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Our guest is Bob Lepine. Bob is my dad. He’s also the co-host of FamilyLife today and the Chief Content Officer at FamilyLife.Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Our guest is Bethany Jenkins. Bethany does a lot of writing and thinking about faith and work… especially for The Gospel Coalition and The Kings College.
She used to work on Wall Street and on Capitol Hill… and she’s a member of House Ravenclaw (according to her Twitter profile).
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Show Notes
6:28 – What Martin Luther meant by calling Christians “the masks of God”
11:22 – The pitfalls associated with Faith and Work (and how to avoid them)
13:27 – How the doctrine of adoption frees us up to do great work
20:15 – Why an NYC school teacher wondered if he picked the wrong profession (and what he did about it)
22:15 – How the doctrine of glory relates to a woman whose daughter has an eating disorder
27:45 – Theological calling, women, and work
32:30 – How to work within organizations to produce change (rather than criticize from the outside)
35:15 – Favorite resources for Heart, Community, and World
39:35 – Favorite books, tv shows, and movies
42:05 – How to think about the upcoming election
Links
NIV, Faith and Work Bible, HardcoverOvercoming Sin and Temptation (Redesign) Counterfeit Gods: The Empty Promises of Money, Sex, and Power, and the Only Hope that Matters Life Together: The Classic Exploration of Christian in Community Living into Community: Cultivating Practices That Sustain Us Every Good Endeavor: Connecting Your Work to God’s Work Work Matters: Connecting Sunday Worship to Monday Work Kingdom Calling: Vocational Stewardship for the Common Good Visions of Vocation: Common Grace for the Common Good Harry Potter Paperback Box Set (Books 1-7) Race
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Scotty Smith grew up in North Carolina. He planted and pastored Christ Community Church in Franklin Tennessee for 26 years. He’s now the teacher in residence at West End Community Church. He also serves as adjunct faculty for a bunch of seminaries. He and his wife of 41 years, Darlene, continue to live in Franklin, close to their two adult children, Kristin and Scott, and their one grandchild, Finn. Scotty is the author of Everyday Prayers: 365 Days to a Gospel-Centered Faith and Every Season Prayers: Gospel-Centered Prayers for the Whole of Life, among other. He enjoys photography, fishing, cooking, and exercise. Bob Thune is a Christian, a husband, a father, and a pastor, in that order. He grew up in Omaha and founded the Coram Deo Church Community in the fall of 2005. He and his wife have four children who keep them honest and teach them much about God’s grace. He’s the author of The Gospel-Centered Life: Study Guide with Leader’s Notes, The Gospel-Centered Community: Study Guide with Leader’s Notes, and Gospel Eldership: Equipping a New Generation of Servant Leaders. In his spare time you can find him on the basketball court, in the coffee shop with a philosophy book in hand, at home hanging out with his wife and kids, or in the garage working with his hands.Listen
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John is a pastor and elder at Fellowship Memphis, a multicultural church he helped found in Memphis, Tennessee. He also served on the board of Acts29 and is a partner with Fellowship Associates.
He is the lead writer and co-presenter of 33 The Series with Authentic Manhood. John travels the country consulting and investing in churches, leaders and great ideas.
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Show Notes
2:45 – The 90 second John Bryson story (in case you aren’t familiar with him)
5:17 – Why he decided to plant in Memphis
6:10 – The three things he fights every single day
7:25 – Challenges he’s overcome in planting a healthy, multiethnic church
8:58 – Practical advice for planting a healthy, multi-ethnic church
11:25 – What advice he’d give to a pastor of a larger, homogenous church who desires to be multiethnic
14:35 – The two or three pieces of advice he’d give a church planter today
16:42 – What the Acts 29 network is all about
18:30 – Why you must get in touch with your emotions
21:25 – How to get in touch with your emotions
23:42 – Where we’ve learned to shut out our emotions
25:55 – Favorite book and TV show he’s read or watched recently
28:15 – How to think about the upcoming election season
Resources
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A recognized leader in the multi-ethnic church movement, Dr. Mark DeYmaz planted the Mosaic Church of Central Arkansas in 2001, where he continues to serve as Directional Leader.
Mark has written five books on the subject of the multi-ethnic church including, Building a Healthy Multi-ethnic Church: Mandate, Commitments and Practices of a Diverse Congregation, which was chosen as a finalist for a Christianity Today Book of the Year Award.
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Show Notes
2:53 – His answer to the question, “If the kingdom of heaven isn’t segregated, why on earth is the church?”
5:32 – What multi-ethnic churches looked like in the New Testament
7:52 – How explosive growth can lead to internal focus with churches
10:28 – What “the Gospel of gentile inclusion” is, and why Paul preached it.
12:33 – Why Paul got jailed for preaching against racism
15:40 – The biggest obstacles he’s overcome whilst building and leading a multiethnic church
20:44 – What advice he’d give to a pastor of a large, homogenous church who desires to become multi-ethnic
25:04 – The difference between assimilation and accommodation
27:54 – “If a church isn’t intentionally seeking to be multi-ethnic, is that church acting unbiblically?”
34:58 – Why “It’s just too hard” isn’t a good excuse for failing to pursue multi-ethnicity
37:34 – Favorite recent book and TV Shows
38:42 – How to think about the upcoming election season
Links
Building a Healthy Multi-ethnic Church: Mandate, Commitments and Practices of a Diverse Congregation Leading a Healthy Multi-Ethnic Church: Seven Common Challenges and How to Overcome Them (Leadership Network Innovation Series) Multiethnic Conversations: An Eight-Week Journey toward Unity in Your ChurchPodcast: Play in new window | Download
Wesley Hill (PhD, Durham University, UK) is Assistant Professor of Biblical Studies at Trinity School for Ministry in Ambridge, Pennsylvania.
He is the author of Washed and Waiting: Reflections on Christian Faithfulness and Homosexuality, and Spiritual Friendship: Finding Love in the Church as a Celibate Gay Christian.
He has written for Books & Culture, Christianity Today, and First Things. He co-founded and writes regularly for SpiritualFriendship.org.
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Show Notes
7:12 – Why he wrote his first book, Washed and Waiting
10:01 – Why he decided to come out in college (and who he told)
12:45 – What “the gift of going second” is, and how to give it to others
14:23 – The history of the term “ex-gay” (and what’s unhelpful about it)
16:25 – Why he identifies as a “gay, celibate Christian”
23:05 – How the church can disciple those who are same-sex attracted
26:05 – Why he wrote his second book, Spiritual Friendship
28:27 – The two options he thought he had as a 20-year-old (and the third way he’s discovered today)
30:55 – How to find friendship after college
37:44 – When it might be appropriate to end a friendship
41:57 – How the culture views friendship vs. how Christian history views friendship
42:55 – Favorite book he’s read recently, nerdiest thing he’s into right now, and who he’s planning to vote for
Links
Gay and Catholic: Accepting My Sexuality, Finding Community, Living My FaithWhy 30 is the decade friends disappear – and what to do about it
The Lake of DarknessStranger Things
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Mike Cosper is the Founder and Director of the Harbor Institute for Faith and Culture, where he works to develop resources for Christians living in a post-Christian world. Prior to that, he served for 16 years as the Pastor of Worship and Arts at Sojourn Community Church, a multi-site church in Louisville, Kentucky. He is the author of Rhythms of Grace (Crossway), The Stories We Tell (Crossway) and the forthcoming Recapturing the Wonder (Intervarsity Press). Mike is married to Sarah, and they have two daughters, Dorothy and Maggie. They live in Louisville, Kentucky.