Foreword by Richard J. Mouw
Introduction: Is a Third Way Possible?
Part I: Mapping New Territory
1. There from the Start: How to Be an Insider and an Outsider at
the Same Time
2. Defining the Emerging Church
3. The Quest for Mere Christianity
Part II: Protest, Reaction and the Deep Church
4. Deep Truth
5. Deep Evangelism
6. Deep Gospel
7. Deep Worship
8. Deep Preaching
9. Deep Ecclesiology
10. Deep Culture
Conclusion: Becoming the Deep Church
Acknowledgments
Notes
Jim Belcher (M.A., Fuller; Ph.D., Georgetown) is founding church planter and lead pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach, California. He previously led the Twenty-Something Fellowship and cofounded The Warehouse Service at Lake Avenue Church in Pasadena. He has served as adjunct professor at Azusa Pacific University and was cofounder of the Renaissance Project Skateboard Company. He has been published in Leadership Journal and re:generation quarterly, and he and his wife and four children live in Costa Mesa, California.
Richard J. Mouw (PhD, University of Chicago) now serves as professor of faith and public life after twenty years as president of Fuller Theological Seminary. He has written over twenty books on topics of social ethics, philosophy of culture and interfaith dialogue, including Uncommon Decency, The Challenges of Cultural Discipleship, Praying at Burger King, The God Who Commands, Calvinism in the Las Vegas Airport, The Smell of Sawdust and Talking with Mormons: An Invitation to Evangelicals.A leader in interfaith theological conversations, particularly with Mormons and Jewish groups, Mouw served for six years as co-chair of the official Reformed-Catholic Dialogue and as president of the Association of Theological Schools. For seventeen years he was a professor of philosophy at Calvin College and in 2007, Princeton Theological Seminary awarded him the Abraham Kuyper Prize for Excellence in Reformed Theology and Public Life.
"Belcher provides a balanced critique of both paradigms threaded
within his own quest to present the formidable issues dividing
them. . . A worthy read."
*Diane J. Chandler, Religious Studies Review, September 2010*
"An excellent survey and tutorial of the issues of dividing the
emerging church and the traditional church."
*Equip to Disciple, Issue 2, 2010*
"Belcher describes his very personal journey to discover a way
beyond the current debate that divides the traditional and emerging
camps within American evangelicalism. In sorting out the contours
of a debate that is sometimes hard to follow, Belcher also sets out
the vision for the church he leads and describes how they are
trying to live into that vision. He calls the vision 'deep church'
... a way of following Jesus and being the church that is both
grounded in what Belcher calls the Great Tradition and engaged with
contemporary culture."
*Robert J. Weingartner, Missiology, 2010*
"Belcher, himself a child of the traditional church in North
America and concerned with the state of the evangelical world,
takes an honest look at the debates raging between the two
perspectives. He looks at the strengths, weaknesses, and
misunderstandings they each have of one another, and introduces a
third way -- what C.S. Lewis called the 'deep church.'"
*David Chow, Mennonite Brethren Herald, February 2010*
"From a former insider of the emerging church, this theologically
weighty book speaks to both sides in the emerging/traditional
debate. Though reflecting primarily a Reformed perspective, Belcher
is irenic, showing appreciation for both emergent concerns and the
great tradition of Christian faith and practice."
*The 2010 Christianity Today Book Awards, The Church/Pastoral
Leadership Category Winner (tie), February 2010*
*Conversation Starter Award* "The most discussed review on our site
in 2009 was by far Chris Smith's review of Jim Belcher's book Deep
Church. We certainly appreciate his careful and thoughtful work and
the book's capactiy to spark meaningful and needed
conversations."
*The Englewood Review of Books, December 2009*
"All serious readers will benefit from Belcher's insights and
critiques as much as from the exemplary, thoughtful manner in which
he handles the discussion."
*Bob Gerow, Pulpit Helps, November 2009*
"Belcher's concern for his congregants and for the future of the
American church is evident on every page. Readers who recognize
that the traditional church is ripe for reform but are wary of
emerging alternatives will find Belcher a careful, sympathetic
guide toward a more productive conversation."
*Brandon O'Brien, Christianity Today, December 2009*
"Jim Belcher was emerging before it was called emerging. His
insights into church life are broadly useful, and the balance he
strikes between tradition and mission, certainty and creativity,
could provide a way forward for many."
*Madison Trammel, Christianity Today, October 2009*
"A fair-minded treatment of a polarizing and polemic topic."
*C. Brian Smith, Christian Retailing, September 7, 2009*
"Passionately, articulately and with sometimes winsome
self-confidence, Belcher seeks to chart a "third way" between the
often divided factions within the traditional and emerging wings of
American evangelicalism."
*Publishers Weekly, July 13, 2009*
"Jim has written the most fair and affectionate critique of the
emerging church yet published (especially from someone with a
reformed theological perspective). Deep Church is a great read.
It's a great read for non-formed types in the emerging church
because it's a fair and thoughtful critique, and it's a great read
for more traditional or reformed types, because it doesn't
construct straw men to make its case."
*(ysmarko.com), April 10, 2009*
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