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ChurchMorph: How Megatrends Are Reshaping Christian Communities (Allelon Missional Series)
 
 
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ChurchMorph: How Megatrends Are Reshaping Christian Communities (Allelon Missional Series) [Paperback]

Eddie Gibbs (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Allelon Missional Series August 1, 2009
It is estimated that 80 percent of churches are either stalled or in decline. In ChurchMorph, internationally known church observer Eddie Gibbs goes beyond an analysis of causes to show how many churches and faith communities are actually breaking the downward trend. He expertly maps current converging church movements--emerging and missional churches, mainline renewal groups, megachurches, urban mission, new monasticism, alternative worship, and expanding networks--and offers a positive assessment of the reshaping of today's church. The core of the book identifies trends and movements that provide signs of the kingdom and reveals how different faith communities are working out what it means to be "church" in a changing world.

This stimulating and encouraging book will appeal to pastors, church leaders, and students interested in ministry, the emerging church, Christianity and culture, and mission.

EXCERPT
The morphing of the church relates to the church transitioning to a new identity as a missional presence in the West. There is a growing realization among leaders committed to mission that the challenge will not be adequately met by adding new programs to ensure the local church, or a denomination's, institutional survival. Such leaders are talking about an unfettered re-imagining of the church, resulting in a comprehensive change in its self-understanding and its reconfiguration.

Frequently the term "deconstruction" is used by radical voices within the emergent church. But this technical term is often misunderstood, being perceived as too threatening and confrontational. It is heard to imply demolition and destruction, which is not what is intended. Deconstruction refers to a particular method of literary criticism that seeks to get behind the text to reveal the embedded assumptions. Among Emerging Church leaders, "deconstruction" signifies, not destruction, but a breakthrough. It means to undo or take apart in order to arrive at a deeper understanding, allowing for a creative re-reading. However, in order to avoid the negative implications of the term, and its highly technical explanation, I prefer to speak of the re-imagining of the church, and of the transformation process as the morphing of the church.

Wikipedia defines morphing as a special effect in motion pictures and animations that changes (or morphs) one image into another through a seamless transition. The term has a much more ancient usage however. It is derived from the Greek word morphe, which appears in the New Testament in a significant context.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A professor of church growth at Fuller Theological Seminary, Gibbs catalogues the latest church trends, from so-called missional and emerging church formats to new monastic communities and alternative worship. The book is intended for a professional audience of ministry students and church leaders and provides short summaries of innovative churches in the U.S., Canada and Great Britain. It calls attention to cultural and geographic changes that will challenge church leaders to adapt to new circumstances if they are to engage people in a 21st-century context. For example, Gibbs points out that preconceived church models, such as the big box megachurch, may not be culturally appropriate to today's ethnically diverse urban communities. In these settings, church members may be more eager to engage with social justice issues such as substandard housing and education in contrast to more self-focused, consumerist suburban churches. Still, Gibbs's book is intended more as a resource than an argument. He commends churches of all types that succeed in advancing the Christian mission. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From the Back Cover

"ChurchMorph is the most thorough interpretive map of church trends to come out in years. It is informed, comprehensive, and intelligently written by one of the most seasoned missionary-statesmen around today. A book well worth reading."--Alan Hirsch, author of The Forgotten Ways; founder of Forge Mission Training Network and shapevine.com

"Here is a master guidebook to the territory we all must travel in order to be church in the new post-Christendom cultures of our day. Gibbs charts both the challenges and the church movements responding to these challenges. In giving us his careful evaluations, Gibbs shows himself once again to be not only a careful scholar and a keen observer of the church but also a sorely needed prophet for these extraordinary but opportune times."--David Fitch, Northern Seminary; reclaimingthemission.com; author of The Great Giveaway

"Over a long and fruitful career, Eddie Gibbs has consistently reported the most relevant on-the-ground happenings in the Western Protestant church. ChurchMorph is no exception. Utilizing his vast network of connections in the US and the UK, Gibbs has delivered to us a book that makes sense of terms like 'emergent' and 'missional,' while relentlessly challenging all Christians to be impelled outward by the gospel. This is a great resource for many Christian leaders."--Tony Jones, author of The New Christians: Dispatches from the Emergent Frontier

"Similar to Mark Noll's Scandal of the Evangelical Mind and Philip Jenkins's Next Christendom, Eddie Gibbs's ChurchMorph is another compelling descriptive study of the changing nature of Christian communities in the West. ChurchMorph could lead to transformation in the way the Western church lives out its missional challenge in a post-Christendom world."--S. Steve Kang, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary

"Eddie Gibbs always brings a unique perspective to church ministry. No matter what type or style or size of church you serve, ChurchMorph will help you understand the crucial changes taking place in ministry today."--Gary L. McIntosh, Talbot School of Theology, Biola University

Product Details

  • Paperback: 222 pages
  • Publisher: Baker Academic (August 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 080103762X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801037627
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #643,986 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Failure to Morph a Failure of Mission, August 17, 2009
This review is from: ChurchMorph: How Megatrends Are Reshaping Christian Communities (Allelon Missional Series) (Paperback)
Eddie Gibbs, ChurchMorph: How Megatrends Are Reshaping Christian Communities (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2009). $17.99, 222 pages.

According to Eddie Gibbs, five megatrends are convulsing the Western church. They are the shifts from modernity to postmodernity, from the industrial age to the information age, from Christendom to post-Christendom, from production to consumerism, and from religious identity to spiritual exploration.

The response of Western Christians to these shifts varies. Some are ignorant of the megatrends; some purposefully ignore them. Others, however, are rethinking what it means to be a church in the new Western cultural context. ChurchMorph is a taxonomy and interpretation of their efforts.

Many of these efforts can be described as emergent or missional. Although those terms arose in different contexts--the former from the grassroots, the latter from the academy--they share a goal: to retool the Western Christian church as a missionary force within the West itself.

Gibbs groups these responses into six categories: fresh expressions, megachurches, urban mission, the new monasticism, non-denominational church networks, and alt.worship. For each category, he provides numerous examples of churches in American, Canada, and England that fall (roughly) under the category. He summarizes their varying approaches, explains their rationales, and offers a critique.

Only time will tell whether any of these efforts will retool the Western church and help reverse the decline of Christian faith in the West. But failure to make any adjustments to the West's new cultural realities is a commitment to missional failure. The church that refuses to morph in some way, as Gibbs puts it, is already becoming moribund.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The changing face of the church, February 1, 2010
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This review is from: ChurchMorph: How Megatrends Are Reshaping Christian Communities (Allelon Missional Series) (Paperback)
This book is a must read for all involved in both leadership and ordinary folk in church. It highlights the importance for the church to wake up and smell dhe coffee of the ever rapidly changing world we are in. There is an excellent chapter looking at fresh expressions of church in the UK.
A challenge not only for the emergent church but for the whole of the church.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gibbs continues to offer Christian leaders helpful insights, January 7, 2010
This review is from: ChurchMorph: How Megatrends Are Reshaping Christian Communities (Allelon Missional Series) (Paperback)
Eddie Gibbs excels at grasping the trends of churches and cultures and translating them into insightful reading for Christian leaders. Readers who have read Gibbs' and Bolger's "Emerging Churches" will recognize several shared themes and discussions. In some ways, this book is a refresher on that book. "Churchmorph" is a great introduction to the trends facing churches in the West as the culture transitions from modernity to postmodernity. Gibbs paints the landscape and helps readers see how the church must morph to maintain its viability to a culture that is threatening to leave it behind.

The book is a combination of current trends among churches and Gibbs' suggestions of trends that churches must take up for their own health. His writing is insightful, enlightening, instructive and pastoral as he advocates mission and community for churches. Gibbs provides big picture views and particulars through this book that is sure to be a helpful resource to readers.
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