Monday, September 30, 2013

Introduction to “ReJesus” by Alan Hirsch and Michael Frost

Westminster Abbey- 20th Century Martyrs

Welcome to our ReJesus Book Study! This is a book study sponsored by the New Ministries Essential Ministry Team, and I am Rev. Nicole Reilley, the Director of New Ministries (Interim) and host for this 10-week study.

Each Monday you will read a new post written by clergy and laity in the California-Pacific Conference who will engage with the book and open a dialogue so you may participate.  You may engage the weekly chapters by responding to the post, talking about the post with others, or reflecting on the post for yourself.  It is up to you!  All we invite you to do is to enter into the topic and give it space for the Holy Spirit to work within you, your heart and your mind.  We hope that you will share the posts with others via social media so we might enter into Conference-wide discussion together.

The book, ReJesus, was selected after I attended a leadership event this summer at which Alan Hirsch spoke.  He challenged those in attendance (various lay persons and clergy from the Western Jurisdiction of the UMC) to start the United Methodist denomination’s renewal with coming anew to the person of Jesus Christ.  He reminded us that when we start with Jesus--and develop our way of being church and engaging with the world out of that relationship--it changes everything.  Hirsch challenged us not to start with renewal in the church, or with a focus on getting into the mission field, but to instead to order everything we do from the context to our relationship with Jesus. He is to be our Touchstone, our Guiding Star.  Hirsch believes that, if we get our Christology (our understanding of the nature of Jesus the Christ) right, things will bloom.

With this in mind, I began ReJesus.  But honestly, I was troubled by where it begins. In the introduction to this book, Hirsch and Frost share story after story of folks who love Jesus but lived in ways that look anything but “Christlike”. And here is the challenge: we can love Jesus and worship him, claiming to his followers, BUT lead lives that look nothing like his.  And this isn’t just a problem for a couple of people who “got it wrong,” but for scores of us whose lives are nothing like the one we call Lord and Savior.  How can this be and what can we do about it?

I thought about this over the last couple of weeks as I watched my own shortcomings, one after another: A homeless person asked for help but I was rushing to lunch and didn’t stop.  A friend was in need but I ignored it, hoping someone else would help because her situation overwhelmed me.  I felt the need for extended time of prayer but found myself surfing the Web instead.  I couldn’t help but see how I fell short over and over again, and it caused me to wonder - Is Jesus my Guiding Star?  Do I have my Christology right?  

Now I might normally have these thoughts but it’s my habit to rush by them.  I am good at excuses and reasons why I don’t live as I know I can.  But, as I continued to read, I felt the hot burning wisdom of Fannie Lou Hamer, the Civil Rights leader who spoke these words into my uneasiness.  She said, “If you are not putting that claim (that you are a Christian) to the test, where the rubber meets the road, then it’s high time to stop talking about being a Christian.” (Kindle edition of ReJesus, page 407). Her words challenge me past my excuses and explanations. Her witness called me to consider how much of a “little Jesus” I am and how I could grow more into who God has called me to be.

I hope you will join in the weekly study, reading the book along with us and listening for the Spirit’s voice.  May these next ten weeks be a time of searching for our Guiding Star and living into whom he is calling us, both as individuals and as a church, to be.          
-Nicole Reilley, NReilley@cal-pac.org
Questions for reflection:
What response do you have as to how one’s faith in Jesus can be totally disconnected from how one lives?

What would it be like to live as “little Jesus”? What feelings and thoughts does this bring up for you?

What words of Jesus most stand in contrast to how you live?

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Join Robb Fuesler, Bonnie Piazza, Cedric Bridgeforth, Gary Williams, Katie Kevorkian, Lynn Munson, Brian Parcel, Craig Brown and Nicole Reilley as we study ReJesus: A Wild Messiah for a Missional Church by Alan Hirsch and Michael Frost. Study begins on September 30, 2013.  

"Amidst all the latest fads and "movements" within contemporary Christianity in the West, Frost and Hirsch's "ReJesus" is a clarion call to recalibrate our lives to the one that gathered us together and sent us out in the first place - Jesus.

In their own words, "this book is dedicated to the recovery of the absolute centrality of the person of Jesus in defining who we are as well as what we do."


What I appreciate so much about these two authors is that it is clear that the motivation behind their penetrating and sometimes uncomfortable critique of pop-Christianity is stemmed in their deep love for the Church. While this book has a rich bibliography from such theologians as N.T. Wright, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Jaqcues Ellul, and Jurgan Moltmann...both Frost and Hirsch have chosen to step out of the ivory tower of academia and into the streets of everyday existence as they paint a vivid picture of what it means for someone's entire life to be re-focused, re-calibrated, and re-centered on Jesus.


While Frost and Hirsch are both excellent writers and engaging to read, I found this book reading me even after I set it down...it really got deep inside of me.


If you are interested in going beyond a mere admiration of Jesus to a pervasive imitation of Jesus in every area of your life - this book is for you." - Drew Sams, Amazon.com review of ReJesus.