Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Driscoll in Sydney

Reaching the next generation mp3. This is Mark Driscoll's 18 points for the more established churches to hear. I reported some initial unacceptance of these points, what I'm now reading suggests that people are paying serious attention to his observations.

ht: Revd. Jon Hobbs

2 comments:

Chris said...

I think there's parts of uccf which feel like a movement - interface:arts, new word alive; parts which are an institution - slobs, execs, annual missions; parts which are a museum - norman grubb, ifes.

dave bish said...

tis true. it's good to remember the past but only to drive us forward to what God is doing and is going to do...

I found Driscoll's talk on Movements at Brighton this summer to be very challenging, not just on church but also for us as UCCF.

Staying on mission as a movement has to be the way forward. In part the responsibility lies with us as coaches and catalysts to the student leaders... in part the responsibility lies with the student leaders themselves. Imagine!

Post a Comment

Loving the church - applying the gospel of grace

Loading...
Member of Frontiers Church, Exeter | Frontiers Church podcast
Leading UCCF South West Team, student mission together because I ♥ the local church.
Sent by Arborfield Church, Berkshire
What's written here does not necessarily represent the view of any of the above, though it might.

Tweets @davebish_

    follow me on Twitter

    Recent Posts

    Comments @ thebluefish

    The Grace of My God

    NEW SONG: The Grace of My God (Matt Giles). Get the lyrics, sheet music & mp3.
    Adrian Warnock writes: "I have found myself listening to a rough acoustic recording of it many many times repeatedly today with tears streaming down my face. It just expresses the gospel better than anything new I have heard for a long time."
    Download Acoustic Demo
    Buy the studio version from iTunes

    Recent Sermons

    Content Management System by Ekklesia360

    People are funny, they say lovely things sometimes

    "It works for me in the same way as the Daily Mail. I disagree with loads of it but feel compelled to read occasionally."
    Steve Tilley

    "...both pioneering and exemplary in the (admittedly relatively small) field of Christian blogging."
    Pete Jackson

    "...edifying posts that remind me of the deeply devotional aspects of the Reformed tradition"
    Stephen Murray

    "Holding stable is part of Dave Bish's character"
    Adrian Warnock

    "This is one of the most helpful types of blog for regular surfers, since we can feel paralysed by our online choice..."
    Mark Meynell

    "Faithful, passionate, thought-provoking, great links and a fellow student worker. What’s not to love about The Blue Fish Project!" John Scheepers

    "Dave is one of the most prolific, prophetic, persistent, poignant, persuasive, and pretty bloggers I know of!"
    JT

    "a bit of a Clapham Junction of links to wider Christian blogland. None of the kind of frivolous nonsense you get here, and consistently thoughtful." David Keen

    "Maybe this could be said to be a blogger’s blog" Jonathan Sherwin

    Blog Archive

    Theology Online




    Warnies

    Arborfield

    Technorati - Top 10 UK Christian Blogs


    With a loose definition of Christian and Christian blogger in the UK. The ranking by Technorati
    . Sorry if I missed you off, its just a list for fun, these are the stats as of Sept 2009, some quirks this month but its what Technorati said...
    1. Andrew Jones (5.8k)
    2. Archbishop Cranmer (19.8k)
    3. Jon Birch (30.8k)
    4. Dave Walker (30.8k)
    5. Dave Bish (33.6k)
    6. Adrian Warnock (37.6k)
    7. Maggi Dawn (40.3k)
    8. Colin Adams (64.4k)
    9.Tim Chester (64.4k)
    10. Jonny Baker (69.3k)
    A selection of others... Bishop Alan (83.5k) Martin Downes 115.5k) Titus 2 Talk (102.4k) Mark Meynell (107.3k) David Keen (110.7k) Terry Virgo (122.7k) Peter Mead (140k) Glen Scrivener (142.5k) Marcus Honeysett (152.7k) Emily Woods (194.1k) Lindsay Langdon (194.1k) Libbie (201.6k) Rosemary Grier (227.5k) Dan Hames (237.4k) Ros Clarke (248.1k) Phil Whittall (259.5k) Dave Simpson (354.3k) Krish Kandiah (369k) Cat Hare (460.5k) Sean Green (338.6.1k) Carla Harding (497.1k) A path less followed (648.4k) Adrian Reynolds (---)