A Family’s Journey from Suburban Vancouverites to Albertan Church Planters
9 Jul
I’ve been reading Ed Stetzer’s Planting New Churches in a Postmodern Age lately. It is beastly-long as compared to the quick read that Launch was.
I was trying to catch some rays and darken the skin a little before we head to Florida at the end of the month for a little iGo action and a round of Disney. I made the mistake of leaving the book on my lawn chair. The boys got out the sprinkler and turned it on full-blast, drenching my lawn chair and my book, borrowed from TWU. Because of its saturation, I think I’ll be buying the library a new copy, so I’d better enjoy this one!
In that light, I’ll say this: the chapters do go by quickly, and Stetzer does a good job of listing references on each chapter so you can do further reading. In a lot of ways, since I am 3/4 of the way through the book, I have been disappointed thus far.
I actually started to comment on this book before. I initially like some of his insights, early on, but as the book moves along, it gets more ordinary. Not a lot is new in fact. It is more a synthesis-type book than a new approach. I find myself in later chapters reading his words which openly rehash material from a variety of other resources. Not plaigarism - he cites his sources clearly - but just disappointing. Like if I had read something else I’d get more.
The most recent couple of chapters I read were on building launch teams and on small groups. The small groups chapter was actually weak. He only discussed small groups of one model type - and I am not even sure I agree that it’s a good type. It’s a jack-of-all-trades small group - one that is designed to provide fellowship and community, but also worship, Bible study, and evangelism. I have become convinced in my time in different small groups that it is impossible to do all these things well when you try to do them in a small group. Stetzer himself points out all the pitfalls of bringing non-Christians into a group full of Christians - the Christianese that gets flung around, the discomfort of being the “new guy”, the culture shock are all not good things for someone you are trying to introduce to the Gospel. Not only that, but it also hurts the relationships of the people already there. To “go deep” and really open up your heart in the safety of Christians is hard enough. What chance does your group have of real authentic community when strangers keep appearing and disappearing, who could do anything with your deep secrets and fears?
The chapter on building a core did hold some useful discussion, but I was at a loss as to understand how his description of various means of teambuilding reflected unique approaches specifically for the postmodern crowds. Maybe it’s because I see a much more intensive variety of postmodern people in Canada - specifically in my workplace at a technology company, and also in my studies of Whistler’s church planting challenges. These people are not just people who don’t believe in existential truth, but live according to that reality. These are people who have not heard a single positive message about authority, church, or traditional structures like marriage in 30 years - which is the lifespan of the majority I work with. These are hard-core people. It’s almost easier to reach new immigrants with a completely foreign paradigm and religion, because at least they believe there is truth out there, and have a greater connection and understanding of family and structure.
For all of its weight, this book feels light. Too light to be very useful but I will finish it out before passing final judgement.
Another thought by someone else:
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