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In An Unstoppable Force, author Erwin McManus offers a vision of the church taking its rightful place. An unstoppable force created to change the world. A church that is active and engaged with its community. A church that dares to cut itself free from atrophied practices and programs to flourish in creative and compelling worship. Where teachers of the Word risk reaching out to our multi-sensory, multi-layered culture with music, the arts and other unique expressions of love and faith. A church that prospers in the life of Christ.
New life comes into a church-an apostolic ethos-when it realizes its destiny is found in its early church origins. A living part of the body of Christ. Driven to find its uniqueness beyond being a cookie cutter copy of the "successful church." An Unstoppable Force will
*Challenge you to see God's vision for the mission and purpose of the church.
*Help you to explore specific changes in the culture that call for immediate change in the church.
*Offer practical ways for your church to find its unique voice and identity to express Christ's love and faith to your culture.
*Present interactive questions in each chapter to foster discussion about the life of your church, its focus on Christ, and how it can be a richer influence on your culture. Never settle for church as usual again! Let An Unstoppable Force excite and inspire you to be part of the Church that God had in mind!
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Erwin's church, Mosaic, has creatively expressed their purposes through the use of five elemental metaphors: Evangelism is the Mission represented by Wind; Fellowship is Water; Service is Wood, Worship is Fire and Discipleship is Earth. Talk about "branding" concepts...every time we feel the wind we think of our mission! Every time we work in the yard we think of the four soils!
Just as anything must be built from three basic shapes (circles, rectangles and triangles) and with three basic colors (yellow, blue and red) so everything in the church can be built from the basic spiritual elements of faith, hope and love. All they do is through the creative expression of the blending of these elements.
Erwin does not believe in a "step by step" growth process but truly believes that even the youngest believers can be involved in ministering to others. He uses arts, music, drama etc to communicate his message in a variety of church settings, from traditional to a nightclub setting. This is a definite "must read" if you want to get a glimpse of what the church may look like in this century.
An Unstoppable Force is a loosely structured, passionate, anecdotal critique of and challenge to institutional churches. It is loaded with stories, accusations, admonitions, unusual metaphors and strong assertions. Some are intuitively appealing and convicting, others might be offensive or inaccurate; nothing is substantiated in any rigorous way. McManus may be the champion modern writer of pithy, quotable one-liner wisdomettes.
McManus makes it clear An Unstoppable Force isn't a handbook or methodology, though the ninth chapter offer conceptual change management advice; it's his perspectives on The Church and a story of his experience and Mosaic, an eclectic, independent ministry in Los Angeles where he is Lead Pastor and spiritual environmentalist. Based upon both the book and website, Mosaic apparently has no edifice, holding services in public buildings. It is a congregation that emphasizes diversity and active service for Jesus Christ, while rejecting - for lack of a better thought, stodgy traditions. Oddly though, neither Mosaic's nor McManus Christology is revealed in the book, or on the website. Jesus Christ is frequently mentioned, obedience to Christ as Lord is encouraged but despite many Bible verses quoted, the only characteristic of the Jesus Christ of McManus or Mosaic that is unequivocal is inclusiveness.
In his criticism of mainline churches McManus comes across as vigorous, confident and passionate. In describing his own ministry and Mosaic, he is sometimes perplexed, insecure, frustrated. He briefly aludes to two occasions where the congregation grew then divisively split with large factions departing. The dividing issues and events are not revealed.
The last chapter of the book should be a published sermon, reprinted and distributed independent of the rest of the book. McManus does an eloquent job of describing the Ten Commandments as a minimum standard, not an objective, and portrays grace in an inspiring context.
You have to work at this book to extract the substance; it's hidden in a lot of rhetoric.
If you're looking for something better suppported and more prescriptive for church growth and renewal consider Lyle Shaller's books.