December 1, 2006

Book Review: “Confessions of a Reformission Rev.”

Filed under: Book Reviews — Michael Pate @ 11:54 pm

Confesssions of a Reformission Rev.: Hard Lessons from an Emerging Missional Church
By Mark Driscoll

Ah, yes. Now is the time when finals are over for us seminarians and now we have the time to read the books we have been wanting to read all semester. This is no shot at the books that the profs make us read for class, they are superb books and most students want to read the books they are assigned. But I think because of our sinful rebellious nature we do not want to read the books we are assigned but only those we do not have to read at the moment.

The very readable and enjoyable book is about Driscoll’s journey in building and growing Mars Hill Church in Seattle. He spares telling of few of the heartaches that he and the church endured through that growth and that leads one to respect Driscoll all the more. (You have to give props to a man who will publish the fact that he crapped his pants while preaching.) I was first exposed to Mark Driscoll at this years Desiring God Conference and since then have been wanting to know more about Driscoll since he started the Acts 29 Network of which my church is apart of. The book is set out in chronological order the growth of Mars Hill Church from being a small group that met in the summer for Bible studies in a park to a church that has around 4,000 people attending multiple services each Sunday but has no paid janitorial staff, which says a lot about the member care for and involvement in the church. One of the things I like most about the book is the fact that Driscoll is brutally honest about how he feels about certain things of which I would say he is right on about.

Here are some of the most notable quotes:

Concerning cessationism (p.121)
“Up to this point, I had been basically a theological cessationist and a fan of fundamentalist straw-man attacks on charismatic Christians. It wasn’t until some years later, however, that I came to see the cessationists’ interpretation of 1 Corinthians 12-14 as the second worst exegesis I have ever read, next to that of a Canadian nudist arsonist cult I once did some research on.”

Concering the typical worship leader (p.146-7)
“I am not supposed to say this, but most of the worship dudes I have heard are not very dudely. They seem to be very much in touch with their feelings and exceedingly chickified from playing too much acoustic guitar and singing prom songs to Jesus while channeling Michael Bolton and flipping their hair. Tim was a guy who brewed his own beer, smoked a pipe, rock climbed, mountain biked, river rafted, carried a knife on his belt, and talked about what he thought more than what he felt.”

Concerning Baptist churches as a gauge for the spiritual condition for Seattle (p.182)
Honestly, I am glad more people don’t go to church in Seattle, because if they did, they would likely end up at churches led by pastors who are going to hell with their gay partners. Things are so bad that even two Baptist churches have gay pastors, and when the Baptists are gay, the city is officially lost.”

This book should be read by anyone who wants to be a pastor, just wants a good story about biblical church growth, or enjoys sarcasm directed against nearly every group imaginable. The only thing I question is their view of church government and how the members do not actually vote in elders but how only elders can vote in other elders. Being at a Baptist seminary I have been brainwashed…er, I mean convinced of the fact that the members should be able to vote their who they want as their leaders. But nonetheless, their church government is different from anything I remember hearing in Systematic Theology III and is worth investigating more.

3 Comments »

  1. Their polity is actually a modified elder rule. Each dept of the church seems to be led by Pastor/elders who lead their area and vote on church wide issues when all pastors need to weigh in. It is very similar to most Bible churches – elder led, but independent churches. The congregation actually has a role in affirming the leadership of men put before them as candidates for elder. The congregation obviously has a role in recommending, affirming, examining candidates etc. but all is not decided on a majority vote. It seems to me that the congregation has certain roles designated to it by the New Testament. There is a resounding clarity in the areas in which the Scriptures call the congregation to be responsible. These areas are as follows: 1) Sending emissaries to intra-church councils (Acts 15)14, 2) Matters of church discipline, membership and excommunication/putting out of the midst (Matthew 18:15-20; 1 Cor 5; 2 Cor 2:1-11) 3) Matters of doctrinal fidelity (Gal 1) and 4) Calling of Servants/Deacons (Acts 6:3 – the church should choose servants for various tasks so to not call the elders away from their primary role of prayer and teaching the word). These areas, though they may be led and guided by elders, are the clear responsibility of the congregation.

    Remember Paul’s exhortation to Titus was: This is why I left you in Crete, so that you might put what remained into order, and appoint elders in every town as I directed you Titus 1:5…

    I wrote a deal on this for an ecclesiology elective – you can read it here at The Resurgence

    PS – I am an external student at the seminary – so I understand the congregationalist view…but I am not Baptist and off campus so the brainwash, er convincing, hasn’t taken place with me :)

    Comment by Reid — December 5, 2006 @ 9:25 pm

  2. Thanks for the clarification.

    Comment by Michael Pate — December 6, 2006 @ 10:14 am

  3. I have read and loved Driscoll’s book. It is refreshing to hear a pastor sound just like a normal guy and not some spiritual Superman who I can’t relate to. Pastors are just ordinary sinful men just like me.
    Another book that you should review and is a good read is “Confessions of a Pastor” by Craig Groeschel. I know another ‘Confessions’ book but they are completely unrelated and are very different from each other. Still, it is very insightful to read of a pastor who is down to earth and real–he has the same weaknesses and struggles we all have.

    http://www.amazon.com/Confessions-Pastor-Adventures-Dropping-Getting/dp/1590527208/sr=8-1/qid=1167709079/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/103-4429473-3764668?ie=UTF8&s=books

    Comment by Tim — January 2, 2007 @ 1:02 am

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