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| Forgotten Ways, The: Reactivating the Missional Church | 
enlarge | Author: Alan Hirsch Creator: Leonard Sweet Publisher: Brazos Press Category: Book
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $11.50 You Save: $8.49 (42%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 26 reviews Sales Rank: 8775
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.8
ISBN: 1587431645 Dewey Decimal Number: 266 EAN: 9781587431647 ASIN: 1587431645
Publication Date: January 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New
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| Customer Reviews:
A Challenging Read January 19, 2007 Alan has been shattering paradigms and challenging ideas for years. In The Forgotten Ways, Alan describes missional movements and challenges us to reorder the church around its mission, all filtered through his deeply personal experience. You will be provoked, challenged, and motivated to embrace the missional DNA and incarnational impulse of the early church in your own life and ministry.
Brilliand and Applicable January 12, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Alan Hirsch writes for me what is the most significant "missional" book since Transforming Mission by David Bosch. He combines theology and philosophy with practice - he's not a dreamer, he's a doer - that's why I listen to him. I will require all our planters and people we work with globally to read to this book.
Forgotten Ways Remembered.. January 10, 2007 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
It's a powerful followup to The Shaping of Things to Come. Alan builds on the imagination and passion of the earlier work with Michael Frost to offer a vision for reinvigorating a missional movement that became an unholy alliance with the state under Constantine. With the legacy of Christendom rapidly becoming a piece of history, we have an opportunity to discover our missional DNA (mDNA). What is the dynamic that caused the church to grow from 25,000 souls to 20 million in 200 years? What similar dynamic empowered the Chinese church, while existing underground and outlawed, to expand at the same rate... without professional leaders, training facilities, or buildings? Is there hope for the Church in the west, mired as we are in modernity, in love with our buildings and comforts? Perhaps Roland Allen, in a quote offered by Hirsch, offers us a clue: "The spontaneous expansion of the Church reduced to its elements is a very simple thing. It asks for no elaborate organization, no large finances, no great numbers of paid missionaries. In its beginning it may be the work of one man, and that a man neither learned in the thigns of this world, nor rich int he wealth of this world.. What is necessary is faith. What is needed is the kind of faith which unity a man to Christ, sets him on fire." At the heart of the transition toward rediscovering this mDNA established communities made these changes: 1. the basic ekklesial unit becomes much smaller - not mini churches but meta church or house church. 2.not a new philosophy of ministry per se, not renewed vision and values, but a covenant and core practices. 3. each group becomes engaged in a set of disciplines 4. the movement exists in three rhythms - a weekly cycle of house meetings, a monthly tribal meetingm and a biannual gathering of all tribes in the network. 5. each group covenants to multiply itself.
Alan is his usual calculating self here.. there are many diagrams and tremendous fodder for the imagination, many examples and diagrams and charts. In short, its a sweeping and integrative attempt to reimagine the church around her mission - what a novel thought!
And essential book January 8, 2007 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
This volume is an essential book to understand the biblical, sociological and historical dynamics behind what is commonly called "missional" today. In reality, Alan Hirsch is rearticulating the divine genuius that has been inherent in the Christian movement from its inception and drawing applications for us in the postmodern world. This is a must book for anyone interested in the "missio dei" in the 21st century.
essential reading January 6, 2007 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
Alan's new book is essential reading for both the church planter and the established church leader. His research into the early church and the church in China under persecution, coupled with his own experiences at South Melbourne Restoration Community has uniquely enabled him to identify a number of critical factors necessary for the missional church.
There are many books that describe the predicament that the Western Church finds itself in, but few that show ways forward which are not limited to how many people we can get to attend our events. This book is focussed on the cause of Jesus and how we can join in with God movement through our world.
I would recommend this book to student, scholar, leader, minister or anyone interested in the mustard seed that grows into a big plant.
Phil www.signposts.org.au
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