Ordinary: Sustainable Faith in a Radical, Restless World
L**D
Should be required reading for every pastor and congregation.
What's sensational about the ordinary? How can the average sell? What's extraordinary about the normal? Our culture, and the church that allows itself to be positioned by it, says "not much." Our culture is constantly looking for the next big thing, is always selling something new, and is ever lifting up the radical, epic, and revolutionary ways of life. Therefore the cry of some in the church today is that new, radical, epic, and revolutionary ways of ministry must rise to the top if the church is to be successful. Christians must become superstars by selling everything for Jesus, celebrity pastors need to lead the way to the next big thing, super (modern day) Apostles need to be over the top and always at it for Jesus, and contentment is to be shunned liked the plague. As a result, tricked out, emergent, everything must change, hyper-missional, extraordinarily ambitious and audacious Christians and churches have become the modus operandi in much of North America.True, ordinary is simple, isn't flashy, has no bells and whistles, and doesn't sell. However, Michael Horton reminds us that the ordinary means of grace is precisely how Christ has worked for over 2,000 years to bring the extraordinary gifts of the forgiveness of sins, and the promise of the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting to people bruised, beaten, and battered by their sins, and the sin of the world.Full of wisdom and ever winsome, Horton takes the reader through the challenge facing the North American Church today--letting the culture set the tone for the life and ministry of the church. He explores the over sensationalized church with all of its law oriented demands and juvenilization, and points her back to the beauty and the joy of the ordinary manner of her existence where the extraordinary message of the Gospel is routinely, regularly, and ordinarily proclaimed, delivered, and administered through Word and sacrament: "Why do we seem to think that churches need to imitate the perpetual innovation of Microsoft instead of the patient care of a good gardener? Chasing the latest fad for spiritual growth, church growth, and cultural impact, we eventually forget both how to reach the lost and how to keep the reached. The ordinary means of grace become yesterday's news. Like pay phones, so we are told by the emergent entrepreneurs, ordinary churches may still be around here and there, but nobody uses them. In olden days believers may have gathered for `the apostles' teaching and the fellowship...the breaking of the bread and the prayers,' but that was before iPads. In past generations, Christ's fruit-bearing vines may have been tended with daily family disciplines of catechism, Bile reading, and prayer, but with my schedule? And to say that the apostolic method of church growth--in breadth as well as depth--is preaching, teaching, baptism, the Lord's Supper, and accountability to elders is likely to provoke the response: `are you serious?' "(p.178-179).Horton insightfully tracks how the evangelical church has gone from understanding the "ordinary" to demanding everything be "extraordinary;" how "ambition" was historically and biblically always a vice (and sin), but has not been elevated to a virtue; how "contentment" was always a biblical virtue but has now been made into a vice (of mediocrity); how the "contractual" American mentality and way of life has replaced the "covenantal" biblical mentality and way of life; and how "passing away" is the preferred mode of speaking rather than talking of the death and resurrection. All these ordinary ways of talking about and proclaiming the Good News have been remade and replaced.But make no mistake about it. Horton is clear that ordinary does not mean mediocre. "In fact, far from throwing a wet blanket on godly passion, my goal is to encourage an orientation and habits that foster deeper growth in grace, more effective outreach, and a more sustainable vision of loving service to others over a lifetime. This is not a call to do less, but to invest in things that we often give up on when we don't see an immediate return. The fact that `ordinary' has come to mean mediocre and low expectations is a sign of the problem I want to address" (p.28). Always focused on the next big thing, movement, or fad in the church, Horton says the church actually fails to focus on the truly next big thing--the second coming of Jesus. Until Jesus returns, Horton reminds us that the ordinary things like catechesis (catechism) and liturgy (hymnal), Word and sacrament, are part of the wonderful ordinary way that faith has been passed on and taught for centuries and invites the reader to celebrate the ordinariness still today.Sadly, what is often given up on is the "ordinariness" of the Good News itself. Namely, that Jesus Christ came to atone for the sins of the lost and the found; that baptism is a gift of God's grace; that the Lord's Supper gives the forgiveness of sins. When these ordinary means just don't seem to be doing what we think they should be doing in the right now, at this moment, immediate demands of our time, they are abandoned for something more flashy, more relevant, and more radical.However, Horton takes joy in lifting up the ordinary message that so many Christians find as inadequate: "The power of our activism, campaigns, movements, and strategies cannot forgive sins or raise the dead. `The gospel... is the power of God for salvation,' and, with Paul, we have no reason to be ashamed of it (Rom. 1:16). That is why phrases like `living the gospel,' being the gospel,' and `being partners with Jesus in his redemption of the world' are dangerous distortions of the biblical message of good news. The gospel is not about what we have done or are called to do, but the announcement of God's saving work in Jesus Christ. `For what we proclaim is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, with ourselves as your servants for Jesus sake,' (2 Cor. 4:5)." (p. 40).Amen to that! There are far too many well-intentioned but misguided methods, manners, and techniques that in the name of innovation, accommodation, and determination disparage the ordinary means of God at work through his Word and sacraments, and yes even in the liturgy, catechesis, and the pastors of the Church. "They're not enough" we're told. So something new must be invented and remade. However, Horton unequivocally, biblically, and theologically demonstrates that they are indeed powerful and more than enough: "CNN will not be showing up at a church that is simply trusting God to do extraordinary things through his ordinary means of grace delivered by ordinary servants. But God will. Week after week. These means of grace and the ordinary fellowship of the saints that matures and guides us throughout our life may seem frail, but they are jars that carry a rich treasure" (p. 149).What is more, not only are they enough, but Horton also points to how the ordinariness of our daily lives (the ordinariness of our daily callings/vocations) is also something to be celebrated as part of God's good creation, and are in fact the means of maintaining a "faithful presence" to "enjoy our neighbors" rather than using them to achieve superstardom in the new ways of doing church: "It is easy to turn others in instruments of our ambition rather than loving them for their own sake, as fellow image bearers of God. They become supporting actors--if not props-- in our life movie. Loving actual neighbors through particular actions every day can be a lot more mundane as well as difficult than trying to transform culture. Regardless of the role or place in society to which God has assigned us by our calling, we are content. Our identity is already determined by our being `in Christ,' not by our accomplishments. The measure of excellence is daily love for our neighbors during this time between Christ's two advents" (p.161).Horton has provided an absolute gem for our times. As one who reads every new thing out there, this book was a breath of ordinary fresh air to fill my lungs. This book is a phenomenal and encouraging read! Before any pastor thinks he needs to start new, join the latest fad, or hire a consultant, he needs to read this book. In fact, it should be required reading for all pastors and aspiring pastors, it's that good and that timely. Thank you Michael Horton for putting out such an important, needed, and ordinary book!Rev. Dr. Lucas V. Woodford (LCMS)[email protected]
S**R
A Refreshing Call to Embrace God's Ordinary Means of Grace
Christ did not found a movement. He is building a Church. In Ordinary, Michael Horton argues that the ‘next big thing’ is not a radical endeavor, but the slow work of Christ in his church. While the situations faced by the church are always new, God’s promise to grow disciples through the ordinary means of grace remains constant. Yet, as Horton points out, we are often suspicious of the ordinary, particularly in relationship to the experience of faith. We are encouraged to seek new and ever deeper experiences by radical efforts to follow Christ and perform his work in the world. But, Horton believes, this frantic activity only leads to burn-out and a lack of depth in our discipleship. Instead of rejecting the ‘ordinary,’ Horton calls for the church to embrace it as God’s means of growing disciples. In the first half of the book, Horton seeks to diagnose our restless culture by tracing how we transformed such vices as avarice and ambition into virtues, and turned contentment into a vice. In particular, he unmasks our discontent with the ordinary means of grace through which God chooses to grow disciples (word, sacrament, and discipline). Instead, we seek methods we believe we can control with predictable results, including an incredible amount of anxiety and burnout. Conversely, we fall into inaction as we wait fervently for revival. Avoiding the poles of frantic action and passivity is the slow, patient work of growing disciples.In the second section, Horton draws from a wide spectrum of Scripture to cast a vision for contentment rooted in God’s work through the means of grace. We do not need to be extraordinary or do extraordinary things – Christ has already died for the sins of the world and will come again. Instead, we are called to receive his gifts and live in gratitude. Like a garden, God chooses to use ordinary means in order to grow something extraordinary. There are no shortcuts in gardening or in our souls. No amount of Miracle-Gro will make there be tomatoes in our gardens tomorrow. We must wait and patiently plant, tend, and weed the garden, trusting God will provide the growth. There is a lot of work for us to do, but most of it is routine. In the same way, through the preaching of the gospel, the celebration of the sacraments, and accountability in the Christian life, Christ forms us into his disciples. It is not automatic, but it is ordinary.I loved every inch of this book. Having read Horton before, I was not surprised to find him clear, insightful, and encouraging as he articulates the call to embrace the ordinary. I expected depth of biblical insight and theological precision. I did not expect, however, the impact that Ordinary would work on my affections. Upon finishing the book, I found myself loving my ordinary people more, loving my ordinary place more, and loving my ordinary work of word, sacrament, and discipline more.Most of us are ordinary. We live in ordinary places, with ordinary neighbors, and, frankly, ordinary pastors. We need Horton’s voice, because we need to embrace these people and these places. It is easier to run off after something more exciting, when the real call is to hear the gospel again today – to love our extraordinary God and our ordinary neighbors.
K**R
The high road of the everyday
For too long we have been badgered with demands that have been too much for us, expectations that placed heavy weights in our shoes. The joy that was supposed to be at the heart of Christian living seemed illusory. The prospect of some new experience or blessing or challenge has disappointed too often to inspire one more big effort.What a relief this book brings to the jaded and weary Christian! Oh to see again that the ordinary is God's gift to us for the journey. Time and again as I read this book I wanted to cheer! How good of God to make his blessings so accessible as to be at hand for us all, all the time.
A**
Reminder that the Christian life does not have to be complicated
If there are words which we need to be reminded of they are those in 1 Thessalonians that tell believers to - live quiet lives an work hard with their own hands. That way a by product will be they gain respect from observers. How do I know a Christian - it is the one who works hard from Monday to Saturday and rests hard on Sunday.
D**O
The Ordinary is extraordinary.
Michael Horton provides an escape from the success driven unsustainable pace that modern society sells us as normal. His scripture based discussion of how we have lost our way in the current time is bang on. By returning to living based on the true Message, we can find rest for our soul and meaning for our lives.A must read for those who feel like the current form of Christianity being sold to many doesn't feel right.This book is a true blessing.
C**7
tres bon livre
Livre facile à lire et profond en même temps. Livraison nickel par téléchargement. A recommander à tous ceux qui sont en recherche non du sensationnel mais d'une relation équilibrée et réelle avec le Créateur et les personnes autour de soi.
A**B
Great points made in first third!
This is so insightful and challenging. It helps those of us disillusioned by wrong expectations to see our experience of the Christian faith is valid. It was unnecessarily long which was a pity
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