O Eclesiologie contemporana

So Beautiful: Divine Design for Life and the Church

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5.0 out of 5 stars Unpacking the Missional Nature of the Godhead, March 23, 2009
By David Phillips “pastor” (Smyrna, DE USA) – See all my reviews
Almost 3 years ago, I heard Len Sweet talk about the MRI Church during our first advance for my D. Min. program. In his new book, So Beautiful: Divine Design for Life and the Church, Len explores and explains the importance of this idea.

In the book, Len talks about the implications of practicing APC Churches: Attractional, Propositional and Colonial churches. APC churches create members, believers and consumers. However, the MRI Church (Missional, Relational and Incarnational) creates missionaries, disciples, and world changers.

The book is quite thick at over 300 pages. In addition, there are only five chapters, including the introduction. Each of the MRI topics are covered in an individual chapter, along with an introduction and epilogue. Each chapter, however, is broken up into sections that make it easy to take a break in the midst of 40-70 page chapters. I knew this book would be big back in September as Len told me at dinner that each of the topics were 100 pages each and his editor would have to get it down to a manageable size.

Despite it’s size, however, it is not a difficult read. But you do have to put your thinking cap on. Len’s verbal imagery is very real. He reframes word meanings based on origin and use quite a bit. It is will cause you to pause and consider how you use language yourself. In addition, this a book that draws from a great myriad of sources, as most all of Len’s books do. You get a true education by reading Len’s book, not just in ministry and life topics, but in science, literature, history, etc.

Content
In the book, Len calls on people and churches to blend together the three MRI strands into one beautiful life.

In Part 1: The Missional Life, Len speaks of God’s “going”. God is a God of motion, movement and mission. Mission is not an activity of the church but part of the character of God. He is a missionary God. Disciples of Christ are mission-shaped. Every vocation is a missionary vocation. In this section, he fleshes these concepts out in a clear and compelling way.

In Part 2: The Relational Life, Len describes a life where the primary reality is relations and relationships. All of life is about relationships: with God, ourselves, others and creation. In this chapter, he describes the primacy of Relational Truth over Propositional Truth. This is a particularly interesting and needed discussion. I appreciate greatly how he unpacks this concept.

In Part 3: The Incarnational Life, Len describes how instead of pulling people and concepts out of their context, we need to be entering other contexts and in doing so localizing the church within that context. One particular thought that I found very compelling and helpful was this: “Jesus was at home everywhere, but naturalized nowhere. The incarnational life pays homage to context by celebrating regionality, by honoring particularity, by domesticating the missional and the relational. God didn’t choose to send us a Superman. God chose to send us an Everyman – `Joe, the Plumber,’ `Jesus, the Carpenter’ – one like ourselves in every way.” (pg. 153) He speaks on how the genius of Christianity is its ability to integrate pagan customs with Christian faith and practice. It uses those customs to communicate itself through indigenous and local expressions of worship.

The final chapter, the Epilogue is practical. It gives you a mirror with which to look at your life and church to see if you are a MRI church. In the epilogue Len provides ten ways to know if your church is MRI. This is a strength of the book.

Additionally, the book is not anti-APC as much as it tries to note the primacy of the MRI over the APC.

Final Thoughts
In a world when most of the attention goes to large, attractional churches, who are by their sheer size considered successful, it is encouraging for someone with such influence noting the need for a different way of being the church. Len does a remarkable job in this book of reframing the idea of church and being vs doing church. It creates energy to infiltrate the world and the marketplace and be the church. It also creates the theological and practical energy for that as well.

Having gotten to know Len over the past 3 years, I admit a bias. But I truly believe that this is one of the best books on being the church and on being a church that influences the context in which we live. It would be a foundational book were I teaching a class on Missional Theology and Practice.
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5.0 out of 5 stars It’s time for the Body to get an MRI, April 1, 2009
By Laurence T. Baxter “Step Up to the Call” (Indiana USA) – See all my reviews
Leonard Sweet has written an engaging and challenging book in “So Beautiful: Divine Design for Life and the Church”. He paints a vivid picture of the DNA of the church as three essential complementary strands of Christian life – missional, relational, and incarnational. He weaves together this view drawing from Scripture, the life of John Newton, the biological wonder of life, along with an engaging writing style that helps us better understand the nature of the church and how we may live more like Christ. The key contrast in the book is between a modern style of church that is becoming an increasingly poor fit with culture, and one he believes is closer to the intent of God. The style he cautions against is APC – Attractional, Propositional, and Colonial, while the one he proposes is MRI – Missional, Relational, and Incarnational, better reflecting God’s interaction with the world and His hope to reconcile man back to Himself. He addresses in a considerate way some significant challenges facing the local church today but without calling us to abandon it – he pulls together the needs to serve both within and beyond the church. (An approach I appreciate very much, there’s no shortage of books focused on bashing down the church itself.) For example, Sweet notes that in the Gutenberg era the watch phrase was: everyone is called to be a minister, your baptism is your ordination into ministry. In today’s Google world, “everyone is dispatched to be a missionary. Your baptism is your commissioning as a missionary. We are both ministers and missionaries. Every disciple has a ministry to the body and a mission in the world. Your baptism is both an ordination certificate and a passport to a missional life, spent in being sent to live and dwell in diaspora, in Babylon not Zion.”

The five chapters unpack the missional life (God’s going, and calling us to go, or be present as we go), the relational life (and goes beyond typical discussions of the need for community), the incarnational life, and an epilogue that calls us, and calls our church to be MRI – and gives us some ways to know if we are. Another way he pulls these together: “Missional is the mind of God. Mission is where God’s head’s at. Relational is the heart of God. Relationship is where God’s heart is. Incarnational is the hands of God. Incarnation is what God’s hands are up to.”

The writing style is unique, quite deep and not avoiding large words, and yet remarkably clear and witty. To say it’s thought-provoking is an understatement. Sweet combines a theological approach that centers on Christ and the trinity, but is not afraid of describing things in new ways. This is no dry academic treatise… at the risk of offending, Sweet asserts that “The church needs to rediscover the missionary position, a posture that forces us to look at the world eye to eye and face to face without turning our backs. The missionary position tries to get together with the world in a healing and so beautiful way. It doesn’t view the world as a market but a mission.” If that makes you upset or angry, this book probably isn’t for you. But if you like reading about a fresh perspective on missiology for today’s culture (as with The Present Future: Six Tough Questions for the Church (J-B Leadership Network Series) or other books by Reggie McNeal), this is definitely one to check out.



Categories: Studiu biblic

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