Simple Church
eBook - ePub

Simple Church

Thom S. Rainer, Eric Geiger

  1. 296 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Simple Church

Thom S. Rainer, Eric Geiger

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About This Book

The simple revolution is here. From thedesign of Apple productsto Google's uncluttered homepage, simple ideas are changing the world.Now in paperback, multi-awarded #1 national bestseller Simple Church guides Christians back to the simple gospel-sharing methods of Jesus. No bells or whistles required. With insights based on case studies of400 American churches, Thom Rainer and Eric Geiger prove the disciple-making process is often too complex. Simple churches thrive by taking four ideas to heart: Clarity. Movement. Alignment. Focus. Simple Church examines each idea, clearly showing why it is time to simplify. This updated trade paper edition includes a new chapter with further insights the authors have gained through hundreds of conversations with church leaders since this landmark book's original release.

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Information

Publisher
B&H Books
Year
2011
ISBN
9781433673535
Part 1
Simple Revolution
One
The Simple Revolution Has Begun
Out of complexity, find simplicity.
~ Albert Einstein
Relax. This book is not about another church model. If you are a church leader, you have been exposed to plenty of models. Most of them are on your shelf. Or worse, you have blended a bunch of models into one schizophrenic plan. If that is the case, neither you nor the people in your church are really sure what your church is all about. We see it all the time.
Go ahead, let down your guard. No new program is going to be pushed. There will be nothing new to add to your calendar. If anything, you will be encouraged to eliminate some things, to streamline. This book will help you design a simple process of discipleship in your church. It will help you implement the model you have chosen. It will help you simplify.
Keep your eyes on the words at the beginning of each chapter. Four simple words. Clarity. Movement. Alignment. Focus. Those four words will speak volumes before we conclude the book.
After hundreds of consultations with local churches and a significant research project, we have concluded that church leaders need to simplify. They are constantly asking, “How can we make all this work? How can we put all the pieces together?” Many of the church leaders we talk to are seeking an escape from the not-so-simple life.
The Not So Simple Life
Pastor Rush is on his way home from a conference on church ministry. He loved the time away, the challenging messages, and the extended times of prayer and worship. But he hates how he feels right now. The conference notebook sits on his lap filled with all that he learned and all that he wants to do. He wants to open it, but he can’t. He wants to think about the future, but his mind is filled with the details surrounding the rest of this week.
As the plane takes off, he only feels the weight of the responsibilities that await him. Somewhere between ten thousand and thirty thousand feet, he puts the notebook (and his dreams) in his bag.
It is Wednesday afternoon. He feels a little guilty not being at the weekly visitation program last night. He feels more guilty for enjoying the night off. The Tuesday night visitation program was his baby, his paramount program, when he came to the church several years ago. It soon became the passion of many people in the church. He is grateful those people caught his passion and feels like a traitor for resenting the additional night away from home.
Tonight, he has to (wishes he wanted to) lead the prayer meeting at church. He tells himself he will share something God taught him in a personal devotion. By doing so he will have time to return some phone calls before the prayer meeting. Experience tells him the messages on his desk and the e-mails on his computer will be many. He knows they are already there.
The financial team is meeting after the prayer meeting, so he will not be home until after 9:00. He does not lead the meeting, but he needs to be there. Hopefully his kids will still be awake when he gets home.
Tomorrow morning he is having breakfast with one of the men on the church board. He does not know what it is about, but he thinks it will only add more to his mounting list of responsibilities.
Then there is a staff meeting and maybe some hospital visits. Tomorrow night he and his wife are in a small group. He has recently encouraged everyone in the church to be in a small group, and he wants to lead by example. He genuinely loves the group when he gets there, and he wishes it did not feel burdensome. He asked each staff person to be in a small group and prays they don’t feel the same way he does right now.
He has little work done on his message for the upcoming Sunday morning worship services. He is in the middle of a series on relationships. He taught on relating to your spouse last week, and he longs to live out some of the practical principles he shared: date nights, picnics, and so forth.
He wants to make that happen in some way this week. Friday night could work. He commits to pass on the invitation to attend one of the local high school sporting events. He knows that will disappoint one of the board members who has encouraged him to be more visible in the community.
Saturday afternoon, after his son’s ball game, he will spend much of the day on his message. It looks like another “Saturday night special” is in store for the Sunday morning crowd.
This weekend he is going to speak on relating to lost neighbors. He wishes he had some personal stories to share, but life has just been so busy lately. He thinks of all the times he has pulled into the garage after late nights at church or church-related activities. He hasn’t met the new couple two doors down. He tells himself they just moved in a few weeks ago but then remembers it was six months ago, at least.
He knows that if he is not relating to his neighbors and inviting them to Christ and to church, he cannot ask his congregation to do so. He wrestles with changing his message, but he has already announced what he is going to preach. He shakes his head and slumps a little lower in the seat.
He is tempted to witness to the person sitting next to him on the plane just to get a personal story for his message—nothing like a good airplane story to get a crowd going. He rebukes himself for the improper motivation. The passenger is asleep anyway. Must be nice.
Pastor Rush reaches back into his bag. He pushes the conference notebook aside and grabs a legal pad.
He has the weekly staff meeting after his breakfast appointment. This will be the only time he has to prepare for it. He decides to keep it brief, jotting down only a few items to discuss. He knows there are some staff issues that need to be dealt with, but he does not have the time or emotional energy to raise them.
He begins to think about his message for Sunday night (which is different from Sunday morning). He has taken some criticism lately for the quality of his Sunday night messages. He understands why. They have been underdeveloped. He is trying to work on them earlier in the week, taking some of the time away from the Sunday morning message preparation.
This Sunday night there is a neighborhood block party. His wife will go while he is at church. He thinks, At least one of us knows our neighbors. Of course, people will wonder why she was not at church. The tension is mounting. He slumps deeper into the seat.
He knows there has to be a better way. He knows it and continually admits it to himself and the Lord. But there is no time to discover it (whatever it may be), much less time to put it into action.
Like other conferences, Pastor Rush was impressed but is coming home almost depressed.
During these times, Pastor Rush has disciplined himself to remember his calling into ministry. When he was in his early twenties, he committed his life to vocational ministry. He mentally goes back to those days when he wrestled with his career path.
God had given him an unquenchable passion for the church, for the Word, and for people. He knew God had set him apart to serve the church. He still does. He still has a deep burden. The nagging in his heart to make disciples through the ministry of the local church is still there. That conviction has not wavered, only grown. But he knows so many things have been placed beside it, even on top of it.
Yet, he is in this for people.
At thirty thousand feet Pastor Rush is thinking of people in his church. He is praying and thinking. Some tough questions are emerging. Are the people in his church being transformed? Is his church making real disciples, the kind of disciples Jesus made? Or is everyone just busy?
He glances over at the sleeping passenger next to him. On his lap is the airline’s magazine, and it is opened to a full-page advertisement for a popular media device. The top of the advertisement says Simple. Out of curiosity Pastor Rush pulls the same magazine out of the seat pocket in front of him. He finds the page to further examine the advertisement. It is interesting. He snickers.
Simple sure sounds good.
The Revolution
Simple is in.
Complexity is out. Out of style at least.
Ironically people are hungry for simple because the world has become much more complex. The amount of information accessible to us is continually increasing. The ability to interact with the entire world is now possible. Technology is consistently advancing at a rapid pace.
The result is a complicated world with complex and busy lives. And, in the midst of complexity, people want to find simplicity. They long for it, seek it, pay for it, even dream of it. Simple is in. Simple works. People respond to simple.
The sim...

Table of contents

Citation styles for Simple Church

APA 6 Citation

Rainer, T., & Geiger, E. (2011). Simple Church ([edition unavailable]). B&H Publishing Group. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/2694245/simple-church-pdf (Original work published 2011)

Chicago Citation

Rainer, Thom, and Eric Geiger. (2011) 2011. Simple Church. [Edition unavailable]. B&H Publishing Group. https://www.perlego.com/book/2694245/simple-church-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Rainer, T. and Geiger, E. (2011) Simple Church. [edition unavailable]. B&H Publishing Group. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/2694245/simple-church-pdf (Accessed: 15 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Rainer, Thom, and Eric Geiger. Simple Church. [edition unavailable]. B&H Publishing Group, 2011. Web. 15 Oct. 2022.