Practical Tools For Missional Living
Posted by Brad BriscoJan 12
For several months now I have been meaning to highlight two fantastic tools for missional living. I have purchased more than twenty copies of each of these “handbooks” to give to those I know are on the journey of developing misisonal churches.
The first is The Tangible Kingdom Primer written by Hugh Halter and Matt Smay. The primer was written with two specific purposes in mind. First, to be a spiritual formation tool to prepare the hearts of people for mission. It is written in such a way that participants can simply be a group of friends who commit to journey through an eight week spiritual formation exercise together. Second, the primer is to be a field guide for starting mission activity together. In other words, it is also a great fit for those who are already inclined to jump in on practices that can engage and impact a local context.
The workbook is divided into seven days of experiences each week. The weekly rhythm looks like this: Day one involves the exploration of the missional/incarnational concept; Day two presents scripture for meditation on the highlighted topic or issue; Day three pushes for a bit of change in the way you think/act; Day four is about putting thoughts into action; Day five pushes the activity towards a faith community for encouragement and discernment; Day six involves ”calibration” whereby the theme of the week is examined from a different angle; Day seven is a day of rest or sabbath.
The second resource is The Forgotten Ways Handbook by Alan Hirsch and Darryn Altclass. The book is a practical oriented companion to Hirsch’s excellent 2007 book The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church. By the way, if you are not familiar with The Forgotten Ways, I blogged through much of the book here.
The handbook moves beyond the theological foundation laid in the original The Forgotten Ways, to a place of practice that very few resources provide. This extremely practical handbook includes helpful tools including summary sections encapsulating the ideas contained in each chapter of the original book, suggested habits and practices to help readers embed missional principles, and adult learning-based techniques and examples from other churches that enable readers to process and assimilate the ideas in a group context.
If you are planting a misisonal community or attempting to transition an existing church in a more missional direction I would highly recommend both of these resources. By the way, both Halter and Hirsch will be speaking at Verge in February.
3 comments
Comment by Abel Garcia on January 24, 2010 at 1:00 am
I just got done reading a new book which was written by two of my proffesors, at Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, which I think would be worth adding to this list. The book is called “Church Turned Inside Out: A guide for designers, refiners, and re-aligners” By Linda Bergquist and Allan Karr (they are church planters and teach church planting) the forward of their book was written by Alan Hirsch. The book is awesome and it speaks to the importance of Churches being incarnational.
Comment by Brad Brisco on January 26, 2010 at 10:13 am
Abel, thanks for the comment. Yes I have read the book as well. A few weeks back I included a couple of quotes from the book but haven’t had the time, yet, to tell a bit more about the book. I, like you, think it is a very helpful book. I have met Linda and heard her speak on a few occasions. I have always appreciated her heart and intellect. Would you be willing to “review” the book as a guest blogger? Let me know if you would be open to that.
Pingback by The Forgotten Ways Training Videos :Missional Church Network on February 11, 2010 at 9:53 pm
[...] Most of you that follow this blog are familiar with The Forgotten Ways by Alan Hirsch. It is certainly one of the most significant books in the present missional conversation. If you are not familiar with the book you can read a series of post I did here. I would also highly recommend the more recent The Forgotten Ways Handbook, which I wrote about briefly here. [...]