Gospel Coalition Booklets – 45% off!

Check out this great deal on Gospel Coalition booklets, all edited by D.A. Carson and Tim Keller! Only $17 for 8 books (45% off) for a week only. Ordering mine today.

By the way, you can preview each booklet.

While you’re at it, check out The Atlantic Monthly’s interview with Tim Keller about his new book King’s Cross. I love the first paragraph! Excerpt:

What made you decide to write a book about the life of Jesus?

In a way, the reason why I wrote the book is I’m a Christian minister. And a basic job, I think, is to get people to be attracted to Jesus. That’s the purpose of the book: to take the continual, almost inexorable, interest that people have in Jesus—it seems like no matter whether people have a positive or negative view of the church, regardless of whether the culture is secular or religious, there is an interest in Jesus. I’m trying to connect with that because I find Jesus very attractive, and I want people to be attracted to him.

Slow, Focused & Creative

There are several reasons I haven’t blogged in a while. Several of those reasons can be captured in one phrase–Slow, Focused, Creative. This year I committed to living a Slow, Focused, & Creative life with my church. What do I mean?

Slow, Focused, & Creative Living

By “slow,” I mean a slower pace of life and a higher quality of life. Although I traveled to speak at as many conferences in the past two months as I did the whole of last year. So, I’m not referring to a sharp decline in productivity or creativity.

By “focused“, I mean a more streamlined way of living and thinking. This has meant a reduction (not all out elimination) of social media. After all, the internet is changing the way we think and church. By “creative,” I do mean leaning into the creative gifts God has given me, and using them in a more focused and redemptive way. This has meant more writing in less places.

Slow Discipleship

However, adjusting my pace of life, streamlining my focus in media, and leaning into my writing isn’t ultimately what slow discipleship is about. When I say “slow,” what I primarily mean is working from my rest in Christ not working to my rest on the weekend. It’s deliberately taking off the yoke of church planting and taking on the yoke of Christ, taking off the yoke of pastoral care and taking on the yoke of my Head Pastor, taking off the yoke of city renewal and taking on the yoke of the Lord of the city. Unless the Lord builds the house, we labor in vain. Unless the Lord watches the city, the watchman stays awake in vain. No need to eat the bread of anxious toil, when the Lord gives to his beloved in their sleep (Psalm 127)!

This has happened, and continues to happen with varying degrees of success, through personal repentance, prayer, and communion with God. It’s been deeply, personally renewing, and I haven’t “planted the church”, pastored God’s people, or “renewed the city” much less. If I’ve piqued your interest, and I hope I have, then you can listen to several messages we preached through in our church. We are still getting feedback on those messages. Fortunately, I’m not the only one slowing!

Writing Update

While being slow, focused, and creative, I finished the new book, provisionally entitled, Gospel-Centered Discipleship (which is almost sure to change). This book is a significant revision of Fight Clubs. I doubled the length of the book. Added fifty footnotes. Included a lot on the Holy Spirit and more practical material. I’m working with Re:LIT right now on cover design.

For those who missed it, I contributed a chapter on “Gospel-Centered Accountability” for an e-Book published by Covenant Eyes. I’ve also been working out some more missional writing, i.e. “The Failure of the Missional Church” and speaking. I put the missional community book on hold, in part because I might write it with someone else. Along with this, I’ll be presenting some material I’ve written on Gospel & Culture at the Acts 29 Bootcamp this weekend. All that to say that something “missional” is in the works. You can look for some new blog posts on Resurgence fairly soon.

I don’t write in the first person much on the blog, ironic, I know. And I’ve had my fill (you probably have too) already. But I wanted to let readers know why there’s been so much silence, as well as pass along some of the sweet lessons I’m learning through believing (and repenting from not believing) in a gospel of rest. Above all, I hope you’ll join me in working from your rest in Christ, not working for your rest on the weekends or wherever you naturally try to find it.

Institutional Church Can’t Renew the City

Today over half the world’s population lives in cities and half of those cities are Asian. There are over 400 cities with a population of over a million. The future of our world is profoundly urban shaped. As cities have emerged, morphed, and multiplied over the centuries, they have created the contours of civilization. Cities are man-made infrastructures that facilitate the flow of goods and services, exercise government, provide education, produce, and contribute to human flourishing in general.

Urban planners and theologians alike have come to view cities as spaces comprised of various domains. A domain is distinct sphere of city life. Experts identify between five and ten domains—Family, Education, Media, Arts, Business, Government, Social Services and so on. These domains work together to create holistic urban life, to foster human flourishing.

How does the Christian church fit into the city? Where does the Church fit into urban domains? What is our responsibility with regard to human flourishing? Consider a few of ways to view the church’s relationship to the city. Read the rest.

This article was originally published by Boundless as “How to Renew a City”

Gospel Community at Work

What do tobacco, community, and work have to do with one another? What would it look like to make work more like church? In this article I make these connections in order to promote great culture in our everyday work.