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Revolution

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According to Barna in Revolution, a new group of Revolutionaries is changing the landscape of Christianity in America. "They are not willing to play religious games and aren't interested in being part of a religious community that is not intentionally and aggressively advancing God's Kingdom." This group is faithfully serving God, but many of them are giving up on congregational expressions of church.

Barna describes the trend and its implications. This book is excellent for leaders in traditional churches who are trying to figure out why the old model seems to be losing effectiveness. It's also helpful for those whose initial reaction is to chide this group as being unfaithful. Every church and seminary leader needs to recognize and understand the trends outlined in this book. Barna includes some suggestions on how a local church can appropriately respond to the Revolution.

It's also useful in thinking about fresh expressions of Church. One size no longer fits all, if it ever did. Barna is careful to distinguish between the capital C Church (Church universal) and the small c church (its congregational expression). "The Revolution is designed to advance the Church and to redefine the church." The Bible, Barna writes, never describes "church" the way we have configured it. There are other options beside the congregational model. "Now it's virtually impossible to craft a 'typical' spiritual pattern, especially among people under the age of forty."

The real issue for many clergy is that the Revolution is potentially career-threatening. "A declining number of professional clergy will receive a livable salary from their churches...To some, this will sound like the Great Fall of the Church. To Revolutionaries, it will be the Great Reawakening of the Church." It will be disruptive, but Barna hopes it will be "a new day in which the Church can truly be the Church - different from what we know today, but more responsive to and reflective of God."

For many of us, it's not exactly news. If you fall in this category, this book might help you explain what's happening to others. It will especially help those who question the commitment of those who are abandoning the congregational church.

Some small quibbles:

  • I wish this book had given more statistical data for what Barna calls the Revolution. No doubt Barna has it; it's almost like a chapter was left out.
  • It's sometimes hard to understand what Barna means by a Revolutionary. Although Barna says you can be a Revolutionary and remain within traditional church structures, this isn't always clear in the book.
  • Barna doesn't reference a lot of other material out there, such as A Churchless Faith by Alan Jamieson.
  • It's predominantly American. I'm from Canada, and I wish he had taken a more global view, since what he's describing is arguably more pronounced here and in Europe.
  • Barna also needs to reflect on the dangers of being Revolutionary. One of them is being reactive and dismissing what God may be doing in traditional church structures.

That being said, this book is a good introduction to a growing trend, and comes from a respected voice in American evangelicalism. As Barna says, we don't have to like what's happening, but we can't afford to ignore it.

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3 Comments

True, the data of the trends discussed by Barna is incomplete, imo. Perhaps it is tucked away somewhere on his web site.

The percent of those whom he reports as belonging to house churches seems to be a little on the high side.

Good review, brother. Write on. House Church Network

Dan McGowan said:

This is not the first review I have read of Barna's new book that sites a wish for "more data." Really? So, if all these people clamoring for more data actually HAD enough data to support what he says, THEN it would alter their thinking?

Perhaps.

Or perhaps it would be sort of like all that "data" we have on smoking, drinking, abortion, violence on television, pastors addicted to web-porn, people addicted to drugs... and how even with all that data, in the end, everyone has a choice...

Which is, as I read Barna's book, exactly what he is talking about - - a choice.

Joshua Brown said:

I thank God for giving this revelation. This book is a wakeup call to the Church. People have had enough of religious games. The Church today is stuck. It's time we went back to Christ and scrapped all this religious legalistic garbage. No wonder the current generation is being turned off to the Gospel. I applaud Goerge Barna for having the guts to speak what's going on with the Church.

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