Truth is narrow, but grace is wide.

More data is not always the answer.

You plant the gospel. You don't plant churches.

We have to assume now that all mission is cross-cultural.

In a world that demands service we position ourselves as servants.

Go among the people. Don't assume you know what church looks like.

If a can opener no longer has the capacity to open cans, what is it?

Christianity is an adventure of the spirit or it is not Christianity.

You can do more with 12 disciples than with 1,200 religious consumers.

There’s no such religious force in the West as powerful as consumerism.

Worship that is in some way divorced from mission is counterfeit worship

There's no such thing as an unsent Christian. You have already been SENT.

Judgments about who belongs in the Hall of Fame are extremely subjective.

Every Christian is a sent one. There is no such thing as an unsent Christian.

At some point preoccupation with safety can get in the way of living full lives.

I found out the hard way that if we don't disciple people, the culture sure will.

There is no doubt that to walk with Jesus means to walk on the wilder side of life.

If we could be freed from our aversion to loss, our whole outlook on risk would change.

A missional church is a church that must live the dialectic. It must stay in the journey.

It's not so much that the church has a mission, it's that the mission of God has a church.

You cannot sell a Christendom approach to a post-Christian world. They are anti-Christian.

The kingdom of God is a crash-bang opera: the king is dramatic, demanding, and unavoidable.

Think of mission like the paddles of a defibrillator applied to the chest of a dying church.

The safety-obsessed church lacks the inner dynamic to foster profound missional impact in our time.

It is vital to see ourselves as part of an ongoing journey started by our heroes in the Scriptures.

The missional church is not a new trend or the latest new technique for reaching postmodern people.

Building community for its own sake is like attending a cancer support group without having cancer.

The fact is that if Jesus's future kingdom is secure, those who trust in its coming will enact it now.

A retreatist spirituality is not a spirituality that can, or will, transform the world in Jesus's name.

Mission is the practical demonstration, whether by speech or by action, of the glorious lordship of Jesus.

Nowadays we raise our children in a cocoon of domesticated security, far from any sense of risk or adventure.

In missional churches, the baby birds have been pushed out of the nest and are learning to fly for themselves.

But the standard churchy spirituality doesn't require any real action, courage, or sacrifice from its attendees.

The quest for heroic adventure then is a quest for the gospel, although it might not be seen that way by everyone.

Real leaders ask hard questions and knock people out of their comfort zones and then manage the resulting distress.

Our preferences for stability and security blind us to the opportunities for adventure when they present themselves.

This submission to the threshold of a cross is at the very root of our following Jesus; it changes the game completely.

The ultimate solution to the problem of spiritual complacency is to create a systematically embedded culture of holy urgency.

Those of us with too much invested in the way things are will never embrace the revolutionary cause required for wholesale change.

We will have to take risks, to chance failure, to be willing to walk away from the familiar paths that have brought us to this point.

But herein lies the rub: Christianity has been on a long-term trend of decline in every Western cultural context that we can identify.

Currently, young Christians reach adulthood bored with church experience, and with little or no sense of their calling as missionaries.

When there is no possibility of retreat, we will find the innovation that only the liminal situation can bring. In short, we find the faith of leap.

Most churches don't have the resources for these tricks and inducements but are still bound to the imagination that church happens on a Sunday in a building.

Put simply, the church finds itself in a post-Christendom era, and it had better do some serious reflection or face increasing decline and eventual irrelevance.

Many church folk, in their self-conscious attempt to be overtly morally upright, emit all the wrong signals, thus messing with people's perception of the gospel.

The appetite for adventure and risk is not exclusive to young Christians. In face, it seems to be a fundamental yearning, knitted into the fabric of the human soul.

Because we believe that somewhere in the nest of paradigms contained in the phrase "missional church" lies nothing less that the future viability of Western Christianity.

Interestingly, it's as though the gospel story of Jesus is the archetypal heroic journey, the embodiment of the very adventure that all people in every epoch have desired.

Whether we like it or not, we are all on a journey, a Quest if you will, every day of our lives, and the path we must take is full of perils, and our destiny can never be predicted in advance.

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