Our Homeless Lord, ReChurching Your Friends and Family & Debate on “Pagan Christianity”

James Robison of the popular TV show “Life Today” recently posted an article of mine on the homelessness of God. You can read it here. It’s very short.

If you have a blog, feel free to link to it if you find it helpful.

Also, if you are looking to help ReChurch your friends and family, our ReChurch Special continues all this month.

Finally, thousands of people are still reading Jon Zens unforgettable debate with Ben Witherington on the book Pagan Christianity. You can read the debate here (Zens’ includes Witherington’s arguments in his responses). Zens brings a slew of historical and biblical information to the table in this discussion and does some great teaching at the same time.

There’s been some discussion on turning this file into a small printed booklet. If you would find a booklet useful, let us know in the comments section.

George Barna and I still receive questions on this book. But virtually all of them have already been answered on this page. So check it out if you or your friends have questions or objections on the book.

We hope you find it of help.

Purists vs. Tourists Plus My Favorite Spoof Christmas Song

I got this email from someone yesterday. Thought it was pretty perceptive:

Frank, “From Eternity to Here” separates the tourists from the purists of those who read you. The tourists say “Pagan Christianity” is your # 1 book. The purists say, “Not by a long shot; From Eternity is by far the best you’ve written so far. I’m a purist. :)

I’d add that there is light and shade in all of my books. “Pagan” is mostly shade; “From Eternity” is mostly light. “Reimagining Church” is about half-and-half.

By the way, PTM is running a special on “From Eternity” all this month, an unprecedented 50% discount plus a CD.

Now for those of you who have a good sense of humor, I’m posting my annual favorite spoof Christmas song of all time.

Enjoy!

Dan Kimball Gets Interviewed

Today on the blog, I interview my friend Dan Kimball. Kimball and I first met in person at George Fox Seminary, where we both spoke together. We had a great time. Before that, we got to know each other online and he graciously interviewed me on the book “Pagan Christianity.”

Here’s my interview with Dan (“the man”). I recommend his book They Like Jesus, But Not the Church.

1. How and when did you come to Christ?

I was approached by a Christian who was witnessing to people in a shopping mall when I was in junior high school.  He wasn’t street preaching, but he was walking up to strangers and he came up to me and my friend Ralph and began asking us questions. I don’t remember too much of what he said but it rang true and I prayed with him to trust in Jesus as Savior. After I prayed with this guy, he gave me a “I’m Saved” button or sticker and then went off to evangelize others. I don’t know if I was saved at that moment, but it was the first time I ever heard that Jesus was Savior and He died on the cross for sin. I had no church I was part of, so not too much changed in my life after that. I did find that I became sensitive to Christian things after that. Watching Billy Graham on television. Reading Christian tracts when I would be given one. But it wasn’t until I met Stuart Allen, a pastor in England after I graduated from college when I began to understand what it means to follow Jesus more. So it was more like when I was in my 20’s when I began realizing Jesus is Lord and what that meant for my life to follow Him.

2. Your book, THEY LOVE JESUS, BUT NOT THE CHURCH, has done really well. Why did you write it, what’s the main point, and what has been the most common response to it from readers?

I wrote it because I kept sensing a growing disconnect from the church and people outside the church. Especially in how those outside the church were defining “evangelical” and “Christian”.  Most of their impressions and stereotypes of Christians were ones that felt we are all homophobic, right-winged politically, judgmental, organized religion and other negative characteristics. So I began exploring this and it turned out so many of those with these impressions, didn’t have actual relationships with Christians. They were mainly getting these stereotypes from the loudest Christian voices out there whom were more extreme in their views and attitudes.

I then began exploring Christians in churches and who they socially engage with and it was primarily all other Christians. I found that even in many churches who used the term “missional” this was the case as well. They were Christians who met in another church, then formed a new missional church because they didn’t like or fit in their previous church – but then they primarily socially engaged with each other. So we have all these non-Christians out there who gain their understanding of church and Christianity by the media and loudest voices while the Christians are all busy hanging out with each other in “community” all the time. It was quite fascinating seeing how much of a Christian bubble we created and how so many of us Christians remain in that Bubble socially and didn’t even realize it. So of course the world around us will develop these weird impressions of us because the loudest voices then defined “Christians”.

The response has been really great overall and it really connected with a lot of church leaders. So most of the response I have heard has been positive – except for a stream of thinking from some Christians who feel that we shouldn’t care what people outside the church think of us. There is a slice of Christians who take the position that Jesus told us that he world will hate us if we are Christians, so naturally we will be hated and not liked. So it can be an excuse and even self-verifying for some to feel satisfied when they aren’t liked by non-Christians feeling that they are then fulfilling what Jesus said would happen. But the problem with that viewpoint, is that Jesus was not talking about not being liked or hated for so much of the issues are people have with Christians. It is mainly our attitudes and how we present and talk about things. It is more of a lack of Galatians 5 fruits of the Spirit why many don’t like some Christians.

3. What are you most passionate about – what drives you?

What drives me is knowing how Jesus changed my life and has changed other lives. Jesus is the truth, the way and the life. So what drives me is to do whatever it possibly takes to see other come to understand who Jesus is and to not simply become a “convert” but a disciple who joins the mission of Jesus as they follow Him. There is a difference between a “convert” who holds their hand up in a moment to make a decision and someone who puts saving faith in Jesus, but then in community growing in their love and knowledge of Him. And as they follow Him and the Spirit changes, strengthens and shapes them as they join in on mission.

I am also passionate about remaining pure to orthodox historical theology however being innovative and leading the church towards change for sake of this mission. Not compromising Scripture, but we have a lot of freedom in how we go about the mission of Jesus and what our churches may look like and function like. So I am passionate to see people understand this and that God gifted them for serving the world on mission.

4. What puzzles you the most about the Christian faith?

  • Why some Christians who know Scripture and say they follow Jesus become mean Christians.
  • Why some Christians are passive and consumers instead of joining in on mission to the world around them.
  • Why some who say they are missional don’t have making new disciples from those who don’t know Jesus yet as a major part of what they do, blog about and share stories about.
  • Why there is evil and suffering to the extent there is (I know the correct apologetical answers and even teach on it, but it is such a tough thing to still comprehend).
  • Why Frank Viola won’t admit that churches whom are intentional about it can be large and structured and still function to produce healthy, vibrant disciples of Jesus.
  • Why Frank Viola won’t grow his hair out on the sides and comb it upward to try and have a hairstyle like me. The higher the hair the closer to God.

5. Who are the 5 people who have influenced your life and ministry the most, and how have they influenced you?

It’s an interesting question, as I have many people who influenced me throughout my life which in turn influences the ministry I am in. I have had bands influence me. Not Christian bands, but secular bands like The Clash, Bruce Springsteen, Pink Floyd, Elvis Presley and U2. Films influenced my life like The Elephant Man, Awakenings, Eraserhead and others (which I would have to explain why and how, especially Eraserhead!). I have had friends throughout various time periods in my life influence me during my college years in particular. I have had writers influence me such as Marvel and DC comic book writers when I was a kid, to classics authors like JD Sallinger, CS Lewis and Tolkien. Dallas Willard, Bill Hybels and even Frank Viola writings have influenced me greatly. Artists influenced me like Ralph Steadman, Mike Ploog, and Will Eisner. So it’s hard to name specific ones as I believe God has used all types of people, authors, films to majorly influence how I ended up turning out and how I view life and how I then function in ministry. I can’t state strongly enough how these various influencers impact me in thinking and viewing the world, which in turn does impact how I serve in ministry today and think. And of course The Bible is my major influence of which I now screen all these other life experiences. But when you ask “who are 5 people who influenced your life and ministry?” the normal answers are the ones I will now list here, but we are shaped in many ways by other factors which come to mind as you ask me that question. But in terms of specific people I had relationships with, about a couple of them are:

1) Stuart Allen: He was 82 years old when I met him. I was living in London playing in a punk/rockabilly band there at the time. Stuart was a pastor of a very small elderly church. By chance (or I should say it was God guiding me) I saw that his church had a Bible study that I ended up going to for a year while I lived there. Stuart was intelligent, allowed me to ask questions and never made me feel dumb.  He never judged me for my haircut or my clothing. He influenced me in realizing you could be intelligent and be a Christian. He stirred a passion in my to know and study Scripture.

2) Dr. Mitchell: When I went to Multnomah Seminary in Portland, Dr. Mitchell was 92 years old and would meet with me while I was a student there. He was so passionate about prayer and being intimate with Jesus. When he prayed it felt like he was speaking to a dear, dear friend he knew so well. So he encouraged me to not settle for a shallow relationship with Jesus but one of depth. He also was passionate about sharing Jesus with others and had crazy stories of being in canoes to go preach to people in remotes places and other adventures of his missionary mindset.

3) Rod Clendenen: He was 65 years old when I met him. He mentored me and met with me weekly and we studied Scripture and prayed together. Rod influenced me to worship God all day and practice His presence all day long.

4 and 5)  My Mom and Dad: I was so fortunate to grow up in a home where my parents were wonderful examples of loving each other and set a caring home to grow up in. It wasn’t a Christian home (although both my mom and dad became Christians later in life). But they influenced me to understand the love of a Father, the love of a mother, the importance of a home of safety and care. And to this day their influence has shaped me in incredible ways which impacts almost everything I do.

6. What do you hope to accomplish on this earth? What are your ministry goals? Be specific as possible.

Foremost, what I hope to accomplish here on earth is to live my life holistically as a worshiper of Jesus, stewarding and using the gifts God gave me on mission. So that when I one day meet Him face to face He will say “Well done good and faithful servant”.  This includes everything, how I live as a husband, father, church leader, friend, living in a local town, living in the world. I try not to compartmentalize my life but see it holistically so as I live as a worshiper on mission –  it is everything I do. So that is goal overriding everything – to steward my life in a way that is honorable and pleasing to God on mission with the time He gives me here.

In terms of ministry goals – bottom-line, is to see as many people as possible come to a saving knowledge of who Jesus is and put faith in Him and then grow and thrive as a disciple serving Jesus on mission with their lives.  This involves challenging church leaders to rethink their roles in the church towards this. This involves people of the church being trained and motivated towards this mission. This involves me living this out personally.

7. Are you working on any future books? If so, tell us about it.

I’ve been working on the same book for 3 years. It is tough for me to write, because it is wonderfully consuming leading a missional church plant now 5 years old as well as being a dad and husband. And I am working on a doctorate degree. So my priorities and time unfortunately push book writing to a slower pace. But I have signed for several more books with Zondervan. My next two books are trade books which are books written for the average person. All my books so far have been church leadership books. The first one is a follow-up book to They Like Jesus But Not The Church addressing the same issues, but more of an apologetics book for the average person to think through some of the primary issues we need to wrestle through in our culture. We are still determining a title. Toying with a title something like “Adventures in Churchland”  but the sub-title may be something like “Discovering why Christianity is not judgmental-homophobic-male dominated-fundamentalist-organized religion”. It’s a hopeful and positive book for both Christians and those wondering about Christianity and church. It really is an apologetic for the church, the Bride of Christ and why the church despite our faults is an essential part of what it means to exist as a follower of Jesus. Why we need the church and the church needs us.

The book after that is one based on a teaching series we did at our church that was called “Don’t be a “Christian”: Exchanging Religion for the Mission of God”.  I don’t know think that will be the actual book title, but it is an exploration and rally cry for people to break out of consumerism into full sacrificial lifestyle worship. To exchange “going to church” to instead “being the church”. To exchange living in the Christian sub-culture to being in the world on mission. To become a theologian rather than closing our minds or numbing our minds with suturing them with entertainment.  So I really look forward to writing this one.

Then I am going to write a biography of Frank Viola. That book will sell more than Blue Like Jazz and The Shack combined. A movie will be made about it. Bruce Willis will star as Frank Viola. It is going to be great!

New Sample Chapter of “From Eternity to Here” & Brant Hansen’s Review

Click here to read the sample chapter. You may pass it on if you like.

Interview with Ed Stetzer: Mission, Church, and God’s Timeless Purpose

Brant Hansen (of radio fame) reviewed “From Eternity,” focusing on Part I of the book: “A Forgotten Woman.” Here is the review:

Here’s the book we’ve been talking about:  Frank Viola’s From Eternity to Here.

You can get it at the usual places online.  And you really should get it.  Like here.

I don’t say that often, and — of course — it’s true that one book does not fit all.  But this is a very accessible book about a topic so important, the word “topic” seems diminishing.

It’s about Jesus.  And you.  And a wedding.

Many people think knowing Jesus is ultimately about one thing:  Going to heaven.  “I got my ticket to heaven, so the rest is details” — I’ve actually heard that.

This sounds right to some, at some level, maybe, but it doesn’t capture the love affair between God and His people.  Not even close. Viola brilliantly explains what he calls the “eternal purpose of God”, and it’s a love story, since before time began.

When I read about this love story, this wedding-to-come, I can’t help but think the “ticket to heaven” idea of Christianity is a selling-short of this Great Romance.  You see, it’s like saying, “All that matters is I get in the reception, and I get some of that cake.  I loves me some wedding cake.”

Well, okay.  We all do.  But this is about love. Always has been.  You see, it’s about much more than whether or not you get some cake.  YOU ARE IN THE WEDDING. You’re being proposed to.  You’re going to be standing up in this one, front-and-center, and the question isn’t whether you want some cake.  The question is:  Do you take this man…?

The question is, and always has been, not “Do you have your ticket?” but…”Do you love me?”

So do I?

Viola admits to being a romantic.  I’m not — not in the typical I-love-”The Notebook” sense — but I’m glad he’s that type, because it’s allowed him some remarkable insight and appreciation into the romantic elements of the Bible, from start to finish.

Genesis to Revelation is all about Jesus.  I knew that.  But Viola points out the romantic storylines, played out over and again, that I’d never noticed.  Fascinating stuff.  (I’d never thought, before, about how “communion” is, among other things, a re-enactment, based on Jewish tradition, of the acceptance of a wedding proposal, for example.  And there’s much, much more.)

This book is not overly heady, not written for scholarly-types only.  And there’s far more to it than I can allude to in a short entry.  If you read it, let me know what you think.  It might rock your world, in the most exciting, freeing way.

- Brant Hansen

 

Ed Stetzer Interview: Mission, Church, and God’s Timeless Purpose

Author-speaker and LifeWay Researcher, Ed Stetzer, graciously invited me to do an interview on his blog recently. Stetzer is one of the best known Christian leaders today, especially among the Southern Baptists. Here is his endorsement for my book From Eternity to Here,

Too often we see people react to what they don’t like about the church. In From Eternity to Here, Frank Viola offers up the doctrine that causes him to act on behalf of the church. Make no doubt about it—Frank is a provocateur and an artist—and both come through in this book. Frank continues to challenge the church-at-large with a powerful mind, an impassioned voice, and a love for the bride of Christ. You need to get this book and wrestle with Frank through the biblical passages regarding our identity in Christ as His body and the mission our God has entrusted to us.

-Ed Stetzer

What follows is the full interview.

From Ed Stetzer:

Today, Frank Viola comes by the blog and interacts for the day.
As I have written before, I like Frank. He is not a subtle man. He is calling for big changes. And, he loves Jesus. Those are some good qualities.
Now, if you have read my books and my blog, you also know that Frank and I have some pretty significant differences about an important subject–ecclesiology. And, I believe that ecclesiology will be one of the defining issues in the evangelical conversation in the years to come.
I am so passionate about the subject, my next scholarly book will be on ecclesiology, probably out in 2012 (my missiology textbook comes out in 2010), so I am pretty concerned about this subject and have some important convictions.
And, it is no secret to Frank that I found his last two books to be lacking in ecclesiology (as I see it in scripture), but I appreciated his passion for the church and God’s mission in his From Eternity to Here. His passion for the church and its mission comes through in From Eternity to Here. Whereas his other books seemed to want to deconstruct the church (in a way I found destructive), this one provides the reader with reasons to love the church.


I also see this when Frank writes against “churchless Christianity,” something I was very encouraged to see. He did so in two parts at Out of Ur.

The postchurch brand of Christianity is built on the premise that institutional forms of church are ineffective, unbiblical, unworkable, and in some cases, dangerous. Institutionalization is not compatible with ekklesia. So say postchurch advocates.

But the postchurch view goes further saying, “any semblance of organization whatsoever . . . any semblance of leadership…is wrong and oppressive. Church is simply when two or three believers gather together in any format. Whenever this happens, church occurs.”
Post Church Perspective, Pt 1

Frank continues in the second article explaining,

The ekklesia as used in New Testament literature is visible, touchable, locatable, and tangible. You can visit it. You can observe it. And you can live in it. Biblically speaking, you could not call anything an ekklesia unless it assembled regularly together.

The postchurch paradigm is rooted in the attempt to practice Christianity without belonging to an identifiable community that regularly meets for worship, prayer, fellowship, mutual edification, and mutual care.

Again, there’s nothing wrong with fellowshipping with Christians on the Internet, over the phone, or meeting with friends at Starbucks. I personally love doing these things. But calling these activities “church” or substituting them for ekklesia is misguided. Postchurch Perspective, Pt 2

As I read these I found them helpful when consider that many are advocating “abandoning the church” for their own spiritual health and to join some sort of churchless revolution.

So, I invited Frank to the blog today to talk about his new book and any other subjects upon which he wants to opine. Let’s start with his answers to a few questions and then you can jump in below.

1. What motivated you to write this book?

The message of the eternal purpose of God changed my life. It gave me a glorious vision to live by, a high and overwhelming purpose to walk in, and a growing love and passion for the Lord Jesus Christ. In addition, it provided me with a framework for understanding God‘s grand mission and the entire Biblical story. All of this profoundly changed my view of the Lord, my view of the church, my view of my brothers and sisters in Christ, and my view of myself. So I wrote “From Eternity to Here” because I wanted others to have that same experience.

In addition, I feel that the eternal purpose is a message that‘s not often preached or written about today, so I felt the time was right to release the book to the Body of Christ.

2. What do you believe is the most critical problem in the church that this book addresses?

Three come to mind:

First, many Christians are living from a performance-based relationship with God that’s marked by religious duty and obligation. The guilt that lurks deep within the hearts of scores of God’s people is very heavy, and there’s great insecurity of what the Lord really thinks about them. The message that is so often communicated today is: “God’s holy. You’re not. Do more and try harder.” Many Christians sincerely want to serve God, but they aren’t passionately in love with Jesus Christ because they haven’t seen, accepted, nor been riveted by how He views them. When we stand on a different mountain and look behind His eyes, it changes everything. This leads us on a journey where we discover the secret of living BY Christ rather than simply doing things FOR Christ.

Second, the gospel that’s often presented today is very much centered on the meeting of human needs, whether that be the saving of lost souls, healing the sick, or making the world a better place. That God wants these things is correct, but it’s not complete. The Biblical story is consumed with a high and glorious purpose in God that is by Christ, through Christ, to Christ, and for Christ. And as we receive a vision of that purpose (Paul called it “the heavenly vision”) and embrace it, human benefits become a by-product not the prime product.

Thirdly, it’s been my observation that many Christians look at and relate to Jesus Christ as merely Savior, Lord, and King. They feel that they know Jesus already, “got the tee-shirt,” and so they must go on to “other things.” But as Paul pointed out rather strikingly in the book of Colossians, a proper apprehension of who the Lord Jesus Christ really is causes one to live the rest of their lives exploring His fullness. And His fullness is inexhaustible (Paul referred to His fullness as the “unsearchable riches of Christ” in Ephesians.) If we get to know this glorious and incomparable Christ beyond the surface, we quickly discover that it’s impossible to get beyond Him. He, in all of His fullness, becomes our life pursuit. We discover Him not simply as Savior, Lord, and King, but as All in All. Leonard Sweet and I have recently tried to introduce this idea in our Jesus Manifesto.

3. What are you getting at with the title, “From Eternity to Here?”

Good question. From eternity past, before the creation of the world, God has had a purpose in His heart that provoked Him to create. He shrouded that purpose in a mystery and He hid it in His Son (see Colossians and Ephesians regarding “the mystery.”) That purpose (Paul calls it ―”the eternal purpose” in Ephesians 3) is what governs all of what God does. According to Ephesians 1, the eternal purpose controls all of His actions. That purpose … being conceived in eternity past and slated to continue on through eternity future … is meant to be fulfilled here, on this earth, for that‘s why He created the physical universe. The book unveils and unfolds the above paragraph, hence the title “from eternity to here.”

4. The subtitle is “Rediscovering God’s Ageless Purpose.” You talk a lot about purpose in this book. What is God’s ageless purpose?

Trying to define it in a few paragraphs in a way that does it justice and doesn’t dilute its incredible impact is like putting the Mississippi River in a tea cup. It took me 300 pages to unveil it, and still it’s beyond my measure to adequately explain. Paul of Tarsus nearly exhausted human language in his attempt to uncork it in the first three chapters of Ephesians.

For those who haven’t yet read the book, I’ll describe it this way.

Traditionally, we have begun the Biblical story with the fall of humans in Genesis 3. The result is that the entire story places the salvation of humans and the redemption of the earth as being God‘s goal. But those two elements, while part of the story, are not the beginning point nor the ultimate goal.

Thus when we begin the Biblical story in Genesis 1 and 2 (which occurs before the fall) and in Ephesians 1 and Colossians 1 (which occurs before creation), the Biblical story is reframed from the standpoint of God‘s ultimate desire rather than with the needs of fallen human beings.

This changes the perspective dramatically, and it makes the story much larger and more God-centered. It moves us from a human-centered gospel to one that‘s rooted in God‘s relentless, eternal, and ultimate desire.

Remember, Adam and Eve were NOT created in need of salvation. So there was a purpose that God had for them that was different from saving lost souls.

Genesis 1 and 2 are mirrored in Revelation 21 and 22. Those four chapters are unique in all the Bible. There is no sin or corruption in them. The events in Genesis 1 and 2 take place before the fall; the events in Revelation 21 and 22 take place after the fall is erased.

There are a number of key themes in those 4 chapters. And they can be traced from Genesis 1 to Revelation 22 like a golden thread. The themes in those four chapters give us a glimpse into the eternal purpose of God. In the book, I trace those themes from the beginning of the Bible to the end.

In short, God has many purposes in time, but He only has one “eternal purpose” which drives Him and governs everything He does.

5. How does this book compare and contrast with your other books, namely Pagan Christianity and Reimagining Church?

“Pagan Christianity” (co-authored George Barna) deconstructed the traditional practices of the modern institutional church on the basis of church history and New Testament principles. The unique contribution of “Pagan” is that it doesn‘t just call for the typical tweaks that many church reform books call for, i.e., better pastoring skills, more outreach, better methods to make disciples, more cost effective church buildings, stronger strategies for making converts, etc.

Instead, it goes to what we feel are the roots. It deals with the systemic problems. It raises the brutally challenging question: ”Is it possible that the very way we do church is the problem?” I believe we are living in a time when it’s critical for us to go back to the teachings of Jesus and the apostles to examine anew and afresh what the church is and how she expresses herself in the earth rather than taking our cues from the business models of secular culture. This is the call to action that “Pagan Christianity” gives.

“Reimagining Church” is the positive follow-up to “Pagan Christianity.” “Pagan” deconstructs on the basis of church history and the New Testament.  “Reimagining” constructs on the basis of the teachings of Jesus and the apostles. It also explores spiritual leadership from the vantagepoint of what Jesus taught His disciples in contrast to the forms that are taken in the Gentile world and in the Jewish world (both of which are very common today). The Lord’s way of leadership is neither Gentile nor Jewish. Therefore, everyone who has read “Pagan Christianity” should read also “Reimagining Church,” else they are only getting one half the argument. Both books strongly endorse Christ-centered, organic community with Jesus as the functional Head (opposed to the clergy-led institutional form of church on the one hand and the postchurch view on the other. The two books offer a third path that’s neither left nor right.)

My new book “Finding Organic Church” is the practical sequel to all of my books, including “From Eternity to Here.” It answers the question: “How does one go about finding, planting, and sustaining churches that make Jesus Christ their practical, functional Head and which stand for God’s eternal purpose?” It examines mission and church planting for the 21st century. One that’s based on the timeless principles of the New Testament rather than secular leadership models.

“From Eternity to Here” takes the reader back a few steps and seeks to bring them into the big picture behind it all. It’s a presentation of the big, sweeping epic of God‘s grand mission. It seeks to explore the grand narrative of the entire Bible as an unbroken story rather than as a systematic theology.

“From Eternity to Here” is like a big river; “Pagan Christianity” and “Reimagining Church” are like tributaries.

“From Eternity” focuses on the church from the heavenly and eternal viewpoint. “Pagan,” “Reimagining,” and “Finding Organic Church” examine it on the ground. Finally, “From Eternity” is for all believers. My other books are for those who are not afraid to seriously rethink church in the light of Scripture and even rechurch. They aren’t written for those who want to simply rearrange the chairs on the Titanic J

6. In the book you explain that From Eternity to Here is a primer for your other writings? Can you unpack that a little?

Yes, it’s because “From Eternity” presents the motivation and controlling vision behind all the other books. I’ve made this statement many times in conferences, but it answers your question, I think: The only reason why any church should exist is to stand for and fulfill God’s eternal purpose. That’s where “From Eternity to Here” comes in.

7. Do you believe God was/is somehow unsatisfied outside created and restored humanity?

I don’t think I’d put it that way. Consider this analogy. When an individual gets restored to God, a dead rock has been transformed into a living stone. Recall Jacob’s dream. After He saw the stairway connecting heaven and earth, Jacob poured oil on a stone and called the place “Bethel”, the house of God. The oil represents the Spirit of life. The rock represents you and me. Oil upon a stone makes that stone “a living stone.”

For many years, I was taught that God’s goal is for us Christians to go out and make as many dead rocks into living stones. That is, He wants us to get lost people saved.

But there is an intention in God’s heart that goes beyond making dead stones living stones. He wants all of those living stones in every city to be built together to form a house for Him and His pleasure.

Paul in Ephesians 2 says that the church is formed when we are “being built together” with others to form God’s dwelling place.

Peter makes the same point in 1 Peter 2. The goal is not the making of many living stones. The goal is that those living stones be “built together” to form a house that is by God, through God, and for God. (Peter uses the term “living stones” in fact.)

This shifts the paradigm in at least three ways.

First, salvation (the making of living stones) is not the end. It’s the beginning.

Second, God is after something that’s corporate and collective, not individualistic. It’s a house that He’s after, not a bunch of living stones scattered all over the earth.

Third, the end in view is not for man, but for God. He wants a house to dwell in. “Heaven is my throne and earth is my footstool. Where is the house you will build for me? Where will my resting place be?”

God’s quest for a house is one of the things that provoked creation. In Genesis 1 and 2, we have the building materials for God’s house in the garden of Eden. In Revelation 21 and 22, we see those building materials put together to form the Lord’s dwelling place. The entire Bible is the unfolding drama of how this “building work” takes place. In Genesis 1, man (humanity) is made from clay. In Revelation 21 and 22, clay is transformed into precious stone for the building of God’s house.

It’s an amazing vision.

8. For the record, I believe God does experience emotions, but unpacking God’s experience of emotions is difficult as it connects to many other key doctrines regarding theology proper. Do you believe God knows precisely what will happen before it takes place in history, and if he does how are his emotions authentic, or real?

I’m not an open theist, so yes, I believe Jesus Christ is the Alpha and Omega at the same time, and as Colossians puts it, creation is in Him. Which means time is in Him also.

That said, I don’t know the answer to your question because we’re dealing with trying to fathom God’s interpersonal senses with finite human thinking. But my guess (and it’s merely a guess) is that the analogy of a dream may help us to grasp a piece of it.

Consider having a dream that later comes to pass. When you had the dream, you felt it was of God and were confident it would come to pass. During the dream, you experienced the full gamut of emotions that you would feel if the dream were real (I feel deep emotion in many of my dreams). You even felt these emotions in the afterglow of having the dream, upon waking up.

Six months later, the dream comes to pass and you watch in living color the events take place that you saw in your dream. And you again experience those same emotions even though you foreknew what was going to happen six months earlier. Perhaps it’s the same way with God (?). He feels when He foreknows and He feels when we experience what He foreknew. He is in fact touched with the feeling of our own infirmities, very closely.

9. Are there others books that hit on the same subjects/ideas that you would recommend?

Yes, though not in quite the same way. There are three that come to mind, all amazing books:

Ultimate Intention by DeVern Fromke

The Stewardship of the Mystery by T. Austin-Sparks

The School of Christ by T. Austin-Sparks

Thanks Ed, for having me on your blog. It’s an honor.

Keep up the good work!

Open Phones: What Perplexes You Most About the Christian Life and/or Christians?

Hi Fun Seekers,

Today is open phones. And it shall be so throughout the weekend.

The question before the house in this edition of “open phones” is: What perplexes you most about the Christian life and/or about Christians?

Let’s see how much the Fanortner will twinkle here.

Remember: if it’s your first time commenting on this blog, begin your comment with the word FROG (we’ll all cheer in front of our computers for you).

The blog manager says she will give a prize to the comment she can relate to the most. Hmmmm …. that should be interesting.

Time to dial in . . .

Personal Letter

This is from the November PTM newsletter . . . for those who didn’t receive it.  There are a few things in here that may be of interest and perhaps help to you.

October was quite exciting with a trip to Nashville (the Zoe Group Conference) and a South Africa tour. You can read a report of the South Africa tour here. I’ve just returned from speaking at a 4-day event in Las Vegas. Never been to that city before. It’s rather amazing.

Take a look at the new sections below. You’ll find a new article I’ve written in the Spotlight section.

Here are three thoughts that I’ll leave with you for this week:

* The next time you hear someone slam another Christian or put them in a bad light, ask them: “So what was his/her response when you shared this with them over coffee?” You’ll quickly find that nine times out of ten, the person doing the disparaging never spoke with the person they are speaking negatively about via phone, let alone in person.

* Don’t make the mistake of following a Christian leader who judges the motives of others, disparages their efforts, demeans their character, or belittles their successes. This is a tell-tale sign that the leader is unbroken, dangerous, and will injure many.

* Become what you already are (you are glorious in Christ), pursue Him who is already yours (He’s discoverable), and listen to Him who never stops speaking (pay attention and be aware).

Two other things: My friend Milt Rodriguez just released a new book that I want to recommend to all of our readers. It’s called The Community Life of God. Here’s the endorsement I wrote for it:

This little book provides a clear window into the ultimate source of authentic body life. Delve into its pages and meet the God who is beyond what most of us have imagined, the God in whose collective voice all genuine churches echo.

You can order the book here.

On a sadder note, I have a friend who has been diagnosed with terminal cancer. She’s not even 50 years old and is wanting to get treated at the Oasis of Hope in Mexico, but cannot afford it. If you feel so inclined to help, here’s the information: http://www.therebuilders.org/bettywellness.html

Yours in the costly but glorious quest,

Frank

If You Use Facebook

Please join this group.

“Reactivate Mike Morrell’s Profile” – http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=195817991104&v=info

The entire story can be read on the INFO tab after you join.

About Facebook

I’ve been using Facebook for over a  year now, and I like it better than any of the other social networks out there, including Twitter (micro-blog) and the Ning sites. I especially like it over MySpace.

What I don’t like about it, however, is that the site seems to be ultra sensitive. I’ve had friends deactivated from it for that reason. See Mike Morrell’s recent post about this. It’s quite informative. (By the way, if you don’t know who Mike is, he’s a marketing genius. You’ll find his endorsement on the well-known book, The Shack).

Facebook only allows 5,000 friends.

When I hit 5,000 earlier this year, I made the decision that I would NOT create a fan page. (This is what many people do when they surpass the 5,000 friend mark.)

As Jerry Seinfeld once said, “I choose not to run!” Well, I choose not to create a fan page (in Seinfeld voice).

I’m not moving from that decision. So if you want to add me as a friend or suggest a friend to me (I have 132 such requests at the moment), you can join the FROM ETERNITY TO HERE group page that a reader created and connect with me that way. Updates and reports go out to each member of that page about once every two months.

Also, if you’re recommending friends to me, please refer them to the group page as there is no limit to the members that can join. Here’s the group page:

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=76903743708&ref=mf

Just join the group and invite your friends by clicking the “Invite People to Join” link at the left-hand top.

Thanks,
Frank

Newsletter Redesign

The Present Testimony Ministry (PTM) newsletter is sent out once a month via email. And it’s just been completely redesigned.

I couldn’t copy and paste the newsletter into this blog without losing the formatting, but you can view it here.

Future issues won’t be posted on this blog or our website, but you can receive them directly to your email box once a month. You may subscribe freely by filling out this form.

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