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The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church

Publisher:
, 2006
ISBN: 9781441257369
Logos Editions are fully connected to your library and Bible study tools.

$21.99

Overview

How did the number of Christians in the world grow from as few as 25,000 one hundred years after Christ’s death to up to 20 million in AD 310? How did the Chinese underground church grow from two million to over 100 million in 60 years despite considerable opposition? In The Forgotten Ways, Alan Hirsch reveals the paradigmatic insights he discovered as he delved into those questions. He then translates these findings into the context of the contemporary Western church.

Hirsch identifies six latent potencies in God’s people that lie dormant and forgotten until something catalytic prompts the rediscovery of them. These elements are clearly seen in the church during times of phenomenal growth and impact, but he suggests that they are actually always present and can be reactivated to create apostolic movement. He describes them as the centrality and lordship of Jesus, disciple making, the missional-incarnational impulse, organic systems, apostolic environment, and communitas (a type of community formed in situations of significant ordeal and/or mission).

A key missional leader, educator, and strategist, Hirsch draws from his own experiences, as well as the experiences of ministries around the world, to provide examples of growing churches, church planting movements, and other missional projects. He further illustrates his points with charts and diagrams, as well as a glossary of terms and an index.

Church leaders, strategists, seminary professors, and students will benefit from Hirsch’s discoveries and his ability to put those ideas to work in contemporary churches and ministries.

In the Logos edition, this volume is enhanced by amazing functionality. Scripture citations link directly to English translations, and important terms link to dictionaries, encyclopedias, and a wealth of other resources in your digital library. Perform powerful searches to find exactly what you’re looking for. Take the discussion with you using tablet and mobile apps. With Logos Bible Software, the most efficient and comprehensive research tools are in one place, so you get the most out of your study.

Resource Experts
  • Focuses on the call for a complete reorientation of the church
  • Rediscovers missional ecclesiology in a revolutionary way
  • Couples theological depth with creative thinking providing a new perspective for approaching the church
  • Section One: The Making of a Missionary
    • Setting the Scene, Part 1: Confessions of a Frustrated Missionary “South”
    • Setting the Scene, Part 2: Denominational and Translocal Perspectives
  • Section Two: A Journey to the Heart of Apostolic Genius
    • The Heart of It All: Jesus Is Lord
    • Disciple Making 101
    • Missional-Incarnational Impulse
    • Apostolic Environment
    • Organic Systems
    • Communitas, Not Community

Top Highlights

“The movement that Jesus initiated was an organic people movement; it was never meant to be a religious institution.” (Page 54)

“have come to believe that the major threat to the viability of our faith is that of consumerism.” (Page 106)

“the Chinese church to discover their truest nature as an apostolic people” (Page 20)

“Apostolic Genius, and the elements that make it up I have named mDNA” (Page 20)

“I have long pondered this mystery, and I can only suggest that they found it in themselves. Or more accurately, this potent coding is placed within them through the work of the Spirit and by the power of the gospel in the community.” (Page 78)

Among the welter of ‘how-to’ books calling the church to this new strategy or that, The Forgotten Ways is a full-blooded and comprehensive call for the complete reorientation of the church around mission. Nothing less than the rediscovery of a revolutionary missional ecclesiology will do for Alan Hirsch. His book makes an irrefutable case for its establishment and offers the exciting, though frightening, DNA necessary for it to flourish. A master work.

Michael Frost, founding director, Tinsley Institute

This is a provocative and insightful contribution to the discovery of effective missional engagement with post-Christendom Western culture. Grounded in Alan’s own experience as a missionary pastor and illustrated by examples from various places, The Forgotten Ways challenges and equips both inherited and emerging churches to recover the dynamic of a missional movement.

—Stuart Murray Williams, tutor in mission, Bristol Baptist College

It is refreshing to read a book related to the missional church that provides theological depth coupled with creative thinking. Alan Hirsch reestablishes the essential links between Christology, missiology, and ecclesiology. The Forgotten Ways helps to rescue the concept of church from the clutches of Christendom, setting it free to become a dynamic movement in place of a dying institution.

Eddie Gibbs, professor emeritus of church growth, Fuller Theological Seminary

The Forgotten Ways is worth the price of the book simply for the diagrams in chapter three. I feel the same way about his insights on movements later in the book. And every other chapter has the kind of rich insight and inspiring challenge that we have come to expect from Alan Hirsch.

—Brian McLaren, activist, author, and speaker

Alan has been shattering paradigms and challenging ideas for years. Now, in The Forgotten Ways, Alan describes missional movements and challenges us to reorder the church around its mission, all filtered through his deeply personal experience. You will be provoked, challenged, and motivated to embrace the missional DNA and incarnational impulse of the early church in your own life and ministry.

Ed Stetzer, president, LifeWay Research

Alan Hirsch is right. Many of the more promising ‘new’ ways of ‘doing church’ today are not really new, but rather a recovery of what our predecessors once knew—insights that once formed and informed significant Christian movements that their successors forgot. Hirsch’s model of the Emerging Missional Church will help many churches to recover from their long night of amnesia.

—George G. Hunter III, distinguished emeritus professor, Asbury Theological Seminary

Alan Hirsch is the founding Director of Forge Mission Training Network. He is the co-founder of shapevine.com, an international forum for engaging with world transforming ideas. He leads Future Travelers, a learning journey applying missional-incarnational approaches to established churches and is an active participant in The Tribe of LA, a Jesus community among artists and creatives in Los Angeles. Known for his innovative approach to mission, Hirsch is a teacher and key mission strategist for churches across the western world. His popular book The Shaping of Things to Come (with Michael Frost) is widely considered to be a seminal text on mission. Alan's recent book The Forgotten Ways, has quickly become a key reference for missional thinking, particularly as it relates to movements. His book ReJesus is a radical restatement about the role that Jesus plays in defining missional movements. Untamed, his latest book (with his wife Debra) is about missional discipleship for a missional church. His experience in leadership includes leading a local church movement among the marginalized as well as heading up the Mission and Revitalization work of his denomination. Hirsch is an adjunct professor at Fuller Seminary and lectures frequently throughout Australia, Europe, and the U.S.

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