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What Is the Mission of the Church? [Kindle Edition]

Kevin DeYoung
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (85 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Social justice and mission are hot topics today: there's a wonderful resurgence of motivated Christians passionate about spreading the gospel and caring for the needs of others. But in our zeal to get sharing and serving, many are unclear on gospel and mission. Yes, we are called to spend ourselves for the sake of others, but what is the church’s unique priority as it engages the world?

DeYoung and Gilbert write to help Christians “articulate and live out their views on the mission of the church in ways that are theologically faithful, exegetically careful, and personally sustainable.” Looking at the Bible’s teaching on evangelism, social justice, and shalom, they explore the what, why, and how of the church’s mission. From defining “mission”, to examining key passages on social justice and their application, to setting our efforts in the context of God’s rule, DeYoung and Gilbert bring a wise, studied perspective to the missional conversation.

Readers in all spheres of ministry will grow in their understanding of the mission of the church and gain a renewed sense of urgency for Jesus’ call to preach the Word and make disciples.



Editorial Reviews

Review

In what appears to be a growing tension over what the mission of the church encompasses, DeYoung and Gilbert bring a remarkably balanced book that can correct, restore, and help regardless of which way you lean or land on all things missional. I found the chapters on social justice and our motivation in good works to be especially helpful. Whether you are actively engaging the people around you with the gospel and serving the least of these or you are hesitant of anything missional, this book will help you rest in God s plan to reconcile all things to himself in Christ. Matt Chandler, Lead Pastor, The Village Church, Highland Village, Texas; author, The Explicit Gospel (Crossway, 2012) Christ is the greatest message in the world, and delivering it is the greatest mission. But are we losing our focus? Are we being distracted, sometimes even by good things? Zealous Christians disagree sharply today over the church s proper ministry and mission. Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert bring us back to first things in an age of mission creep and distraction. Offering balanced wisdom, this book will give us not only encouragement but discomfort exactly where we all need it. It s the kind of biblical sanity we need at this moment. Michael S. Horton, J. Gresham Machen Professor of Systematic Theology and Apologetics, Westminster Seminary California Among the many books that have recently appeared on mission, this is the best one if you are looking for sensible definitions, clear thinking, readable writing, and the ability to handle the Bible in more than proof-texting ways. I pray that God will use it to bring many to a renewed grasp of what the gospel is and how that gospel relates, on the one hand, to biblical theology and, on the other, to what we are called to do. D. A. Carson, Research Professor of New Testament, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School DeYoung and Gilbert have put us in their debt with their clear, biblical, theological, and pastoral exposition of the mission of God s people. That mission, which they rightly understand within the story line of the whole Bible, is summarized in the Great Commission and involves gospel proclamation and disciple making. This superb book will encourage its readers to go into the world and make disciples by declaring the gospel of Jesus Christ in the power of the Spirit and gathering these disciples into churches, that they might worship and obey Jesus s commands now and in eternity, to the glory of God the Father. --Peter T. O'Brien, Senior Research Fellow in New Testament, Moore Theological College, Australia

A very timely and eminently engaging book for all those who care deeply about the church s mission in our day. Again and again, I found myself nodding in agreement as the authors made a key point from Scripture or noted the missional relevance of a given biblical passage. I highly recommend this book, not just as food for thought, but more importantly, as a call to obedient, biblically informed action. Andreas J. Kostenberger, Senior Professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology, Director of Ph.D. Studies, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert have written an important book on an important topic. Fair, keenly observant, startlingly honest, this book is replete with careful exegetical work. Verses are not merely cited; they are considered in context. The length of an idea is considered, all the way from its expression in the local church back to its source in Scripture. The result is a book that is nuanced and clear, useful and enjoyable to read, and that is no small gift from two young pastor-theologians who have already become reliable voices. Open this book and you ll want to open your Bible and open your mind on everything from justice to capitalism, from mercy to love. Mark Dever, Pastor, Capitol Hill Baptist --Rick Holland, Executive Pastor, Grace Community Church, Sun Valley, California; Director, Resolved Conference

A very timely and eminently engaging book for all those who care deeply about the church s mission in our day. Again and again, I found myself nodding in agreement as the authors made a key point from Scripture or noted the missional relevance of a given biblical passage. I highly recommend this book, not just as food for thought, but more importantly, as a call to obedient, biblically informed action. Andreas J. Kostenberger, Senior Professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology, Director of Ph.D. Studies, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert have written an important book on an important topic. Fair, keenly observant, startlingly honest, this book is replete with careful exegetical work. Verses are not merely cited; they are considered in context. The length of an idea is considered, all the way from its expression in the local church back to its source in Scripture. The result is a book that is nuanced and clear, useful and enjoyable to read, and that is no small gift from two young pastor-theologians who have already become reliable voices. Open this book and you ll want to open your Bible and open your mind on everything from justice to capitalism, from mercy to love. Mark Dever, Pastor, Capitol Hill Baptist Church, Washington DC; President, 9Marks DeYoung and Gilbert clear the fog that has settled over the nature of the church s mission. Their tone is gracious, the style is accessible, but most importantly this book is marked by fidelity to biblical revelation and the gospel of Jesus Christ. The authors have succeeded in what they exhort us to do: they have kept the main thing as the main thing. Thomas R. Schreiner, James Buchanan Harrison Professor of New Testament Interpretation, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary DeYoung and Gilbert provide clarity to some of the most complex contemporary issues facing the church. Focusing us squarely on the redemptive nature of the gospel, they ultimately point us not only to the church s mission, but to practical ways to understand and live it. The result is a book that will be of great help to pastors, missiologists, theologians, and practitioners. M. David Sills, Faye Stone Professor of Christian Missions and Cultural Anthropology, Director of the Doctor of Missiology Program and Great Commission Ministries, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary Every generation is tempted to augment or diminish, even nuance or redefine the mission of the church. Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert have provided a biblical corrective and protection for our generation in What is the Mission of the Church? With a gracious and kind spirit, this book reclaims the ecclesiastical concepts of mission, purpose, social justice, and the Great Commission from those who have redefined these words with a dictionary other than Scripture. Pastors should read this book with their elders, deacons, and leadership teams to wrestle with answers to the most pressing questions about the church in our day. --Rick Holland, Executive Pastor, Grace Community Church, Sun Valley, California; Director, Resolved Conference

Review

“In what appears to be a growing tension over what the mission of the church encompasses, DeYoung and Gilbert bring a remarkably balanced book that can correct, restore, and help regardless of which way you lean or land on all things ‘missional.’ I found the chapters on social justice and our motivation in good works to be especially helpful. Whether you are actively engaging the people around you with the gospel and serving the least of these or you are hesitant of anything ‘missional,’ this book will help you rest in God’s plan to reconcile all things to himself in Christ.”
Matt Chandler, Pastor, The Village Church; President, Acts 29 Church Planting Network

“Christ is the greatest message in the world, and delivering it is the greatest mission. But are we losing our focus? Are we being distracted, sometimes even by good things? Zealous Christians disagree sharply today over the church’s proper ministry and mission. Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert bring us back to first things in an age of mission creep and distraction. Offering balanced wisdom, this book will give us not only encouragement but discomfort exactly where we all need it. It’s the kind of biblical sanity we need at this moment.”
Michael Horton, J. Gresham Machen Professor of Systematic Theology and Apologetics, Westminster Seminary California

“Among the many books that have recently appeared on mission, this is the best one if you are looking for sensible definitions, clear thinking, readable writing, and the ability to handle the Bible in more than proof-texting ways. I pray that God will use it to bring many to a renewed grasp of what the gospel is and how that gospel relates, on the one hand, to biblical theology and, on the other, to what we are called to do.”
D. A. Carson, Research Professor of New Testament, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

“DeYoung and Gilbert have put us in their debt with their clear, biblical, theological, and pastoral exposition of the mission of God’s people. That mission, which they rightly understand within the story line of the whole Bible, is summarized in the Great Commission and involves gospel proclamation and disciple making. This superb book will encourage its readers ‘to go into the world and make disciples by declaring the gospel of Jesus Christ in the power of the Spirit and gathering these disciples into churches, that they might worship and obey Jesus’s commands now and in eternity, to the glory of God the Father.’”
Peter T. O'Brien, Senior Research Fellow in New Testament, Moore Theological College, Australia

“A very timely and eminently engaging book for all those who care deeply about the church’s mission in our day. Again and again, I found myself nodding in agreement as the authors made a key point from Scripture or noted the missional relevance of a given biblical passage. I highly recommend this book, not just as food for thought, but more importantly, as a call to obedient, biblically informed action.”
Andreas J. Köstenberger, Senior Research Professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary

“Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert have written an important book on an important topic. Fair, keenly observant, startlingly honest, this book is replete with careful exegetical work. Verses are not merely cited; they are considered in context. The length of an idea is considered, all the way from its expression in the local church back to its source in Scripture. The result is a book that is nuanced and clear, useful and enjoyable to read, and that is no small gift from two young pastor-theologians who have already become reliable voices. Open this book and you’ll want to open your Bible and open your mind on everything from justice to capitalism, from mercy to love.”
Mark Dever, Senior Pastor, Capitol Hill Baptist Church, Washington DC; President, 9Marks

“DeYoung and Gilbert clear the fog that has settled over the nature of the church’s mission. Their tone is gracious, the style is accessible, but most importantly this book is marked by fidelity to biblical revelation and the gospel of Jesus Christ. The authors have succeeded in what they exhort us to do: they have kept the main thing as the main thing.”
Thomas R. Schreiner, James Buchanan Harrison Professor of New Testament Interpretation, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

“DeYoung and Gilbert provide clarity to some of the most complex contemporary issues facing the church. Focusing us squarely on the redemptive nature of the gospel, they ultimately point us not only to the church’s mission, but to practical ways to understand and live it. The result is a book that will be of great help to pastors, missiologists, theologians, and practitioners.”
M. David Sills, Faye Stone Professor of Christian Missions and Cultural Anthropology, Director of the Doctor of Missiology Program and Great Commission Ministries, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

“Every generation is tempted to augment or diminish, even nuance or redefine the mission of the church. Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert have provided a biblical corrective and protection for our generation in What is the Mission of the Church? With a gracious and kind spirit, this book reclaims the ecclesiastical concepts of mission, purpose, social justice, and the Great Commission from those who have redefined these words with a dictionary other than Scripture. Pastors should read this book with their elders, deacons, and leadership teams to wrestle with answers to the most pressing questions about the church in our day.”
Rick Holland, Senior Pastor, Mission Road Bible Church, Prairie Village, Kansas


Product Details

  • File Size: 650 KB
  • Print Length: 290 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1433526905
  • Publisher: Crossway (September 6, 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B005LIH9N2
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #82,724 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 21 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Balanced and Biblical View of the Missional Church September 20, 2011
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
As a pastor for over twenty years you see a lot of fads come and go in the way churches seek to make an impact in our communities and culture. I have never met a pastor (worth his salt) who didn't want to be pleasing to God and make a difference for the sake of Christ in his community and culture. However, I have become more and more concerned as I see pastors watering down the message of the gospel; focusing more on programs than on the message of the gospel; and being influenced more by the culture, than influencing culture with the message of the Bible. Therefore, I wholeheartedly endorse and applaud this latest offering on the "mission" of the church because I think it is an excellent treatment of the relevant biblical passages and how they bear on the issues we are facing in the 21st century on what the mission/purpose of the church should be. It is missional and Biblical; truthful and loving without compromise; theologically profound and culturally relevant.

Without giving away the mission of the church as defined and defended in this book, I can say that DeYoung and Gilbert do a fantastic job of discussing issues like helping the poor, economics and social justice, the Kingdom, the gospel, and how a church can make an impact on the world without sacrificing the truth and absolutes.

The strengths of this book lie in its simplicity and clarity, exposition and insightful interpretation of the Scriptures, and it's very clear explanation and application of the gospel as revealed in the 66 books of the Bible. I recommend this book especially for pastor's young and old, leadership teams of churches, missionaries, and Christians who want to know how they can be purposefully a part of the only organization of which the "gates of hell will not prevail."

At the end of the day - this book is highly recommended because the author's build a great case for how to be biblically focused, God-centered, and culturally penetrating without sacrificing the most important truths and main story line of the Bible - the centrality of Jesus Christ as Lord and King to whom is all praise, glory and honor forever.
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34 of 41 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Lopsided Gospel March 4, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Let me start by saying that, when DeYoung and Gilbert are right, they're really, really right. They want American Christians to reclaim the goal of evangelism and witness to which many white Protestants have grown averse. While an emerging generation of Christian leaders embraces Christianity as a call to engage with the powers of this earth, we lose sight of Christ's commission to speak His truth with boldness.

That said, I absolutely have to take exception to where the authors run with that thesis. They extol individual salvation, an otherwise noble goal, at the expense of any other Christian goal. They seek to actively demolish the theology that Christians have a responsibility to those who lack in this world. Indeed, at places, they seem outright hostile to Christianity as possessing a social mission or political message.

Using Emerson and Smith's analysis, DeYoung and Gilbert clearly come from the privileged side of American Christianity. Their diminishment of Christ's "good news to the poor" and "release [to] the oppressed" only makes sense to anyone who has never been poor or oppressed. Of course Christ meant the literally poor and oppressed! Centuries of Christians, from Augustine and Francis to Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Luther King, would agree.

Yet DeYoung and Gilbert don't just say we've overemphasized this goal. They say we've flatly made it up. While Christianity does, for them, involve outreach to the poor and the marginal, they see that as the mission of the chosen few. The church as a body has only one goal, in their view: witness and evangelism. In other words, they say this life matters little to the church; our only ecumenical goal is getting people to heaven when they die.

I want to be clear: I agree that we overlook the importance of witness in our time. Jesus and the apostles preached vigorously, far and wide. But they did not talk about pie in the sky when you die, they said the Kingdom of God is at hand, and we must live for that Kingdom right now. These authors' flat dismissal of that witness leaves a lopsided and unsatisfying status quo theology that will disappoint those who most need the message.
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35 of 43 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Is Great Commission our Only mission? November 18, 2011
Format:Paperback
In WITMOTC Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert have put forth their corrective to the current understanding of the concept of mission as it relates to the church. They are discussing the church as an institution as opposed to the church as the sum total of those in Christ. Their thesis is that proclamation is the entire mission of the church institutional. Deeds, they suggest, are either for individual believers to pursue on their own or for the church to take advantage of simply to adorn the gospel message.

I had a lot of minor disagreements with various areas of the book, but any serious reader will probably have minor disagreements with almost anything they read. The book fails because it doesn't offer a convincing argument to those who emphasize evangelism as most urgent but not at the expense of caring for physical needs. The New Testament seems to be in conflict with their argument. The church as an institution should(and did) not only make disciples; they should be(and were) disciples as well. For those inclined to write off my review, read John Stott's Christian Mission in the Modern World (IVP Classics); he focuses on salvation, but still puts forth a more honest theology of social action.

(side note - Making Sense of Social Justice, the exposition chapter, made some significant assumptions about the inherent benefits of capitalism that had more to do with conservative economic theory than biblical exposition, justice, or historical realities of the pitfalls of capitalism and industrialization. They were beneath the argument that the rest of the book put forth.)
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Unvieling preconcieved notions.
In reading through this book you may find yourself revealed to you. I say that because, as the author discusses missional idea of the church, you discover that you have underlying... Read more
Published 5 days ago by L. Perry
5.0 out of 5 stars Balanced and exegetical treatment
This issue is a matter of balanced approach to all the bible says about the mission of Christ's Church......the authors do an excellent job of letting the scriptures speak.... Read more
Published 14 days ago by Kent Thompson
5.0 out of 5 stars The Church Should Be The Church Again
Light and salt. That's what the church is supposed to be in this world and yet the church has lost sight of this simple yet poignant mission. Read more
Published 26 days ago by Livin' La Vida Low-Carb Man
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Book + Good Application
If you are looking for a thorough treatment of social justice by Christian authors, this is as good as anything out there. Read more
Published 29 days ago by Bradley Bevers
4.0 out of 5 stars Get ready to dig deep. This is not a light read.
This book challenges me in a great many ways. The authors don't just take a handful of scriptures and touch on current topics. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Rachel Himes
5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable book on the mission of the church and social Gospel!
Kevin DeYoung and Greg Gilbert have written a fantastic assessment of the mission of the church today, particularly as it relates to social Gospel. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Geoffrey L. Dennis
3.0 out of 5 stars ok
I would have liked a further exploration of what mission is (can be). While the authors did some good work here, the book, at times, was too wordy. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Tracey Knight-Simane
5.0 out of 5 stars the best most balanced book I've read on the subject
If you are in church or parachurch ministry, you must read this book! In a day and age where everyone everywhere seems to be writing books on mission, Gilbert and DeYoung take on... Read more
Published 2 months ago by JM110
4.0 out of 5 stars very thought provoking
Although I have not quite finished the book yet, I have thoroughly enjoyed it. It gives a strong biblical account of what the church's mission is, while also looking at other views... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Dan S.
5.0 out of 5 stars Cvers the subject
Lots of original thoughts. Puts works as they accompany reconciliation in proper perspective. Clearly puts God in his sovereign place. Read more
Published 2 months ago by bblsu
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More About the Author

I am the Senior Pastor at University Reformed Church (RCA) in East Lansing, Michigan, near the Michigan State University campus. I've been the pastor there since 2004. I was born in Chicagoland, but grew up mostly in the Grand Rapids, Michigan area. I root for da Bears, da Bulls, da Blackhawks, the White Sox, and the Spartans.

I am married to Trisha. We live in Lansing and have five young children.

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