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The Tangible Kingdom: Creating Incarnational Community [Hardcover]

Hugh Halter , Matt Smay
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 14, 2008 0470188979 978-0470188972 1
Written for those who are trying to nurture authentic faith communities and for those who have struggled to retain their faith, The Tangible Kingdom offers theological answers and real-life stories that demonstrate how the best ancient church practices can re-emerge in today's culture, through any church of any size. In this remarkable book, Hugh Halter and Matt Smay "two missional leaders and church planters" outline an innovative model for creating thriving grass-roots faith communities.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

According to a recent survey, of the nine in every ten Americans who identify themselves as Christian, only a third of these actually participate in a faith community with any regularity. Many faith seekers have tried different churches, methods, programs, leaders, teachers, and styles only to discover that nothing holds their interest.

Written for those who are trying to nurture authentic faith communities and for those who have struggled to retain their faith, The Tangible Kingdom offers theological answers and real-life stories that demonstrate how the best ancient church practices can re-emerge in today's culture, through any church of any size. In this remarkable book, Hugh Halter and Matt Smay—two missional leaders and church planters—outline an innovative model for creating thriving grass-roots faith communities.

Starting from nothing, Halter and Smay began meeting in homes, coffee shops, and anywhere they could. Their goal wasn't to attract people to worship services, but to be the faithful church in small pockets throughout their city. Based on their experiences, the authors offer some intentional activities and habits of life that can help a faith community make God's kingdom more tangible. Halter and Smay call for churches to take a leap from their safe environments of their buildings and truly enter into the real world—God's reality.

The Tangible Kingdom offers new hope for church leaders, pastors, church planters, and churchgoers who are looking for practical new ways to re-orient their lives to fit God's mission today.

About Leadership Network — The mission of Leadership Network identifies and connects innovative church leaders, providing them with resources in the form of new ideas, people, and tools. Contact Leadership Network at www.leadnet.org.

From the Back Cover

"Among increasing numbers of faithful, conservative, Bible-believing Christians, an important shift is beginning to occur. These aren't wild-eyed radicals; they're solid, established church leaders and members who are asking new questions because deep within they discern that something is wrong with the status quo. Hugh and Matt have been through this shift, and offer wise counsel for a way forward."
—Brian McLaren

author, A New Kind of Christian Trilogy and Everything Must Change

"What makes this book so outstanding is that it is not just another book on theology and theory, but it is rooted in the process of making disciples."
—Bob Roberts

pastor, NorthWood Church, and author, Transformation, Glocalization, and The Multiplying Church

"No matter what kind of church you are seeking to participate in or plant, The Tangible Kingdom will knock you out of your comfortable pew to follow the mission of Jesus to transform your community."
—Mark Driscoll

author, Confessions of a Reformission Rev. and The Radical Reformission

"Hugh Halter and Matt Smay are not just men of words but of actions. They have broken from the pack of theorizers, philosophers, and abstract theologians by diving into the deeper waters of experimentation, struggle, failure, and success. The results are sharper principles packed with punch because they have been refined in the fires of real life. Take confidence that what they teach will work."
—Neil Cole

church starter; director of Church Multiplication Associates; and author, Organic Church


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Jossey-Bass; 1 edition (April 14, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0470188979
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470188972
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 0.9 x 9.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #26,363 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

The book is well presented and helpful. Trey Turner  |  10 reviewers made a similar statement
As a lay-person, I highly recommend the book. Angela Lau  |  11 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
143 of 168 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars The Tangible and Intangible Kingdom April 15, 2008
Format:Hardcover
As the previous review pointed out, the strength of `The Tangible Kingdom' is the stories. Halter and Smay include some great anecdotes from their own lives as church planters that illustrate their faith and ministry in the context of modern culture. Their care and love for people is evident. Their real-life examples of being missions-minded, invitational, and outward-reaching are personally challenging to me.

With that said, the book also has a few weak points. They get much of their church history backwards. For instance, they claim "People in the Dark Ages tended to be focused on God. They built their churches in the middle of their towns and lived to survive the day and keep God at the center of their worldview." That might be a good description of the Puritans. However, prior to the Enlightenment, Reformation, and Great Awakening, while `religion' and `superstition' were prevalent, God being the center of community just wasn't the case.

Additionally, they go on to champion the Eastern-mindset as having a radically holistic approach to life - and claim `Christianity is completely, entirely, an Eastern faith.' That's a bold statement. If anything, Christianity, born at the crossroads between East and West has had a significant impact on the West, while having a marginal impact on the East. As a result, the ideals, worldview, and mindset that are reflected in the West, more closely align with the core tenants of Christianity. Those would include the world being separate from God, the world being knowable, the sanctity of human life, life having meaning, and life going somewhere as opposed to life being endlessly circular.

However, the part of the book that most concerned me was their understanding of the gospel. The authors claim the gospel isn't the answer of Jesus to the sin-problem of men and women. Rather, it's "[God's] love and acceptance and vision for every human being... God's love for his created humanity." That description of the gospel too easily marginalizes the passion, crucifixion, and substitutionary death of Jesus. In fact, if the gospel is merely about God's love and acceptance of every human being, then why would Jesus have to die? They go on to claim that the gospel isn't just about God's love, it's about love in general - people adopting children, having block parties, and planting trees... "it's all Kingdom, and it's all good news." While Christians are called to love others, that's not the gospel - that's an outworking of the gospel. The good news in the New Testament isn't a message about us, it's a message about Jesus. The authors go on to claim, we should look for ways to "Witness to this gospel by bringing tangible slices of heaven down to life on Earth, and continue to do this until those we're reaching out to acknowledge that our ways are `good news'." Again, the gospel is not a message about me. It's a message about Jesus, who is more than sufficient for a person has the same problem a non-Christian does. It's called sin, and Jesus provides an incredible answer to it - His life. His good news is about Him, not about me trying to be Him.

In short, I wanted the book to be more about its sub-title, "The Posture and Practices of the Ancient Church Now." I was hoping for an understanding of how the Jesus of then is the same today and how His cross can be known now. Instead, the book focused more on general relationships, inter-personal situations, and caring for people in community. Those are good, but how are they uniquely Christian? How do they differ from the community experienced by people from other faith-traditions? In short, the community in the Tangible Kingdom seemed to be both the beginning and the end.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Book to Inspire Thought June 10, 2011
Format:Hardcover
The Tangible Kingdom presents some excellent ideas for thought on the church. The authors take on the typical tough question of making the church relevant to an increasingly secular and uninterested society. Yet, they point out how these same people, who include many of us, are interested in the spiritual aspects of life and will relate to the teachings of Jesus. They are very critical of the modern church but recognize the need it serves for the many current Christians who have grown up with it security. This is not a book of theology, but an idea of how to look at the world and how the church relates to it.

The core of the authors' idea is a clever diagram that spells out the relationship of the missional people in a church to the "sojourners" in the world around them. As I read I began to see that I am both a missional person and a sojourner. After years of being fully immersed in the formal, administrative monolith of the American Protestant church I am turned off by alter calls, memorized prayers, and membership requirements. The thought that someone is showing a PowerPoint slide at a denominational meeting somewhere with my attendance shown as a successful metric makes me ill. The Tangible Kingdom was not the answer, but pointed me in a direction to think about it.

I came away from the book inspired to build a missional organization around my work. Fully immersed in the world, I want to work with faithful people who no longer are happy in "the temple" and want to walk through the desert with the farmers, tax collectors, and fellow sinners. Perhaps, there is an opportunity to model a care and love that might inspire a few sojourners to regain their faith in Faith. This book made me think, pray, care more, and read Matthew 5 and 6. I hope it does you too.

Dios te Bendiga.
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28 of 34 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
As a Christian who has been involved in ministry as a participant or leader over the last 15 years, I have to say that this book has some of the most fresh ideas about reaching the world that I have ever heard. The odd thing is they are not "new" ideas, they are firmly rooted in scripture and an understanding of the way believers and nonbelievers lived in community 2000 years ago. Halter and Smay communicate clearly the message that if the church is going to grow and continue to be a vessel for change in people's lives, it is going to have to change the way that it relates to people in our modern culture.

In reponse to the review above, never once did the authors suggest that adopting a child or having a block party was a substitute for Christ's redemptive work on the cross. This book was not written as a gospel presentation. It was written to Christians and Church leaders who already know the gospel, but don't know how to make that gospel matter to people who have never been to a church and never care to.

I would reccomend this book to any Christian, especially one in a leadership role, who is interested in having a deeper impact on the people in their communities.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Has answers but not all
I read this book at the behest of my disenfranchised Pastor. It was very easy to digest and actually made a lot of sense. Read more
Published 1 month ago by JimmyG
4.0 out of 5 stars Thought-provoking but not condemning
Most of the "emerging church" books/articles I read have a single punchline, "The way we've been doing church for 1700 years is wrong. Read more
Published 2 months ago by M. Chesner
5.0 out of 5 stars Challenging and helpful
Halter and Smay's experience give a great picture of how a community of faith that lives "missionally" and "Incarnationally" can grow out of culture. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Tim Flickinger
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring
As I am striving to be progressively missional, this work is one giant stepping stone and I have been sharing it with like minded brothers and sisters. Read more
Published 2 months ago by richard gagnon
5.0 out of 5 stars Life Changing -
This book was very powerful in message and has changed the life of me, my family and my church family. This book spoke to us deeply. Hugh is great and lays it out so well. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Morgan Cassady
4.0 out of 5 stars Very good
Hugh is able to identify the 'problems' with the American church in a way that is unique and well thought out. Wish that there was a clearer 'how to' in the book.
Published 4 months ago by Charie
3.0 out of 5 stars Good start, poor progression and application
In all disappointing. Needs more history and less of a critical eye to what has come before. Modern writers act like they just invented the Church and the Kingdom.
Published 4 months ago by Gerard Fonte
5.0 out of 5 stars Great!
This is a great book by Halter. I liked AND the best, but this is second in my opinion. A must read!
Published 5 months ago by Trent A. Shivley
5.0 out of 5 stars Christianity at its best
I've been around the whole spectrum in the Christian faith and Christian experience & after 25 years of wondering what was wrong with Christianity This book offers the diagnosis... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Flavio Chavez
3.0 out of 5 stars Some Good, Mostly Watery
This book has some decent insights into postmodern culture and how to engage it with the gospel. I found the last part of the book really helpful to put some meat on the bones of... Read more
Published 11 months ago by J. Chase Davis
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