Towns, Perimeters of Light

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Elmer Towns and Ed Stetzer, Perimeters of Light: Biblical Boundaries for the Emerging Church. Moody Publishers, 2004.

Referenced in: Theology and Practice of Evangelism – Evaluating Emergent

LifeandLeadership.com Summary

The title of this volume clearly gives away its approach and content. The assumption is that the current discussions surrounding missional/emergent and even contemporary evangelical church growth models need careful “perimeters” to keep them from drifting into biblically unsound territory. The book proposes several such perimeters. The authors come from diverse backgrounds. Towns is a recognized authority from a highly pragmatic, Sunday school-based, church-growth perspective, and Stetzer is a missiologist who came through contemporary evangelicalism into what is now a more missional-convergent orientation. It is likely that their most appreciative readers will be preachers from a traditional or quasi-church-growth orientation. But for this audience, it would be difficult to find a more helpful text. They will appreciate the simple, straightforward, yet theoretically grounded wisdom. They will also find a number of helpful tools for expressing ministry philosophy to their congregations through the numerous drawings, charts, and visualizations.

In my opinion, the best use of this text is for preachers of more traditional, conservative churches whose elderships or governing boards are fearful that adopting contemporary or missional models goes “too far…” or who may fear angry opposition from folks in the pew. Ministers in these situations are always looking for reasonable, non-threatening ways of communicating the need to be more effective in a changing culture. They must constantly overcome barriers to innovation and work hard to maintain the trust of anxious leaders and not be perceived as “having an agenda.” For ministers in this situation, this book is a treasure. Self-taught ministers will appreciate the non-technical language. Seminary-trained ministers may see one page as homespun, but then be surprised by the theoretical description on the next page.

A few examples illustrate the overall content. First, in discussion on boundaries of practice, they discuss the “Hughes Scale” that suggests a balance between one extreme of being biblically sound but culturally blinded and the other extreme of being culturally relevant but having abandoned the faith. Second, in a discussion of makes worship Christian, they offer six balanced benchmarks that should occur in all true worship. Third, in their discussion of worship, they propose seven biblical principles to help determine if music is Christian. They offer similar guidelines on issues such as preaching, evangelism, and over-all church practice.

Throughout, the authors bring their experiences as ministers, mentors, professors, and consultants to the issues. For churches that speak a similar language as the authors, it would be hard to find more balanced advice. The book is very easy to read, well-organized, to the point, with helpful questions at the end of each chapter. It is the kind of book ministers love to put in the hands of their elders.

From the Publisher

How far do we go to connect with our culture? Can we ‘sell’ the Gospel like the world sells soft drinks? Where are the boundaries? The church today is walking a tightrope.On the one hand, we need to proclaim, and – perhaps, more importantly – live the Gospel in such a way that it connects with both seekers and younger people looking for community and authenticity. Yet at what point does this fall into ‘feel good’ ministry at the expense of biblical truth? These are issues that God’s people are now beginning to wrestle with. Towns and Stetzer provide an intergenerational perspective that sheds biblical light on some tough challenges facing the church.

About the Authors

Elmer L. Towns is Vice President of Liberty University, where he also serves as Dean of the School of Religion. He cofounded the university with Jerry Falwell in 1971. Elmer teaches the 2,000-member pastor’s Sunday School class at Thomas Road Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Virginia.

Ed Stetzer is director of LifeWay Research and missiologist in residence at LifeWay Christian Resources in Nashville, Tennessee. He has trained pastors and church planters on five continents, holds two masters degrees and two doctorates, and has cowritten popular books including Comeback Churches and Breaking the Missional Code. Stetzer and his wife have three daughters.


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