David Crowder and Rob Bell have a Jam Session

Enjoy this!

PS – For more info about the event from which this video was taken, go to this post at Mike Morrell’s blog.

A Vision of Worship: Pete Rollins, Rob Bell, and Encountering the Divine (Mike Krause)

I’ve been a teaching pastor for close to 14 years, which means that for a decade and a half, I have passionately and wholeheartedly devoted myself to this thing we call worship. So, when I caught this glimpse of Rob Bell’s interview with Peter Rollins, about his forthcoming book Insurrection, I was intrigued to say the least.

Pyro-Theology from Peter Rollins on Vimeo.

“Christianity promises substantive transformation and, if we’re lucky, some of it might happen in church.” Not exactly a ringing endorsement of this thing I’ve given my life for over the past 14 years.  Of course, Bell and Rollins are right. They fairly describe many people’s experiences of both God and “church”, that some of our most transformative moments happen outside of the context of worship. That’s David’s experience in Psalm 19:1-3: [Read more...]

Living into our Destiny (Erwin McManus)

Ewrin McManus is one of my favorite church leaders – period.  Here’s a glimpse into why…

 
[Read more...]

Pastor, I just wish the sermons would “Go Deeper” (really?)

In my lifetime, I’ve been around folks that leave churches because they claim the sermons aren’t “deep enough.”  Sometimes this is valid.  Other times, it’s a cop-out.  Valid = sermons are pop-psychology attempting to give a four point format for fixing your life.  Instead of immersing us in the story and looking for intersections to the stories of the first century world and our twenty-first century world; these sermons give us facts about felt needs and use abstracted verses to validate claims.  Invalid = A person really struggles with commitment issue to the local church.  This person needs a “holy” excuse to leave, so they point to the sermons as their cop-out.  This happens more often then many want to admit.

Alan Danielson says the following in an attempt to subvert the “I want to go deeper” syndrome by suggesting what “going deeper” out to mean.

So what does “go deeper” mean to me?  It means three things:

1. Going deeper into my commitment to God’s Church. [Read more...]