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A Book Review
A New Kind of Christian:
A Tale of Two Friends on a Spiritual Journey
Copyright (c) 2001 by Brian D. McLaren,
Jossey-Bass Inc., San Francisco, CA. A Leadership Network Publication

August 2001

July 2001

June 2001

May 2001

 



 

By Charlie Wear, Publisher, Next-Wave
If either Daniel Poole, Dr. "Neo" Oliver, or for that matter Brian McLaren pastored a church near me, I think I would love to be a member. In a New Kind of Christian, burnt-out traditional church pastor Poole is revived and invigorated by his dialogue with post-traditionalist, former pastor, "Neo" Oliver.
Click here for other reviews or to buy the book.

The dialogue begins at a junior high rock concert as the depressed pastor seeks information concerning a possible career change to high school teaching, the trade that "Neo" has practiced for several years in the aftermath of his years as a pastor. This fictional setting serves as the framework for McLaren’s unpacking of the problems, emotional, philosophical and theological, faced by Christians in the transitional phase between the "modern" and the "postmodern" era.

In conversation and eventually by e-mail, these two become friends helping each other along on their spiritual journey. The burnt-out pastor moves from depression to revitalization in his work and life. The high-school professor moves toward a return to the pastoral ministry he had left years before. McLaren’s "neo-Christian", Neo serves as the guide to postmodernism’s ins and outs.

McLaren’s device, a fictional dialogue, turns what could be dry essayism into something alive and, for me, well worth reading. I’m sort of a simple guy. I must confess, I haven’t read a book by a single postmodern philosopher, I only know about relativism and deconstructionism because I have heard others, more well read, speak and write about these subjects and their implications for the Christian church.

Of course, this makes a kind of poetic sense, don’t you think? That the publisher of a widely-read web magazine that deals almost exclusively with the problems facing the church because of the cultural and worldview shift that has occurred in the most recent past, has not had an original thought on the subject?

I identified with pastor Dan Poole, and with Neo. I am a former pastor and continue to be pretty burnt-out on "normal" church. I just wish that either one of them were pastoring a church near my home, I think I would feel right at home struggling with them on the spiritual journey. In the meantime, I enjoyed meeting them in the pages of A New Kind of Christian, and would highly recommend it to those interested in exploring the new paradigm and the new theology that will flow from it.

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Charles R. (Charlie) Wear, is the Editor, Publisher and Webmaster of Next-Wave Web Magazine. At 51 years of age, Charlie is a lawyer living with his wife Loretta, in Bakersfield, California. Raised in the Seventh-day Adventist denomination, he has served on the staff of a denominational church. He was the Senior Pastor of the Vineyard Christian Fellowship of Moreno Valley from 1995-1998. From 1996-98 he served as an Area Pastoral Coordinator and Church Planting Coordinator in the Association of Vineyard Churches. From 1998-to the present he has worked with a team reaching out to teens to twenty-somethings and their parents through the extreme sport of skateboarding (see If you build it, they will come.) You can e-mail him at publisher@next-wave.org.
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