Here is an update on my booklet Fight Club: Gospel-centered Discipleship. Excerpt included.

Here is an update on my booklet Fight Club: Gospel-centered Discipleship. Excerpt included.

Hugh Halter of Tangible Kingdom fame spoke at PlantR last week. We had a record 68 turn out. Here are some reflections from that meeting.
You know the kind of book that is so good you don’t want it to end? I typically experience this with fiction, but this year there have been a few non-fiction books I have read slowly and not finished–because they are so good! Over the next few weeks, I’ll share from some of my reading in the books that I don’t want to end.
Death By Love – This is easily Mark Driscoll’s best book yet. Death By Love is a series of actual letters Mark wrote to people struggling with serious sin and suffering. Here are a few of the chapter titles:
“My Wife Slept with My Friend”
Jesus Is Luke’s New Covenant Sacrifice
“I Am a ‘Good’ Christian”
Jesus Is David’s Gift Righteousness
“I Molested a Child”
Jesus Is John’s Justification
“My Dad Used to Beat Me”
Jesus Is Bill’s Propitiation
“He Raped Me”
Jesus Is Mary’s Expiation
Chapter after chapter is charged with honesty, empathy, and wisdom. Rich in practical counsel and biblical theology, this book should be required reading for all courses in Pastoral Ministry. Driscoll takes categories from systematic theology and applies them using biblical theology in a very practical way. Brilliant and grace giving. A basic outline for counseling I use was coined by David Powlision: 1) Listen to their Story 2) Empathize with their Story 3) Redemptively retell their Story. I’ll use this to frame Driscoll’s counsel for a victim of abuse:
Okay, so maybe American missions work is driven by the same kind of pragmatism that characterizes so many American churches. Is that really such a big deal? Well, stop and consider the differences between planting pragmatically-driven churches in America versus planting them in most Majority World contexts. Such churches in America have the luxury of building themselves upon the foundations of a culture imbued with several hundred years of Christian influence and ethical norms. Fill a room with nominal Christians, as pragmatically-driven churches do, and you still have a dame that looks half way decent. She’ll dress up alright.
There’s some good thinking in this issue of 9 Marks, though I don’t agree with all of it.