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Archive for September, 2010

Training Kids to Grow in Their Knowledge & Love for God’s Word

kidsFor those of you training kids to grow in their knowledge and love for the Bible, you may want to look into the newest Crossway releases from Starr Meade:gods-mighty-acts-in-creation-salvation

  • God’s Mighty Acts in Creation: Guides children ages 8–12 through Scripture’s account of creation, teaching them how God reveals himself through the things he has made. Great for use in family devotions or for children to read on their own.
  • God’s Mighty Acts in Salvation: Forty interactive readings for children ages 8–12 unpack Paul’s teachings in Galatians about God’s saving work and the gospel. Great for children to read alone or with parents or teachers.
  • The Most Important Thing You’ll Ever Study: A Survey of the Bible (Complete most-importantSet)—Easy to follow study guide format that leads young teens through the story of the Bible chronologically. Students can either use the text as a supplementary companion to their own reading of Scripture, or they can simply use the study guide to move through the Bible from beginning to end.
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September 3, 2010 | Posted in: Books,Children | Author: Crossway Staff @ 6:00 am | 1 Comment »

Video: “Church Planter”

Church Planter is now available. Check out this video that The Resurgence says “should be seen by every man.”

“Church Planter” by Darrin Patrick from Crossway on Vimeo.

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September 2, 2010 | Posted in: Church Planting,Video | Author: Crossway Staff @ 7:31 am | 1 Comment »

We Are All Worshipers

“Worship is unavoidable,” explains Darrin Patrick. “Whenever we stop worshiping God, we worship some kind of substitute instead of God.”

In his chapter “Idol-Shattering” in Church Planter, Patrick helps explain and expose idolatry.

The first idolatry: When Adam and Eve willfully placed their trust, significance, identity, security, and future in something other than God. When Paul describes the root of human rebellion, he talks about sin as not just a breaking of the law but rather as an exchange of worship: “[They] exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images.”

Idolatry is: What we put in the place of God that captures our imagination and heart, and then we become servants of our object of worship. Our object of worship will always be the primary influencer of our thoughts, our emotions, our actions, and of course, our lives.

What idols do: They seduce us and draw us into complete intoxication, enslavement, and dependence. They steal the love that should be directed toward God alone. In idolatry we willfully exchange what our hearts should love for a cheap prostitute.

Exposing idols: Patrick proposes some questions that help expose our idols by demonstrating where our ultimate source of trust is:

  • What do I worry about most?
  • What, if I failed or lost it, would cause me to feel that I did not even want to live?
  • What do I use to comfort myself when things go bad or get difficult?
  • What do I do to cope? What are my release valves? What do I do to feel better?
  • What preoccupies me? What do I daydream about?
  • What makes me feel the most self-worth? Of what am I the proud- est? For what do I want to be known?
  • What do I lead with in conversations? Early on what do I want to make sure that people know about me?
  • What prayer, unanswered, would make me seriously think about turning away from God?
  • What do I really want and expect out of life? What would really make me happy?
  • What is my hope for the future?

The answers to these questions help identify what a person is truly trusting in, no matter whom they claim to worship. The answers to these questions describe what a person is serving as their functional lord.

Excerpt modified from chapter 12 of Church Planter.

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| Posted in: Books,Idolatry | Author: Crossway Staff @ 6:00 am | 1 Comment »

Preview “Church Planter”

church-planterThere’s more to church planting than methodology and strategy. Darrin Patrick addresses the most vital part of a church plant—the church planter.

His new book, Church Planter: The Man, The Message, The Mission, is a call for men to be biblically qualified in character, doctrinally sound, and daring in ministry in order to impact cities for the glory of God through the local church.

What people are saying…

  • Tim Keller: “Church planters should all read this.”
  • Matt Chandler: “Whether you are considering planting a church or have been a pastor for decades I couldn’t more highly recommend this book to you.”
  • Dave Ferguson: “When it comes to church planting Darrin is a guy that absolutely ‘gets it’ because he has done it! And you will ‘get it’ too if you read this book!”

Preview Mark Driscoll’s Foreword and Chapter 13, “The Heart of Mission: Compassion”.

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September 1, 2010 | Posted in: Books,Church Planting | Author: Crossway Staff @ 6:00 am | 0 Comments »