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A new brand of apostolic ministry for today's world The Permanent Revolution is a work of theological re-imagination and re-construction that draws from biblical studies, theology, organizational theory, leadership studies, and key social sciences. The book elaborates on the apostolic role rooted in the five-fold ministry from Ephesians 4 (apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teacher), and its significance for the missional movement. It explores how the apostolic ministry facilitates ongoing renewal in the life of the church and focuses on leadership in relation to missional innovation and entrepreneurship.The authors examine the nature of organization as reframed through the lens of apostolic ministry. * Shows how to view the world through a biblical perspective and continue the "permanent revolution" that Jesus started * Outlines the essential characteristics of apostolic movement and how to restructure the church and ministry to be more consistent with them * Alan Hirsch is a leading voice in the missional movement of the Christian West This groundbreaking book integrates theology, sociology, and leadership to further define the apostolic movement.
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Seitenzahl: 623
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2012
CONTENTS
About the Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series
Foreword
Preface: A Briefing for the Journey
Introduction: The Crisis of Infertility and What to Do About It
Part One: Ephesians 4:1–16: Frameworks for Ministry
Chapter 1: Activating the Theo-Genetic Codes of APEST Ministry
Almost a Silver Bullet
The Devil Made Me Do It
“Perfectly Designed”
A Missional Ministry for a Missional Church
The Order of Creation and the Order of Redemption
A Letter for Everyone
Language Matters
Getting into the Text (or, Allowing It to Get into Us)
Can We Mature with a Twofold Ministry?
To Each One of Us
The Ministry of Christ in and Through the Body of Christ
Did We Miss Something?
Chapter 2: An Elegant Solution: Distributed Intelligence in the Body of Christ
Get Smart
Apostolic Intelligence: Custodian of the DNA
Prophetic Intelligence: Guardian of Faithfulness
Evangelistic Intelligence: Recruiting to the Cause
Shepherd Intelligence: Creating Empathic Community
Teacher Intelligence: Bringing Wisdom and Understanding
The Genius of the Church
Chapter 3: Better Together: The Synergy of Difference
The Multifaceted Gospel
Prophetic Intelligence for Apostolic Architecture
Ensuring Growth: Avoiding the Iron Law of Involution
Culture Creators, Engagers, and Redeemers
The Spatial Profiles of APEST
Pioneers and Settlers
A Missional Dialectic
Chapter 4: Missional Ministry for a Missional Church: A Church Where Everyone Gets to Play
Between Differentiation and Integration
It’s All in the Genes
Variety for Adaptivity
Embedding the Codes
Surfing the Edge of Chaos
The Importance of Apostolic Ministry
Part Two: Apostolic Ministry
Chapter 5: Custody of the Codes: Mapping the Contours of Apostolic Ministry
Little “a” and Big “A” Apostles?
Paul as Prototype
The Apostle and the Gospel
An Apostolic Job Description
Conclusion
Chapter 6: Come Back, Peter; Come Back, Paul: The Relation Between Nuance and Impact
Pauline and Petrine Apostolic Ministries
Pioneers, Miners, Networkers, and Mobilizers
Functional Profiling
Chapter 7: Living from the Center: Apostolic Ministry and the Renewal of Christianity
Along the Life Cycle
APEST Leadership and Movement Ethos
A Journey to the Center of the Church
Home Is Where the Heart Is
The Mission Has a Church
Renewal with a Long Tail
Adventures in the Borderlands
Drawing Near to God, Taking It to the Streets
Part Three: Apostolic Leadership
Chapter 8: The Enterprise of Movement and the Movement of Enterprise
Challenges of Pioneers
The Anatomy of a Pioneer
Entrepreneurial Intensity
Characteristics of Entrepreneurial People
A Typology of Entrepreneurship
The Permanent Revolutionary
The Pauline Entrepreneur
Navigating Risk
Chapter 9: The Spirit of Innovation: Creating New Futures for the Jesus Movement
The Age of the Unthinkable
The Strange New World of Innovation
Conclusion
Part Four: Apostolic Organization
Chapter 10: Movements R Us: Thinking and Acting Like a Movement
Mobilizing Bias
Organizing Movements
The Starfish and the Spider
Ending with the Beginning in Mind
Chaordic Ecclesiology
Covering the Bases
Chapter 11: Apostolic Architecture: The Anatomy of Missional Organization
Design Matters
Four-Self Dynamics
A Balance in the Force
To Organize or Not to Organize?
Conclusion
Afterword
Appendix: A Question of Legitimacy: The Restoration of the Apostolic Ministry
The Authors
Index
More Praise for The Permanent Revolution
“The Permanent Revolution is an example of the kind of theological work that is urgently needed to ‘equip the saints for the work of ministry’ apostolically, prophetically, evangelistically, pastorally, and instructively.”
—From the Foreword by Darrell Guder, Winters Luce Professor of Missional and Ecumenical Theology
“The Permanent Revolution by Hirsch and Catchim is a timely reminder that Jesus founded a dynamic missionary movement. This is a well-researched and thoroughly engaging study of the dynamic that Jesus planted at the heart of the church and now calls us to rediscover.”
—Steve Addison, Australian director, Church Resource Ministries; author of Movements That the Change the World
“C. S. Lewis believed the ultimate compliment you could give a book was to reread it. As I read The Permanent Revolution for the first time, already I was anticipating the opportunity to reread it! How often does that happen? I knew it would be one of those few books that would become a reference point for my entire life and ministry from then forward. Outside the New Testament, in this one man’s humble opinion, The Permanent Revolution is the seminal work on apostolic ministry.”
—Rob Wegner, pastor, Life Mission Granger Community Church; lead catalyst, EnterMission; experience director, Future Travelers; author, Missional Moves
“A very PROVOCATIVE and INFORMATIVE book! Readers are invited to give careful consideration of reclaiming the Ephesians 4:11 gifting of apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers (APEST) as the foundational framework for exercising and structuring Christian leadership. It is an argument worth serious consideration given the problems associated with the clergy/laity dichotomy that continues to exist in so many of our churches today.”
—Craig Van Gelder, professor of congregational mission, Luther Seminary
“ ‘Jesus has given the church everything it needs to get the job done.’” This statement reverberates throughout this book. There is no greater job in the world, and belief in this statement with action reflecting it will no doubt reform the western church. This truly is the capstone to all of Hirsch’s work. Every church leader must consider this Permanent Revolution as Jesus intended.”
—Tammy Dunahoo, vice president of U.S. operations/general supervisor, The Foursquare Church
“Clearly, practically, and with much love for the church, Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim redress the imbalance brought about by the exiling of the apostle, prophet, and evangelist from the leadership of the local church. There is a challenge here that must be listened to. The Permanent Revolution is a must-read for every leader who seeks to recover the apostolic heartbeat that drives the church into God’s mission.”
—David Fitch, B. R. Lindner Chair of Evangelical Theology, Northern Seminary; author, The End of Evangelicalism?
“Hirsch and Catchim are architects of the future. Their goal is not to dismantle today’s church, but to help re-engineer its future by realigning around the five-fold gifts. Every other solution currently being offered is simply a façade. Cover to cover this is a truly worthy read.”
—Linda Bergquist, church strategist; coauthor Church Turned Inside Out: A Guide for Designers, Refiners, and Re-Aligners
“Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim have written a book that all church leaders should read as we consider the church’s mission and movement into the twenty-first century. There is a growing, and often confusing, dialogue concerning apostolic ministry in the church, and The Permanent Revolution offers both clarity and a compelling argument. If you have a heart for ‘sent’ ministry, read this book.”
—Ed Stetzer, president, Lifeway Research
“The crisis of the Western church cannot be adequately addressed merely by working harder or smarter. We need a fresh paradigm for the church in order to frame and direct our efforts. Hirsch and Catchim contend that Ephesians 4:1–16 provides just such a “back to the future” paradigm. For too long the church has depended almost exclusively on the gifts of pastor and teacher, but now we must cultivate the full range of Christ’s gifts to the body. The greatest need for our day, the authors believe, is to reactivate apostolic giftedness. At stake is the success of the missional movement and the renewal of the evangelical church. This is an important book that needs to be widely read and broadly debated. But watch your toes . . . they will be stepped on!”
—David G. Dunbar, president, Biblical Theological Seminary
“There is desperate need for what Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim have designed this book to be: ‘. . . a single, comprehensive reference text promoting the ongoing role of the apostolic person in the life of the church.’ It is a long overdue conversation of critical importance. The stakes are high, particularly in the West. A new generation of apostolic leaders is essential if the Church is to ever regain the initiative that we have lost by ignoring this essential biblical function.”
—Sam Metcalf, president, Church Resource Ministries
“An exhaustive exploration of the dynamics of apostolic ministry, interweaving biblical, historical, and contemporary material, presenting a persuasive argument for the recovery, recognition, and release of this neglected ministry as a crucial component in the emergence of missional churches. The Christian movement in post-Christendom needs to re-appropriate the ministries of apostles, prophets, and evangelists alongside pastors and teachers. This book offers a wealth of resources to help us.”
—Stuart Murray, author, Post-Christendom and The Naked Anabaptist
“In matters of mission—especially in the West—there are no simple solutions and no magic bullets. There are some key starting points and the debate about leadership is just such a point. Hirsch and Catchim have opened up the difficult issue of leadership, imagination, and gifting with no holds barred. This is a text that will inform the controversy around this issue for some time to come. If you care about leadership and mission you will want to grapple with this book.”
—Martin Robinson, president, Springdale College; National Director of Together in Mission
“This book, written by one of the foremost missional thinkers of our day, addresses what I believe to be the most necessary and neglected of subjects in the New Testament—the equipping gifts of Ephesians 4:11. Once again Alan Hirsch (now with the help of Tim Catchim) has opened the Pandora’s box of missional inquiry so the rest of us can try and get our minds around a subject of wide consequence that will not likely settle back down. This book will be the first of its kind, but I guarantee not the last.”
—Neil Cole, founder, Church Multiplication Associates; author, Organic Church, Organic Leadership, Search & Rescue, Church 3.0, and Journeys to Significance
“In The Permanent Revolution Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim gift us with a weighty tome that befits the epic adventure unfolding in these days of the collapse of Christendom. Church leaders are increasingly aware that the big shift for us is to move from managing an institution to leading a movement. Our learning curve is steep. We need help in reimagining and redesigning our leadership beliefs and practices. Nothing less than reconnecting with our apostolic roots will do. This volume helps us do exactly that.”
—Reggie McNeal, author, The Present Future, Missional Renaissance, and Missional Communities
Copyright © 2012 by Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim. All rights reserved.
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Credits are continued on p. 326.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hirsch, Alan, date
The permanent revolution: apostolic imagination and practice for the 21st century church / Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim; foreword by Darrell L. Guder; with contributions from Mike Breen.
p. cm.—(Jossey-Bass leadership network series; 57)
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-470-90774-0 (hardback); 978-1-118-17357-2 (ebk); 978-1-118-17358-9 (ebk); 978-1-118-17359-6 (ebk)
1. Church development, New. 2. Mission of the church. 3. Missional church movement. I. Catchim, Tim. II. Breen, Mike, Revd. III. Title.
BV652.24.H57 2012
262.001’7—dc23
2011039901
LEADERSHIP NETWORK TITLES
The Blogging Church: Sharing the Story of Your Church Through Blogs, Brian Bailey and Terry Storch
Church Turned Inside Out: A Guide for Designers, Refiners, and Re-Aligners, Linda Bergquist and Allan Karr
Leading from the Second Chair: Serving Your Church, Fulfilling Your Role, and Realizing Your Dreams, Mike Bonem and Roger Patterson
In Pursuit of Great AND Godly Leadership: Tapping the Wisdom of the World for the Kingdom of God, Mike Bonem
Hybrid Church: The Fusion of Intimacy and Impact, Dave Browning
The Way of Jesus: A Journey of Freedom for Pilgrims and Wanderers, Jonathan S. Campbell with Jennifer Campbell
Cracking Your Church’s Culture Code: Seven Keys to Unleashing Vision and Inspiration, Samuel R. Chand
Leading the Team-Based Church: How Pastors and Church Staffs Can Grow Together into a Powerful Fellowship of Leaders, George Cladis
Organic Church: Growing Faith Where Life Happens, Neil Cole
Church 3.0: Upgrades for the Future of the Church, Neil Cole
Journeys to Significance: Charting a Leadership Course from the Life of Paul, Neil Cole
Off-Road Disciplines: Spiritual Adventures of Missional Leaders, Earl Creps
Reverse Mentoring: How Young Leaders Can Transform the Church and Why We Should Let Them, Earl Creps
Building a Healthy Multi-Ethnic Church: Mandate, Commitments, and Practices of a Diverse Congregation, Mark DeYmaz
Leading Congregational Change Workbook, James H. Furr, Mike Bonem, and Jim Herrington
The Tangible Kingdom: Creating Incarnational Community, Hugh Halter and Matt Smay
Baby Boomers and Beyond: Tapping the Ministry Talents and Passions of Adults over Fifty, Amy Hanson
Leading Congregational Change: A Practical Guide for the Transformational Journey, Jim Herrington, Mike Bonem, and James H. Furr
The Leader’s Journey: Accepting the Call to Personal and Congregational Transformation, Jim Herrington, Robert Creech, and Trisha Taylor
The Permanent Revolution: Apostolic Imagination and Practice for the 21st Century, Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim
Whole Church: Leading from Fragmentation to Engagement, Mel Lawrenz
Culture Shift: Transforming Your Church from the Inside Out, Robert Lewis and Wayne Cordeiro, with Warren Bird
Church Unique: How Missional Leaders Cast Vision, Capture Culture, and Create Movement, Will Mancini
A New Kind of Christian: A Tale of Two Friends on a Spiritual Journey, Brian D. McLaren
The Story We Find Ourselves In: Further Adventures of a New Kind of Christian, Brian D. McLaren
Missional Communities: The Rise of the Post-Congregational Church, Reggie McNeal
Missional Renaissance: Changing the Scorecard for the Church, Reggie McNeal
Practicing Greatness: 7 Disciplines of Extraordinary Spiritual Leaders, Reggie McNeal
The Present Future: Six Tough Questions for the Church, Reggie McNeal
A Work of Heart: Understanding How God Shapes Spiritual Leaders, Reggie McNeal
The Millennium Matrix: Reclaiming the Past, Reframing the Future of the Church, M. Rex Miller
Your Church in Rhythm: The Forgotten Dimensions of Seasons and Cycles, Bruce B. Miller
Shaped by God’s Heart: The Passion and Practices of Missional Churches, Milfred Minatrea
The Missional Leader: Equipping Your Church to Reach a Changing World, Alan J. Roxburgh and Fred Romanuk
Missional Map-Making: Skills for Leading in Times of Transition, Alan J. Roxburgh
Relational Intelligence: How Leaders Can Expand Their Influence Through a New Way of Being Smart, Steve Saccone
Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers, Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird
The Externally Focused Quest: Becoming the Best Church for the Community, Eric Swanson and Rick Rusaw
The Ascent of a Leader: How Ordinary Relationships Develop Extraordinary Character and Influence, Bill Thrall, Bruce McNicol, and Ken McElrath
Beyond Megachurch Myths: What We Can Learn from America’s Largest Churches,Scott Thumma and Dave Travis
The Other 80 Percent: Turning Your Church’s Spectators into Active Participants, Scott Thumma and Warren Bird
Better Together: Making Church Mergers Work, Jim Tomberlin and Warren Bird
The Elephant in the Boardroom: Speaking the Unspoken About Pastoral Transitions, Carolyn Weese and J. Russell Crabtree
We thank you, our wonderful Lord Jesus. We humbly offer these words to you; we trust that you might sanctify them, cleanse them of sinful motivations, and witness the truth and/or falsity of what is being said, so that you might ultimately use them in the extension of your purposes in our lives and through your people.
To Jesus, Paul, Peter, St. Patrick, John Wesley, and the myriad apostles who have gone before us and trailblazed the ground on which all of us stand. We humbly and gratefully stand on your shoulders.
To Mike Breen, Neil Cole, Martin Robinson, Mike Frost, Felicity and Tony Dale, Tim Keller, Steve Addison, Dick Scoggins, Bob Roberts Jr., Dave Ferguson, Reggie McNeal, Chris Wienand, Milton Oliver, Rob Wegner, Caesar Kalinowski, Hugh Halter, Jeff Vanderstelt, and the many other contemporary practitioners who ably demonstrate what apostolic ministry is all about. What an honor it has been to be a part of your worlds.
To the seminal apostolic thinkers who have kept alive the tradition of apostolicity, especially Darrell Guder, and the late Leslie Newbigin and David Bosch.
Brave souls all.
This one is for you!
—Alan
To my wife, Tiffany, who was a constant source of encouragement during the process of carving out time to press forward through the challenges of writing. To my dear friend David Noles who provided spiritual counsel, and to Jason Gayton who provided key reflections at various stages of writing. To the 3DM crew who have been a beacon of light in the landscape of discipleship and mission. And to our local Christian community, Ikon, which provided the context, support, and patience for the implementation and refinement of this material.
—Tim
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FOREWORD
ONE OF THE MOST intriguing pieces of evidence that Western Christendom is over, or is rapidly disintegrating, is the emergence of a broad spectrum of initiatives to plant untraditional, postdenominational congregations in the Western cultures once self-defined as Christian. These initiatives are enormously diverse, although they all share a commitment to experiment with forms and styles of community life that are clearly not beholden to the received traditions of the Western churches. In terms of the practices and patterns of their gathered life, they are decidedly countercultural. Although no defined theological consensus guides them or serves as their common ground, many of these initiatives are generating a biblical and theological engagement that is challenging and encouraging. Convergence may be too strong a term for what is happening, but there is clearly a mutually constructive theological conversation emerging among theologians like Alan Hirsch, Michael Frost, Tim Catchim, and the participants in the missional church conversation. This book is an important resource for that discussion and a motor to advance it further.
The term missional came into broad use after a small group of missiologists published Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America in 1998.1 The term immediately became a cliché that today means everything or nothing. Its original sense, focusing on the essential purpose and character of the church as the called and sent instrument of God’s mission in the world, has been recognized and enriched by the work of such pioneer planters of post-Christendom Western indigenous churches (my term) as the authors of this book. Alan Hirsch neatly summarized the thrust of the missional church proposal when he wrote in his The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church:
A missional church is a church that defines itself, and organizes its life around its real purpose as an agent of God’s mission to the world. In other words, the church’s true and authentic organizing principle is mission. Therefore when the church is in mission, it is the true church. The church itself is not only a product of that mission but is obligated and destined to extend it by whatever means possible. The mission of God flows directly through every believer and every community of faith that adheres to Jesus.2
In The Permanent Revolution, Alan Hirsch and Tim Catchim propose a revolutionary missional ecclesiology shaped by the New Testament account of the apostolic missionary strategy. From the outset, the Christian mission focused on the calling and forming of communities that would continue the witness to the person and work of Jesus Christ that had brought them into being. To reclaim that strategy, Hirsch and Catchim argue that the functions of Word ministry in Ephesians 4:11ff—apostolic, prophetic, evangelistic, pastoral, and teaching—are essential for the formation of authentic and faithful witnessing congregations. This emphasis is linked with a strong critique of Western Christendom’s reduction of these essential functions to the last two: pastoral (or shepherd) and teaching. The problem of clericalism that results from that reduction is certainly one of the major and most daunting challenges that the Western Christian movement faces as it moves out of the protections of established Christendom. Especially crucial for the missional ecclesiology today is the recovery of the apostolic function in the church. It is this ministry that ensures that the church is always centered on its calling to be the agent and instrument of God’s mission and that everything it is and does relates to and demonstrates that calling. I share this conviction and have argued that the Nicene marks of the church need to be interpreted in the reverse order—apostolic, catholic, holy, and one—so that apostolicity defines every aspect of the life and action of the church. Only when apostolicity functions in that way can God’s mission be served obediently.
In the missional church discussion, this conviction has been linked with the critique of Western ecclesiologies that replace the central and decisive theme of mission with various theologies of institutional maintenance. This book’s focus on apostolicity clearly converges with this insistence that mission defines the church, and the authors’ exposition of the practice of apostolicity broadens and deepens the discussion in truly generative ways.
Hirsch and Catchim persuasively argue their proposal of a revolutionary ecclesiology from many perspectives, exegetical and theological as well as organizational and sociological. To flesh out the practice of apostolicity, they turn to diverse insights from the world of organizational behavior and leadership in Western cultures. This approach can be understood as an exercise in contextualization. It expounds the way in which apostolic ministry ought to work in Western cultures by calling on the research and analysis of corporate organizational behavior, which constantly generates new theories and interpretations. This leads to their “interesting conclusion that underscores the purpose of this book: it seems that the degree to which a system is willing to acknowledge and legitimize apostolic ministry is directly proportional to the ability to be entrepreneurial and have higher levels of entrepreneurial intensity.”3 This claim will undoubtedly trigger a range of responses from critical to laudatory.
That may well be one of the primary merits of the bold proposal of this missional ecclesiology: it will generate questions that need to be debated passionately and thoroughly. And it should. The lasting value of this theological proposal will be measured by the quality of the debate that it evokes. It speaks to a number of issues that have dogged the missional church process since it started—for example:
The character and role of leadership in the missional churchHow Jesus’s own formation of the disciples (described in the four gospels) and the apostles’ formation of their churches (continued in the epistles) define our formation todayThe dialectical tension between the church’s dependence on the empowering work of the Holy Spirit and the intentional actions of Christians in obedience to the biblical mandateThe appropriate reception of the Christendom legacy with both critique and gratitudeThe faithful translation of the gospel and the formation of witnessing communities in diverse cultures, without being assimilated into those cultures and becoming ultimately their captivesIt is significant that the theological process represented by this book (and its predecessors) is shaped by the hard challenges of secularized post-Christian cultures such as Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. It is just as significant that some of the most intriguing examples of post-Christendom Western indigenous churches have emerged in the midst of the most advanced, even hostile, secularization. Health-giving theology should emerge from the crucible of such faithful, radically obedient mission. The Permanent Revolution is an example of the kind of theological work that is urgently needed to “equip the saints for the work of ministry” (Ephesians 4:12) apostolically, prophetically, evangelistically, pastorally, and instructively.
Darrell L. Guder
Henry Winters Luce Professor of Missional and Ecumenical Theology Princeton Theological Seminary
Foreword
1. D. Guder (ed.), Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1998).
2. A. Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Brazos, 2007), p. 238.
3. Ibid.
PREFACE: A BRIEFING FOR THE JOURNEY
THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO, and well before mass publishing, Ecclesiastes wryly commented that of the making of books, there is no end (Ecclesiastes 12:12). We cannot imagine what he’d say today. So what are we doing writing one more book?
Why We Wrote This Book
Given the fact that so little of substance has been written on the subject of Ephesians 4 (which speaks of the roles of apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers—APEST) in general, and the apostolic ministry and person in particular, the sin in this case actually lies in the deficiency of thinking and reflection in these matters, not in their excess. This is a big statement, but we hope to show that it is entirely justifiable. Here are some of our guiding objectives and reasons.
To Change Some Minds and Strengthen Others
First, in relation to those unaware, the not yet convinced, or even those who harbor antipathy to the idea of the fivefold ministry in general and the apostolic in particular, our aim is nothing less than to change minds about the importance of these for the church today. We cannot shake the conviction that nothing less than the future viability of the Western church is involved in the revitalization of its ministry along more biblical lines. And so if we fail to somehow shift any readers’ paradigm, even a little, then we consider that we will have failed at least in part. This is no small task: we fully recognize that we are going against the inherited grain of thinking in this matter. Nonetheless, we think that the Western church has been wrong on this, and it is high time for a thorough reassessment, along with some significant change, in this regard.
Second, for those who are already convinced of the need for a broader, apostolically focused ministry in the church—either because they come from traditions where the typology of Ephesians 4 is accepted or have become more aware of the power of APEST because of their immersion in missional thinking and practice—we hope to strengthen your case, calibrate your thinking and practice, correct possible misperceptions, and equip you with a deeper and significantly sturdier justification of these particular aspects of the biblical ministry than has been given to date. Our hope is that this work will encourage and equip others in their ministry and help them better fulfill their calling as part of God’s people in his kingdom.
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!