Fasting from Social Networking
My church planting comrade Bill Streger down in Houston is taking 6 weeks off from Twitter, Facebook, and blogging. Read his reasons why and see what you think.
My church planting comrade Bill Streger down in Houston is taking 6 weeks off from Twitter, Facebook, and blogging. Read his reasons why and see what you think.

Bob and former OU athlete Leonce Crump, now an A29 church planter in Atlanta
In 2006 we linked arms with a fledgling church-planting movement called Acts 29. The movement was made up (at that time) of less than 100 churches. We joined primarily because of the influence and invitation of our sister church Core Community, which was one of the first in the network.
I’ve always had the sense that God is up to something through A29. I am real skeptical and hesitant to use words like “renewal” or “revival” or “reformation” because they seem to require the judgment of history, not just the emotion of the present. But something God-sized is going on. Consider these evidences of God’s grace:
Sometimes we get so focused on our own context (Omaha) that we forget about the bigger picture of what God is doing. He is worthy of worship not just for what he’s doing among us, but for how he’s at work around the world. You are a part of all this through your prayers and giving, as Coram Deo contributes to the work of church planting around the world.
Please be praying for the pastors and leaders in Acts 29, that we would remain faithful to Jesus and zealous for the glory of God. Pray that God would graciously allow us to be part of His means to renew the church and advance His kingdom in our generation.

We are excited to announce that The Gospel-Centered Life is now available for purchase worldwide! To go directly to the ordering/publicity website, click here. For the back-story on GCL, keep reading.
When we planted Coram Deo four years ago, we structured the entire church around missional communities. The ideal missional community consists of a small band of Christians living on mission together and inviting their non-Christian friends to join in conversation and interaction about the gospel of Jesus. This seemed like a really great idea. Until we started doing it. We quickly discovered two significant problems:
So in order to shape “gospel DNA” in our church in a way that was accessible to both Christians and non-Christians, Will and I locked ourselves in a room for a couple weeks in the summer of 2007 and wrote a nine-week small-group study called The Gospel-Centered Life. Much of the content for GCL was adapted from older material published by World Harvest Mission which had been instrumental in our own gospel formation. WHM is a mission sending agency in the Reformed tradition that was started by a pastor and missional leader named Jack Miller, who influenced many of our own teachers and mentors (Tim Keller, John Frame, and Steve Childers, just to name a few).
God used GCL to bring about a mini-renewal in our church. New Christians, older Christians, and non-Christians all began to “get” the gospel in deep and powerful ways. People began asking if they could send copies to their parents, their family members, the pastor at the church they grew up in. Which put us in a dilemma, since many of the concepts we used for GCL were the intellectual property of WHM.
So I wrote a cold-turkey letter to WHM asking if they’d be willing to look over the material and consider working with us to publish it. In God’s providence, the folks at WHM were beginning to think about developing some new gospel renewal resources. So we began forging a partnership to edit and re-launch GCL for a wider audience. The crew at WHM has been great to work with, giving us tons of creative control in everything from writing to graphic design. Most importantly, they’ve been careful to preserve the missional ethos of GCL that makes it so accessible to non-Christians and new Christians.
WHM is selling the material as a digital download, which will shrink the overhead (no publishing or warehousing costs) and literally make GCL available worldwide. We’re excited about being part of God’s means to help spur gospel renewal in churches everywhere. Please do what you can to help us get the word out so that churches and Christians everywhere can experience the transforming power of the gospel. The direct link for ordering and publicity is www.whm.org/gcl.
Until July 31, you can receive a free sample of GCL via email! Just follow the directions at the WHM site.
This Saturday at Benson High School, the Refugee Task Force of Omaha will be hosting World Refugee Day. This day is an international holiday that was initiated in 2000 by the United Nations General Assembly. It serves as reminder to educate ourselves about the plight of 31.5 million persons worldwide which UNHCR identifies as “persons of concern.” They include refugees, victims of human trafficking, asylum seekers, internally displaced and other stateless persons. This will be a time to learn about refugee issues and also to celebrate through international music and dance performances. The event will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Benson High School, 5120 Maple St. Also on hand will be educational panels, a job fair, health screening, fashion show, children’s carnival, and even some volleyball. This is a small step to begin to learn more about what is going on in and around Omaha and what it looks like for the Gospel to bring transformation and renewal to all parts of our city. You can click on the flyer below for more details surrounding the event…
One of my favorite pastors in Acts 29 is Ed Marcelle, planter and lead pastor of Terra Nova Church in Troy, NY. Ed is one of the brightest and most thoughtful guys I’ve ever been around. He is deeply grounded both theologically and culturally, and articulates his insights poignantly and intelligently. I have yet to find a book Ed hasn’t read, a band he’s not familiar with, or a poet or philosopher he can’t dialogue about.
He just wrote the first of a series of posts over on the Resurgence that will be worth reading and pondering. Check it out.
One of the weaknesses of much modern church worship is that it replaces participation by the people with performance by professionals. Certainly church worship should be led by excellent and qualified people… but it’s a worship service, not a show.
Recently at a small Protestant chapel in the north Georgia woods, I opened the hymnal and ran across these “Directions for Singing” written by John Wesley in 1761 – before amplifiers, rock bands, and electricity. It couldn’t hurt for us to contextualize and apply some of his wise counsel to our own practice of corporate worship.
Tim Smith and his music cohorts at Mars Hill Church released their first full-length album this week. It’s called The Rain City Hymnal, and to distribute it they’re using a pretty cool website I’d never visited before called Noise Trade. You can pay what you want for the music they sell, or download it for free if you’ll agree to tell 5 friends about it.
I was pleased to see artists like Derek Webb, Sandra McCracken, and Indelible Grace Music featured in addition to Rain City. All of these songwriters are seeking to worship God through music – not just by crafting lyrically meaningful worship songs, but by pursuing artistic excellence in their music (in contrast to much of “Christian radio” fare). Noise Trade also promotes a number of artists like Sleeping at Last and Jackopierce, who don’t approach their art from a distinctly Christian perspective.
If you enjoy our worship style at Coram Deo, you’ll enjoy Webb, McCracken, and Indelible Grace – all of whom we’ve borrowed songs from. The music on the Rain City recording reflects a little edgier, more indie-rock Seattle sound. Regardless of your musical taste, you’ll find something on Noise Trade worth listening to.
I read a lot of books. I recommend very few of them. But John Rosemond’s Parenting by the Book may be one of the most important books written in the last decade. It is a must-read for every parent, grandparent, and teacher. Yes, it’s that good. Let me explain why.
Rosemond is a well-known family psychologist who specializes in parenting issues. He has authored eleven bestselling books on parenting and family, writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column, and is one of the most sought-after speakers in his field. I got his latest book from my friend Victoria, who recognized Rosemond’s name from her days as a public-school teacher.
Rosemond built his career without any regard for Scripture. But nine years ago, he became a born-again Christian. He writes: “I accepted Jesus as my Lord and Savior in my early fifties… I began reading Scripture… [And I realized] I have never had an original idea concerning the raising of children. Even when I thought I was coming up with original ideas, I was not.” This book is Rosemond’s magnum opus – his crystallization of his prior thought under the authority and reality of the Bible.
Why do I say this is one of the most important books written in my lifetime? Because of its credibility and focus. There are other good books on parenting – and some, in fact, which I think are more gospel-centered than Rosemond’s. But there is none that speaks more clearly or more potently against our culture’s idolatry of psychology. Speaking as an insider, Rosemond shows how almost all modern parenting techniques are built on decades-old psychological assumptions which have proven false both academically and pragmatically. He argues winsomely and factually for the truth of a biblical/traditional understanding of parenting – and in the process, takes a well-researched sledgehammer to the presuppositions of secular parenting theories.
Until you read Rosemond’s book, you probably won’t realize the extent to which postmodern psychotherapy is the air we breathe. Even many Christian parents have bought into its assumptions and techniques. Rosemond traces its historical roots, deconstructs its key thinkers, and offers a refreshing, common-sense critique rooted in biblical wisdom. Here’s a sample:
The traditional point of view holds that children are fundamentally bad and in need of rehabilitation; the nouveau point of view holds that children are fundamentally good. Supposedly, children no longer do bad things intentionally; they just make errors in judgment. The term most often used today is “bad choices”… Because malevolent motive is absent, punishment is not warranted. Besides, punishment damages self-esteem, or so the new parenting elite warns… Whereas the old way enforced responsibility on the child for his behavior, the new way neatly absolves him of that responsibility. The misbehaving child, once a perpetrator, has become a victim, in need of therapy or drugs or both.
…Enough time has passed to determine whether this grand social experiment is working or not. Is it? One single fact answers the question: Since 1965, when postmodern psychological parenting began gaining a toehold in our culture, every single indicator of positive well-being in America’s children has been in a state of precipitous decline… The per-capita rate of child and teen depression has increased at least fivefold since 1965. In just one fifteen-year period, from 1980 to 1995, the suicide rate for boys ages ten to fourteen almost doubled.
The emperor has no clothes – and Rosemond is willing to say so.
Rosemond’s book isn’t flawless. It should be read with wisdom and discretion. Some readers won’t love his writing style, and others will find his black-and-white, advice-columnist categories a little too simple. Most importantly, Rosemond isn’t God, so parents shouldn’t hold his counsel higher than that of the Bible. Those looking for cut-and-paste parenting advice will tend to apply Rosemond’s instruction woodenly and be disappointed, but discerning readers will find his book full of “a-ha” moments.
For all of you whose non-Christian family members don’t “get” your parenting style… for you public-school teachers who want to better understand the behavior problems in the kids you’re teaching… for you first-generation Christian parents who are trying to figure out how to raise kids biblically… for you moms who have challenging kids (especially defiant toddlers)… this is a must-read book. And it’s a book you can give to unbelievers who might not read a “Christian” book on parenting, but who would listen to a renowned psychologist. As Rosemond says (demonstrating a well nuanced understanding of vocation), “I am not a Christian psychologist. I am a Christian who holds a license to practice psychology.”
This is a crucial book for our cultural moment. Get a copy.
I wrote a post on preaching for the Resurgence last month… it is finally posted today and you can read it here.