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Paperback From Embers to a Flame: How God Can Revitalize Your Church Book

ISBN: 1596380713

ISBN13: 9781596380714

From Embers to a Flame: How God Can Revitalize Your Church

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Book Overview

Whether your church is healthy or struggling, the biblical principles in this book point the way to greater spiritual vitality. A pastor, seminary teacher, and conference speaker, Harry Reeder has long specialized in church revitalization. Reeder and Swavely deftly alert us to potential problems in our churches, help us to recognize our weaknesses and opportunities, and guide us in applying biblically based strategies for rekindling the flames of...

Customer Reviews

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A biblical and practical guide for church revitalization

I have dozens of books on church revitalization. They range from trendy and shallow to not bad, but few of them are really good. That's why I am glad to have found From Embers to a Flame: How God Can Revitalize Your Church. This book manages to be both biblically grounded and practical, and is a useful guide for church leaders who would like to see their churches transformed. The author, Harry L. Reeder III, first makes a case for why church revitalization is necessary. This is important because revitalization is sometimes ignored in favor of church planting, leaving pastors in struggling churches wondering if it's worth it. Reeder then offers a paradigm for revitalization based on the church in Ephesus, which he traces through Acts, the pastoral epistles, and from Revelation 2. Reeder describes ten strategies that fall under three categories: remember, repent, and recover the first things. While some may find ten strategies or steps to be signs of yet another pragmatic book focused on methodology, these strategies go deeper than many I've read. I'm glad he emphasizes the importance of connecting with the past, and acknowledging and repenting of corporate sins. His focus on gospel-driven and Christ-centered ministry is also welcome and necessary. Reeder writes, "Since the gospel is such an important, powerful, and life-changing message, it should be the center of everything we do in the church of Jesus Christ." Although this should be obvious, it's often ignored. Reeder also emphasizes the importance of biblical preaching, since God uses his Word to change the hearts of people. Reeder also covers other matters that sometimes come too early: mission and vision, the multiplication of servant leaders, small group discipleship, and evangelism. Reeder concludes, "The church you pastor may not be a flame bringing light and heat, but I know that its embers can be stirred up - not through gimmicks, programs, or personalities, but through godly leadership to a biblical paradigm of church revitalization." It is this emphasis that I appreciate most. If you're in a church that needs revitalization, I highly recommend this book.

A good exposition on the importance of church revitilization

It is common practice in today's organizational structures to create metrics; things by which success of agreed upon goals can be met. The nature of the church as a spiritual body, concerned with often-unseen results makes the development of measuring metrics difficult if not impossible. Presbyterian pastor, Harry Reeder, in From Embers to a Flame, is concerned with showing the church leader what the church can do to achieve its mission; but shows that the metrics for the church are best measured not by particular achievements, but by always coming back to where the church draws its strength. Building success in the church is always linked to the concept of returning to a Biblical source. Innovations come and go, and can be important as tools, but a living church is always marked by how close it is to its source. In today's Western world, much of the church has slowed not only in numerical growth, but in drifting away from its mission. Even in conservative churches, it is not uncommon for needs other than centering the congregation on grace, or evangelizing and serving the community to be addressed. Sick churches, with focuses on personalities and programs (the seen things) often lose the heart for the gospel that grew them in the first place. Revitalizing a dying church body forces the members to be active and to take ownership of the ministry that the whole body has been called to. When a church gets to the point where a pastor must be the one who leads, but does the work; then there has been a terrible disconnect among the membership and the pastorate about the necessity of communal ministry. Reeder's solution is one of remembrance and repentance. His emphais is to point out how a lack of vision can be deadly for future endeavors, but so is a lack of perspective about the past. Any church that believes its history began 50 to 100 years ago when the body was first organized has at best a myopic view of its past. It must see the wide scope of church history, the great cloud of witnesses who teach truth from their graves. The long gone must infect zeal towards those who are among the living dead. Repentance of the past and desires for future man-centered ministry must be done away with. No body can survive unless it is honest about the information it gathers about itself. Church revitalization, a major concern for Reeder, always begins with the ending and beginning of the Christian faith in refreshing people in the gospel. It is impossible for an effective ministry to operate; from ruling to teaching elder to deacon, unless those charged with leadership know the Bible and how to apply it to the specific needs of their people. Reeder's purpose in this book, to encourage and motivate Christians for the work of revitalizing dwindling and lethargic congregations, is done through reminding those who desire to revitalize their churches what their first principles are. The metrics for church revitalization are not necessarily accomplished through vis
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