, assuming their proper place. When God takes the ultimate place, and his word of grace, the gospel, becomes our good news, we discover true happiness. Suddenly, we are able to lower our expectations for family and friends. Our career, while enjoyable, no longer becomes our source of worth. Quality of life, while desirable, settles in at a far second to the comfort that only Christ can provide, especially through suffering. The wonderful news of the gospel is that it untwists things, placing them back in their proper order. It announces to us that the weight of our longings can be forever held up by an un-pliable Jesus Christ. Jesus bears the weight of our twisted things at the cross, and emerges from the grave in order to bear the weight of our forever longings to be loved, accepted, forgiven, and known. The gospel untwists things.