by Michael Frost
|
| List Price: | $19.95 |
| Amazon Price: | $13.57 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. |
| You Save: | $6.38 (32%) |
| Average Rating: |  |
| Lowest New Price: | $11.94 |
| Availablitiy: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
|
 |
|
Product Description Exiles: Living Missionally in a Post-Christian Culture presents a biblical, Christian worldview for the emergent church—people who are not at home in the traditional church or in the secular world. As exiles of both, they must create their own worldview that integrates their Christian beliefs with the contemporary world. Exiles seeks to integrate all aspects of life and decision-making and to develop the characteristics of a Christian life lived intentionally within emerging (postmodern) culture. It presents a plea for a dynamic, life-affirming, robust Christian faith that can be lived successfully in the post-Christian world of twenty-first century Western society. This book will present a Christian lifestyle that can be lived in non-religious categories and be attractive to not-yet Christians. Such a worldview takes ecology and politics seriously. It offers a positive response to the workplace, the arts, feminism, mystery and worship. Exiles seeks to develop a framework that will allow Christians to live boldly and courageously in a world that no longer values the culture of the church, but does greatly value many of the things the Bible speaks positively about. This book suggests that there us more to being a Christian than meets the eye. It explores the secret, unseen nooks and crannies in the life of a Christian and suggests that faith is about more than church attendance and belief in God. Written in a conversational, easy-to-read style, Exiles is aimed at church leaders, pastors and laypersons and seeks to address complex issues in a simple manner. It includes helpful photographs and diagrams.
Customers who bought this item also bought
Average Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Motivation & practical suggestions for neighbourhood mission, 2010-03-21 EXILES: LIVING MISSIONALLY IN A POST-CHRISTIAN CULTURE
Michael Frost
Peabody: Hendrickson, 2006
Exiles is Michael Frost's latest and most substantial book, in which he addresses the urgency of the missional challenge in the post-Christendom Western world. Christendom, he explains, is no longer a reality in Western culture but continues to define the church's self-understanding: `And here lies the root of the problem of the church today. Victimized by nostalgia and buffeted by fear, the church is focused too much on merely holding the small plot of ground that it currently occupies to confidently reimagine a robust future' (p.9). Frost paints a picture of a life-affirming and Christ-centred faith for followers of Jesus who feel exiled from both secular Western culture and old-fashioned respectable and conservative church culture. Drawing on Brueggemann's identification of the parallels between the dislocation and irrelevance of contemporary Christianity and the experience of Jewish exiles in Babylon, he explores dangerous inspiration and directions for modern-day exiles:
I. `Dangerous Memories' of Jesus and his daring agenda
Frost insists an incarnational model of engaging but not submitting to secular culture is essential for followers of Jesus today. Like an experimental farm, the church is to demonstrate living in the Kingdom of God with generosity and selflessness in contrast to the greed and consumerism rampant in society. The secret to this is rediscovering (remembering) the genius of the teachings of Jesus and the missional practices of the early church. Rather than seeing Jesus in insipid non-human terms and with predominately dogmatic ontological formulas (as in the creeds) or theological frameworks (as in the Reformation), he calls the reader to a fresh understanding of Jesus through first century Jewish eyes. For example, Jesus' eating patterns amazingly broke down social barriers and demonstrated inclusiveness unheard of in Jewish religion of his day. Frost insists if we are to imitate Jesus, we will value hanging out with people in `third places' like clubs and hotels where people gather regularly and not get overly caught up in meetings and Sunday stuff (the usual barometer of Christian commitment). Furthermore, in order to embody and share the gospel, we will balance inner spirituality such as contemplative prayer with outward disciplines like hospitality, generosity, justice, environmental stewardship and mission.
II. `Dangerous Promises' that point to the Kingdom
Frost expands on some promises that he says transform communities and point to the Kingdom of God. To begin with, in a world obsessed with reality television and fake experiences (and with churches that extol the virtues of short-cut magical Jabez prayers), the counter-cultural promise is to be authentic. Second, rather than aiming for community as an end in itself, exiles first seek to serve a cause greater than themselves. In prioritising mission, they find that community (or communitas) incidentally happens as people's imagination is captured by a higher cause.
Third, rather than just gathering with other Christians (whether loyally on Sundays in a church building or occasionally on Mondays at a pub), exiles are captured by a vision to create missional community and `do church' that Frost says is characterised by four essential features: Trinitarian theology (as a framework and spiritual glue for community), covenantal expression (committing to a way of life together), Catholic orientation (conscious of their part in the broader church) and missional intent (which gives a common goal and a basis for a common life together).
The fourth promise is of generosity and hospitality. With the inspiration of Joseph the steward who saved nations from hunger, Daniel who refused to eat junk served up to him and Paul who ate to engage people rather than fearing contamination, Frost caters for a life-affirming and not-too-difficult approach to hospitality: `Serve up something delicious, and then just watch the conversation flow and trust God to stick his nose in somewhere' (p.168). The final promise is to work righteously as God's apprentices. Dismissing a dualistic approach to secular work, Frost encourages integrating work and mission. He tells some particularly creative examples of architects and retailers whose work benefits social equality and the environment.
III. `Dangerous Criticism' of injustice and environmental destruction
Frost is restless with the injustices of global poverty, slavery, greedy corporations and selective journalism. He empathises with people around the world suffering human rights abuses - imprisonment without trial, torture, abuse and religious discrimination. He calls for advocacy and compassionate action - not just in short bursts (as following the Tsunami) but with sacrificial commitment over time. He also critiques the theology and practice of domination/subjectivism that has led to overconsumption. He warns we are living a lifestyle the planet cannot afford to sustain. His critique is complemented by helpful suggestions for practical action.
IV. `Dangerous Songs' to evoke a vision for a better world
Christendom, according to Frost's overview of church history, grew preoccupied with Sunday worship rituals in dedicated buildings. The Reformers overturned a works-based theology but still gave priority to attending meetings. Contemporary expressions of church often imply Sunday worship is the ultimate expression of devotion (for example, singing `Better is one day in your house than a thousand elsewhere') or the ultimate marketing device (seeker services). So it can be difficult for Christians to see worship in broader terms - as including missional service as well as singing songs of adoration, and incorporating Monday-Saturday as well as Sunday. Alternative worship is an attempt to express worship in broader forms: `A few songs and a long sermon won't do. A communal, ambient space, centred around a convivial meal table, reflecting local culture, using ancient and modern rituals, and infused with spiritual singing will be a wonderful expression of the overflow of loves lived daily to please our happy, joyful, all-powerful God' (p.300). Exiles have given up on singing sentimental us-centred (`Jesus my boyfriend') love songs, and want to cry songs of revolution that call into reality a new world. And they want to see their actions as well as their songs as an expression of worship.
Michael Frost teaches evangelism at Morling College and is the missional architect of an innovative urban church plant smallboatbigsea. He has served Forge Mission Training Network as NSW Director and is one of Australia's leading communicators of the gospel. He draws on his experience and weaves together a rich mix of story-telling and exegesis, art criticism and practical suggestions, missiological and New Testament scholarship, and insightful cultural analysis to form a significant resource for practitioners and students of mission to the West.
Other books on the emerging missional church including The Shaping of Things to Come suggest experimenting with new forms and giving them a go, and not worrying that some will fail. Exiles says give simple and diverse expressions of missional church a go because they are not too hard! Following Jesus into community and hospitality, opposing oppression and calling for a better world is not rocket science. I read it and was inspired to get together with some friends and `be church' together informally in our neighbourhood in homes and cafes. I had been part of a remissionalised church one suburb away from home and was enthused by emerging missional approaches to church, but it was reading Exiles that gave us the impetus to be sent from our old church to be part of starting a new expression more locally and organically. Michael shows the way with his impassioned plea for authentic discipleship and practical `how to' suggestions ranging from advice on hospitality, nutrition and environmental care through to character conversation questions for Life Transformation Groups and a simple order of service (`BELLS' = Blessing, Eating, Learning, Listening, Sending). I found Exiles to be an empowering guidebook and a careful analysis of the challenges and needed directions for new expressions of `living missionally in a post-Christian culture'.
Alongside the book, a missional lifestyle course Exilio has been developed which runs in Sydney and will be available in other areas.
(Originally reviewd in Zadok Perspectives, No. 96 (Spring), pp.24-25.)
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Exiles from the Church, 2009-12-09 Michael Frost's strength of character and personality shines through each page of this book. Michael isn't afraid of offending anyone, and he boldly takes on the contemporary church, blog writers, and even some of the finest Christian musicians of our time including Matt Redman and Steve Fee.
Michael is a great story-teller, and the book is full of stories about life on the edge as a beer-drinking crowd-defying follower of Jesus. Most of the stories are effective in calling us back to a truer reflection of the lifestyle of Christ. However, Michael's story-telling style requires him to display extensive details about his subjects, and his ruminations in the fields of economics and corporations could have benefitted from more detailed research.
What Michael has to say is important and deserves to be heard. Nonetheless, in my view it does not present a complete picture, and the critiques which it presents are for the most part more convincing than the tentative suggestions which it makes. If you want some original insights into what is wrong with the church, read the book; if you want to know how to fix the problems, look elsewhere.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Exiles is weak, 2009-09-11 This book is largely a waste of time and paper. The premise is thought provoking but definitely not biblical. The author mixes his opinion with misguided biblical exegesis and anti-establishment sentiments. This book is weak- don't waste your life on it.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
you are not alone!, 2007-08-27 If you sometimes feel like the desire and passion to live like Jesus puts you in unusual places doing His work and you wonder if this is "authentic", this is the read for you. I do church every Sunday, but I do more church outside of church (hiking trails, gay bars and events and business networking events) and, not only am I not alone, I am in a group of exiles who worldwide are trying to follow what Jesus would be doing were He here. He is not here in the flesh and expects us to carry on. I am an exile and I felt encouraged and unified by reading this book.
23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
Great ideals...but exiles hurt, too., 2007-08-16 I read this book after being involved in an emerging church full of exiles. There's so much I recognise and agree with in this book, which I think accurately portrays the feelings, reasoning, and practical implications of those who are rejecting the current church.
My one criticism of this book is that it seemed to be so angry - not just passionate - and very hard-line. The arguments and experiences need to be heard, but you can't continue to build a church on your anger toward what you define yourself against. I think Mike's disdain for pastoral care of the hurting also assumes that exiles are happy to go from a painful, abusive church to throwing themselves into mission in a victorious, confident experiment, where my experience is that a lot of us want a rest and need to deal with our issues before we inflict our woundedness all over others. I'm not saying we should be the perfect, healed, whole Christian...I'm just aware of how bitter and angry an exile can become.

Price is accurate as of the date/time indicated. Prices and product availability are subject to change. Any price displayed on the Amazon website at the time of purchase will govern the sale of this product.
|
Store Categories
|