Today I finally received through the post (via Amazon) a book that I have wanted to read for months. Lesslie Newbigin’s ‘The Gospel in a Pluralist Society’ is a classic missiological/missional book. First published in 1989 it has spawned much of the current missional debate.
Books on my desk…
My desk often looks a little untidy! I’m a multiple pile type of guy. Today as I was sat doing some work I looked around at the current piles on my desk and thought that they sum up much of what I’m thinking and working on at the moment:
Pile 1
Man Overboard! (Sinclair Ferguson)
The Message of Jonah (Rosemary Nixon
Jonah (RT Kendall) personalised with a full cup of coffee by my good friend Rob T
Jonah (John Calvin)
Pile 2
Christ and Culture Revisited (Don Carson
The Reason for God (Timothy Keller)
Counterfeit Gods (Timothy Keller)
Pile 3
Gracism (David Anderson)
Letters Across the Divide (David Anderson & Brent Zuercher)
Grace for Muslims? (Steve Bell)
Pile 4
The Deliberate Church (Dever & Alexander)
Leading with questions (Marquardt)
Pile 5
Vintage Church (Mark Driscoll)
Church Planting (Timothy Keller)
The Mission of God (Christopher Wright)
Pile 6
Don’t waste you life (John Piper)
John Piper: The people that make a durable difference in the world…
“The people that make a durable difference in the world are not the people who have mastered many things, but who have been mastered by one great thing. If you want your life to count, if you want the ripple effect of the peebles you drop to becomewaves that reach the ends of the earth and roll on into eternity, you don’t need to have a high IQ. You don’t have to have good looks or riches or come from a fine family or a fine school. Instead you have to know a few great, majestic, unchanging, obvious, simple, glorious things–or one great amm-embracing thing–and be set on fire by them.” – John Piper, Don’t Waste Your Life, Pg. 44
Holiday Reading
On Monday I’m on holiday for 2 weeks. Below is the stock of book that I’m taking with me to plough through.

How Long, O Lord? Reflections on suffering and evil (D. A. Carson)
Shepherds After My Own Heart. Pastoral traditions and leadership in the Bible (Timothy S. Laniak)
Biblical Eldership. An urgent call to restore biblical church eldership (Alexander Strauch)
Planting Churches Changing Communities (David Stroud) – NEW
How to Read a Book. the classic guide to intelligent reading (Mortimer J. Adler & Charles Van Doren)
Suffering and the Sovereignty of God (John Piper & Justin Taylor)
The Week. The best of British and Foreign Media (for a bit of light reading)
Discipleship

I’m currently writing a 5-week discipleship course for folk within our children work. Here are the titles for each session:
DELIGHT. Finding true delight in a world of cheap imitations
GLORY. Finger painting for the glory of God
CROSS. The cross-shaped life
IDENTITY. Who am I?
SERVANTHOOD. The upside down kingdom
As part of my research I’ve just reread Bill Hybels book ‘The Volunteer Revolution’. What a suburb book! It is short and easly accessible, but filled with some great truths about team, servanthood all firmly rooted in the mission of the local church. Here are just a few of quotes:
“I have never done a single thing of value without the assistance of others.” (p. 9)
“We love, serve, and care for others because that us normal behavior for people who are filled with God’s Spirit. We are Christians. Christ was the ultimate servant. We can’t help but serve because the Spirit of the Servant has filled our hearts. When we serve we are just being who we naturally are.” – Steve Sjogren (p. 35)
“Jesus, our Lord and Teacher, took the very nature of a servant. Here Paul challenges us to a new perspective. He calls us not just to momentary emotional hype, but to a crisp, intellectual understanding of what Jesus models for us. He asks us to allow the Holy Spirit to renew our minds so that our reflex reaction at home, work, at church, and in our community is humble service to God and people.” (p. 42)
What am I reading at the moment?

As always I’ve got a number of books on the go at once. Here is my current selection:
- How to read a book (Mortimer J Adler & charles Van Doren)
- Finally Alive (John Piper)
- The difficult doctrine of the love of God (D. A. Carson) seconding reading
- Lectures to my students (Charles H Spurgeon)
- Preaching the Cross (Dever, Duncan, Mohler, Mahaney)
- Institutes of the Christian Religion (John Calvin)
Converse: Tim Chester

It is a great pleasure to be able to republish my interview with Tim Chester.
Adam Bradley: Please can you tell me a little bit about yourself?
Tim Chester: I’m married to Helen and we have two daughters. I’m a church planter, writer, Bible teacher and blogger (www.timchester.co.uk). I co-direct The Porterbrook Network (www.theporterbrooknetwork.org) with Steve Timmis which currently consists of two training programmes: Porterbrook Training which trains people for church planting and missional church through distance learning and residentials; and the Northern Training Institute (www.northerntraininginstitute.org) which trains people for church leadership through guided reading, residentials and monthly seminar days. I’ve written a dozen or so books (http://timchester.wordpress.com/books/). I also love books, food, conversation, playing tennis, watching any sport with a ball (especially cricket), tidying up and washing the family’s clothes.
Adam Bradley: Please can you tell me some of the highlights of your testimony?
Tim Chester: I was brought up in a Christian home. I believe I became a Christian one Sunday night when I was four – a view, I discovered some twenty years later, shared by my parents. I struggled in childhood with assurance until reading John 6:37 when I came to appreciate that the question was not whether I had repented ‘enough’, but would Christ accept me if I came to him – something about which I could have no doubt. I was baptised at the age of 14.
Adam Bradley: What church do you lead/involved in? (background, movement/denomination, philosophy of ministry, etc)
Tim Chester: I lead The Edge Network, a group of three household congregations which is part of The Crowded House (http://www.thecrowdedhouse.org/). The Crowded House is gospel-centred in all that it does (missional church) with a strong emphasis on community as the context for mission, pastoral care, discipleship and so on. We emphasis ‘ordinary people living ordinary life with gospel intentionality’. We also speak of home as the primary location for church and most of our congregations meet in homes. Our approach is summed up in our ten values (http://www.thecrowdedhouse.org/?q=ourvalues) and described in more detail on a book I co-wrote with Steve Timmis called Total Church (IVP/Crossway). http://astore.amazon.co.uk/timche-21/detail/1844741915/202-7594482-7212630
Adam Bradley: What books are your currently reading?
Tim Chester: I need to finish a book for IVP by the end of October on how the cross and resurrection should shape our lives as Christians. So much of my current reading is geared around that. It’s mostly re-reading books: Andrew Lincoln’s book, Paradise: Not and Not Yet, Michael Gorman’s book, Cruciformity, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s classic, The Cost of Discipleship. I’ve just finished Atonement by Ian McEwan (I haven’t seen the film version). I’m also reading a book by Roy Strong, The Spirit of Britain: A Narrative History of the Arts.
Adam Bradley: What’s sermons/preachers are you listening to at the moment (the i-pod question)?
Tim Chester:
None.
Adam Bradley: Why is church planting such a passion for you?
Tim Chester: Because it’s a lot of fun! Am I allowed to say that? I’d rather be church planting than coping with all the admin and change issues that my friends in established churches have to face. I guess my ‘proper’ answer is that church planting puts mission at the heart of church and church at the heart of mission.
Adam Bradley: What would you say are the three most important principles for any young want-to-be church planter?
Tim Chester:
1. Recruit a team
You can’t do it on your own! It doesn’t need to be a big team. Half a dozen people would be enough. What does matter is that you have people who are on board with your vision. We routinely ask people not to join us. (Our rule of thumb has been not to have Christians from other local churches join us just because they fancy a change of church.) We want people to feel a sense of coming to be part of missional team (even if they have a full-time secular job).
2. Develop a vision
Start to develop a sense of what kind of church you want to be. What principles or values will shape you? Try to express this is in a clear way so that everyone in the team can articulate it for themselves. We don’t have much in the way of programmes, plans, structures and buildings. But we do try to set a clear vision so everyone knows what they should be doing and has the freedom to innovate within the vision.
3. Hang out in your area Walk the streets, prayer walk, spend time in local cafes (do your reading and prep there), join community groups, talk to people about your area. This serves a double purpose: (1) it will help you contextualise and (2) it will begin to build bridges with people in your neighbourhood.
You can do all these three things in an iterative way – they all feed into one another.
One other word of warning. Don’t rush to start do something called ‘church’ until you are confident your team has a radically different vision of church. The business of ‘doing church’ (services, children’s work, etc.) can be a distraction. You might want to call yourself a ‘missional team’ for a long time and then let slip that you have been church all this time and this is how you’re always going to do church. Or consider waiting to plant a church until you have the home of new convert in which to meet. This may help you get your contextualisation right. Let church be done on the hoof.
Adam Bradley: Here’s your opportunity to say anything else you like…
Tim Chester: Treasure Christ. Don’t find your identify in being a cutting edge, on the ball, hip and cool, orthodox and conservative church planter. Don’t try to prove yourself. don;t be controlled by the opinions of other people. Enjoy each day the grace of God to your in Christ. Return again and again to the cross. Treasure Christ. Be disciplined about it. Meditate on all that he is and all that he has done so that he is enough. Then you can bear fruit in every season, as Psalm 1 puts it. You can face disappointment, failure, temptation and still be full of joy because your joy is in the Lord.
Book Review: THE DIFFICULT DOCTRINE OF THE LOVE OF GOD
THE DIFFICULT DOCTRINE OF THE LOVE OF GOD
With only 103 pages this book at first glance looks lightweight. Do not be deceived! This book deals with some mammoth theological challenges!
D. A Carson opens the book by saying…
“On learning the title of this series, ‘the difficult doctrine of the love of God’, you might well be forgiven for thinking that the 1998 W. H. Griffith Thomas lecturer has taken leave of his senses. If he had chosen to speak on ‘The difficult doctrine of the Trinity, or ‘The difficult doctrine of predestination’, at least hi title would have been coherent. But isn’t the doctrine of the love of God, well, easy compared with such high-flown and mysterious teachings?”(p9)
Carson goes on and shows how the love of God is at the very centre of some monumental and humungous theological challenges. He also demonstrates so clearly that to have a deficient theological framework for understanding the love of God will inevitably lead to a domino effect of distortion on other massive theological issues such as the sovereignty of God and a right understanding of the wrath of God.
There are four chapters in the book:
- On distorting the love of God
- God is love
- God’s love and God’s sovereignty
- God’s love and God’s wrath
This book is short but every page is a sirloin steak of theological brilliance!
Please visit my amazon site to purchase a copy… buy now
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