Photo de l'auteur

Steve Timmis

Auteur de Gospel-Centred Church

11 oeuvres 515 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Steve Timmis lives in Sheffield where he is a pastor in The Crowded House. He is the Executive Director of the Acts 29 Network. He and his wife, Janet, have four married children and, currently, nine grandchildren.

Œuvres de Steve Timmis

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male

Membres

Critiques

In this book Timmis walks the reader through short chapters that are aimed at helping the church lose it's inward focus and turn to the world around them. I appreciated the simple way that Timmis explains the beautiful concept of what the church should be.
 
Signalé
laholmes | 2 autres critiques | Jul 21, 2014 |
I'm pastoring a church striving for and working through renewal, so I'm always looking for good, Gospel-centered resources to help our people grasp the realities of what that renewal involves. When Brad Byrd (The Good Book Company, Brad on Twitter: @tweetiebyrd) gave me a copy of The Gospel-Centred Church (GCC) workbook by Steve Timmis and Tim Chester at the Acts 29 boot camp in Louisville, I hoped this would be one of those resources. It is.

GCC is broken up into an introduction, three main sections and a conclusion...

Part One: The Priority of Mission
Part Two: The Priority of People
Part Three: The Priority of Community
There are a total it's 18 lessons of 4-5 pages each. Each is engaging and provocative. It worked well as an individual study, but I can see greatest value in a group setting. For the most part you can read it either systematically or topically. Despite having the limitations of being a workbook under 100 pages, the authors do well to encourage us to long for and become the community the Gospel should produce.

There are six parts to each lesson. The first is a principle--the core of the lesson. A scenario is introduced to raise a dilemma in gospel ministry. Then we consider Scripture (only a reference given so you can use your own Bible) with questions, a section discussing the theology and application of the principle, discussion questions, and actionable items are finally suggested.

I enjoyed GCC. Its challenges were many: how we think about church buildings, money, community life, leadership, courage, using gifts and more. I grew progressively more convicted by chapter after chapter over this different picture of what "church" can and should be.

I most impressed by some thought-provoking statements and application. The authors were creative in making the principles practical. Specifically many of the "Ideas for action" were helpful. GCC will provoke you to be see your world in a different way because of the Gospel.

GCC will be helpful anywhere Christians are struggling with what it means to be community-focused and missional. If you are a pastor of an established church, I think GCC will be helpful for key leaders in your congregation. If you need a bit of a push out of safety and into the world, you will find encouragement here. If you need to remember the value and importance of local communities of faith, of locking arms for our mission, this is a good place to go. Small groups of various sorts will do well to check out GCC.

This is truly a workbook about a Gospel-shaped vision for the local church. If you are looking for a theological book, this isn't it. But for what it is, I found GCC useful for my own life and will be using it with some folks at my church (Doxa).
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
SteveMcCoy | 2 autres critiques | Dec 15, 2009 |
Very Heady kind of a book
½
 
Signalé
ShellSingle | 2 autres critiques | Aug 19, 2009 |

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
11
Membres
515
Popularité
#48,205
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
3
ISBN
20
Langues
3

Tableaux et graphiques