US Shop   CA Shop     UK Shop
Christian Living Faith Bookshop - US Shop
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » General AAS » Confessions of a Reformission Rev.: Hard Lessons from an Emerging Missional Church (The Leadership Network Innovation)  
Categories
Books
Bibles
Music
DVDs
Videos
Software
Gifts
More
Subcategories
Mass Market
Trade
Related Categories
• General AAS
Qualifying Textbooks
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Books
• Religious
Leaders & Notable People
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• General
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• Ministry
Ministry & Church Leadership
Christianity
• General
Evangelism
Christianity
• General AAS
Evangelism
Christianity
• Social Theology
Theology
Religious Studies
• General
• General AAS
• Paperback
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
Sponsors
 
Buy an Amazon Kindle device
 

Google Ads

Confessions of a Reformission Rev.: Hard Lessons from an Emerging Missional Church (The Leadership Network Innovation)

Confessions of a Reformission Rev.: Hard Lessons from an Emerging Missional Church (The Leadership Network Innovation)

zoom enlarge 
Author: Mark Driscoll
Publisher: Zondervan
Category: Book

List Price: $16.99
Buy New: $11.55
You Save: $5.44 (32%)



New (27) Used (9) from $9.00

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 60 reviews
Sales Rank: 16318

Media: Paperback
Edition: Revised
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 208
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.2 x 0.6

ISBN: 0310270162
Dewey Decimal Number: 280.4
EAN: 9780310270164
ASIN: 0310270162

Publication Date: April 1, 2006
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • The Radical Reformission: Reaching Out without Selling Out
  • Vintage Jesus: Timeless Answers to Timely Questions (Relit Theology)
  • Listening to the Beliefs of Emerging Churches: Five Perspectives
  • The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism
  • Death by Love: Letters from the Cross (Re:Lit)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
An inside snapshot view of the innovative Seattle church called Mars Hill and its Acts 29 network, providing--with a touch of sarcasm and humor--both principles and practices shared from the people actually doing missional church ministry with people often untouched by today’s traditional and contemporary churches.


Customer Reviews:   Read 55 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars open and honest   December 13, 2008
Confessions of a Reformission Rev. is written as a confessional history of the life of Mars Hill Church. it chronicles the church from its inception, with a handful of couples, to its present state, with about 4,000 members. as with any lasting church, Mars Hill's has experienced times of great blessing and growth, and also extreme lows and several points of certain death. like the church, Driscoll too experienced times of great joy and blessing in his ministry, but also times of questioning and severe hardship. in recounting both trials and periods of fruitfulness Driscoll speaks with candid honesty. this honesty was one of the things that struck me about the book. it is not often that pastors will speak as openly about their ministry mistakes and failures as they do about their successes. what i found most impressive was the humility he displayed at both extremes, always acknowledging that "the Lord gives and the Lord takes away," viewing the trials as times of pruning and growth in faith, and the times of blessing as confirmation of God's love and the ministry that He had given Driscoll.

another point of interest in the book was Driscoll's telling of the early days of the Emergent movement, his involvement in the early days, and the fact that he is currently distancing himself from those who have taken Emergent into what it is today. he outlines the disagreements he has with many of the Emergent leaders and continually affirms that he is committed to biblical doctrines and understandings of the faith, and that he is not ashamed of the true Gospel as revealed in the record of redemptive history that God has given us. despite what many pro-postmodern leaders would have us believe, Driscoll's ministry and church is a profound testimony to the fact that the biblical message of the Gospel of God's grace-that we are all sinners who are saved by the grace of God through faith in Jesus Christ who humbled Himself to take upon the sins of those that are His, paying the penalty for them as a sacrificial lamb in order to purchase redemption, newness of life, and eternal blessedness for those whom God adopts as children-is still "relevant" to and capable of making sense to the so-called postmodern generation. Driscoll does not shy away from presenting a "bloody" Gospel (as some refer to the biblical message and refuse to preach because they cannot reconcile it with the way they think it should be) because he believes that to be God's truth. and rightly so.

one of the only issues i have with Driscoll's philosophy of ministry (i have a few, but most of them are largely preferential, rather than any kind of clear right/wrong dichotomy) is his ambition to grow his church to over 10,000 members. he does mention that the church has been planting churches around Seattle and elsewhere, and that is definitely commendable. however, i wonder what kind of toll that will take on Driscoll to pastor a church that large. thankfully, he has chosen a church model that allows him, as he says, to be a pastor of a 70-100 member "church" with those numbers representing the number of elders in the church. Driscoll spends time getting to know the elders and trains them for ministry, and then lets them pastor the various ministries that they have been placed in leadership over, allowing Driscoll the time to prepare sermons, study, and write so that all of his time is not taken up making hospital visits and doing counseling sessions. i would be interested to see what kind of impact that has on the average church member. i'm curious as to how they would view Driscoll. just a face at the front of the stage (or on the screen)? the designated speaker of the church? or do they sincerely consider him to be their pastor. my concerns aside, it is obvious that this model works for Mars Hill and that God is greatly blessing the efforts of all involved.

at the end of the day, this book has had a great impact on me. from Driscoll's zeal for the lost and his city, to his humble honesty in telling of his successes and failures, to his dramatic transformation from a cussing, sarcastic youth leader to a godly and loving pastor, there is no doubt that God has been and is at work in him and in his ministry in Seattle. i would strongly encourage all Christians, especially those training for pastoral ministry to read this book and glean the wisdom that Driscoll carefully and graciously shares. i hope the book will be as much of an encouragement to all who read it as it was to me.



4 out of 5 stars A Dangerously Honest (usually) Pastor . . .   November 16, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

People come to Driscoll's church in part because he has a lot to say, and says it well. The same is true in this autobiographical narrative of the founding of Mars Hill Fellowship, and all the associated hoopla. (Now 5000 or so per Sunday, including taking over the big old Presbyterian Church I grew up in, in West Seattle -- now that's a mindblower.)

As for telling well, here are four of Driscoll's aphorisms, from two facing pages (these also show what Driscoll means by "theologically conservative and socially progressive -- a bit):

"The music was very cool if you were into suicide."

"One of our long-haired arty types turned all the lights off and read Nietzche's The Madman by candlelight, which was supposed to make us very Bohemian and cool but just kind of scared the handful of normal people in attendence."

"I decided . . . to work hard at becoming a solid long-winded, old-school Bible preacher that focused on Jesus."

"Silence is better than painful music."

As for having a lot to say . . . Aside from explicit ideas, an implicit message seems to be, "Christians can love Jesus and be really honest at the same time; holiness and frankness need not cancel one another out."

The story involves God, the Devil, sex, music, and the surreal . . . along with occasional boring statistics and church-growth theory that you may or may not find interesting. (Including chapter one.) Fortunately, most of the story concentrates on the difficult early years of the church; like human biographies, childhood seems to be the most interesing part of a church's life . . . Life remains interesting partly because like Chairman Mao, Driscoll seemed to get bored with slow progress and often decided to deliberately stir things up. Apparently it worked.

Driscoll is often crass and frequently treats people instrumentally. He notes that the church needs a "colon;" what does that imply the people who leave his church (refugees from his own "cultural revolution") are? He's also frequently dismissive of other churches in Seattle, though one senses part of this is for (admittedly humorous) effect: "Another woman pastor and her gay male associate pastor with a lovely rainbow on his elegantly sassy robe both spoke passionately about the need to get rid of our nuclear weapons. Their message did not connect with me because I did not have any nuclear weapons. So I left early."

For the record, Mars Hill is not the only good church in North Seattle. In fact, just a few miles away is an excellent, solidly orthodox and missional Presbyterian church of about the same mega-size; and there are several others in between. (I hop around between them like Driscoll did, for very different reasons.) But it's great to have Driscoll and his brash band in the 'hood; doing God's work an unusual way.



5 out of 5 stars In my top 5 best books   October 24, 2008
I really think that this is one of the best Christian books I've read. Here are my reasons:

* It's readable - too many Christian books are like wading through mud.
* It's biblical - I love the uncompromising biblical view that drives everything. Many will be offended by reading this but I imagine those that would be offended would also be offended by Jesus too (not that I think Driscoll is Jesus - just that he speaks truth without shrinking back, something we badly need).
* It's missional - It pushes Christians right out of their comfort zones, but unlike the emergent church, it actually takes the gospel with it and doesn't compromise.

There are annoying bits in the book. For example there's a little too much about the impressiveness of the numbers (I'm not sure the book of numbers is about how you build a big church! - you'll have to read the book to understand that). One comment Driscoll makes says that he met with a guy who'd built a church of x people. I think that's a little man-centred. As a Brit I'm always a little wary of the American - "build it and they will come" mentality. But on the whole, this is a great book to start you thinking about how to be contemporary and yet biblical at the same time. The UK and Europe especially need his entrepreneurial spirit and need to step out of our comfort zones for the gospel.



4 out of 5 stars My Confesson of Confessions   September 18, 2008
I find this book both wonderful and sarcastic. Mark Driscoll is deffiently a truthful author more so than others I've read. The book gives the deep, dark, intimate truths of startinga new church and the struggles you may face. For the first two-thirds of the book I didn't care for Mr. Driscoll. He was sarcastic, negative, and aerogant. but afther the fact I found he was writing exactly what he was thinking through out those tough times. All in all I would recommend this book with the warning to be prepared. Mark is not the traditional Pastor you would think of.


4 out of 5 stars A Handful of Really Important Lessons   September 15, 2008
I didn't know what to expect when I picked up this book, and I honestly didn't expect that much from it. I was pleasantly surprised by the book--not because my expectations were so low, but because it really is a helpful and useful book for a pastor trying to wrestle with the deepening and broadening of the church. The sarcasm was an unexpected treat. I am sarcastic a little too often, and it was fun reading his take on the world. As with all hard humor, though, it was great when I agreed with it, and it was frustrating when I didn't.

But humor aside, Driscoll has a handful of extremely important things to tell pastors (and church leadership in general). To being with, church is about Jesus. We can put on dazzling shows, mimic models working half-way around the States, or disband the whole thing in favor of house churches, but every adaptation needs to be about Jesus. Pastors and churches grow in the right ways when we preach Christ and him crucified every week no matter the topic or text. A church without carefully defined and followed theology is like a grocery store that only sells Hostess cupcakes. People will get a sugar high coming, but the crash is not far away and they certainly won't grow.

In addition, churches need to define or discover why they exist and move in that direction. As so many church leadership books tell us, that sometimes requires hard decisions. But as Driscoll reminds us, churches are guarded by shepherds that are supposed to tend for and protect the flock.

He also raises an issue I have discovered in my own journey as a pastor. It sounds simple on paper, and if you haven't struggled with this temptation you may not guess how powerful it is. Pastors and leaders need to be who Jesus called them to be and do the things Jesus called them to do. We make huge mistakes fitting into someone else's mold or trying to act and preach like the popular guy down the street. Churches sometimes put pressures on pastors to be and do certain things that will end up sapping them of vitality and ruin the church. Sometimes it is a cult of personality or a denomination, but the problem is the same - pastors give into other peoples' expectations at their own peril. We all know pastors and leaders end up with things in their portfolios they are not great at or need to learn to love, but, as a matter of priority and gifting, be who God called you to be.

I am not a huge fan of books on church leadership technique. That is probably why I liked this book. Instead of a heck of a lot of tips and tricks (there are a fair amount of details, pie charts and schematics), it is mostly about a set of lessons learned trying to do what God called a pastor to do.




Powered by CBN AssociateStore

DISCLAIMER: This is an Amazon storefront - the products referenced on this site are manufactured and sold by parties other than Christian Book Network and its affiliates. Any questions, complaints, or claims regarding the products must be directed to the appropriate manufacturer, vendor or to Amazon.com.