I am fortunate to get to instruct an online course entitled, “The Emerging Church in the 21st Century,” for Fuller Theological Seminary each year. Based on current discussions and publications, I try to make appropriate and helpful updates to the course each time around. This year, I decided to make Brian McLaren’s newest book, A New Kind of Christianity: Ten Questions that are Transforming the Faith, an optional book choice (students have to read something by McLaren).

After I made this decision, a flurry of reviews of the book were published all over the blogosphere. I was disappointed that a great many of them paid no mind to the life and ministry of the author and were virtually completely devoid of charity, something which ought to mark all Christian discourse. More than this, I was thwarted in my effort to find reviews that offered reflections that were practical in nature.
Convinced that there is a better way to engage with the material of Christian authors, I created an alternative assignment, which about half of the class has chosen to participate in. I created a blog, dearbrianmclaren.wordpress.com, and invited students to write a personal letter to Brian. Here’s the criteria for the assignment and grading:
1) Letter must be addressed to Brian as the author of the book and should be between 500-600 words.2) You must speak to the practical implications of Brian’s content for your own life and ministry – no abstract, hypothetical or theoretical speculation. If taken seriously, what are the implications of Brian’s points and proposals for your church or how you live and minister? Obviously, you will have to be selective and won’t be able to address everything in the book, that’s fine.3) The degree to which you write with Christian charity. You are welcome, even encouraged, to disagree with anything (or everything!) Brian has to say, that’s not the point. The point is showing that you can disagree and respond to an actual person with Christian charity.5) Included within the letter, or at the end, you should pose 2-3 questions to Brian that you are left with after reading the book.4) Provided enough people are reviewing the book in this manner, you must comment on at least three other peoples letters/posts within a week of their being posted on the blog.
These letters have been posted and Brian has even been gracious enough to give some time to reading and responding to them. Though this is primarily a class assignment, the blog is public and I’d encourage you to read the letters and offerer comments if you choose.
Even better, if you’ve read the book, I’d invite to you respond along the lines of the guidelines above and leave a link to your letter in the comments below.
Ben Sternke said...
1I love it! Modeling charitable and civil discourse. Bloggers and politicians could learn something.
04/29/10 5:23 PM | Comment Link
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2[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by JR Rozko. JR Rozko said: via lifeasmission: Letters to Brian McLaren from Emerging Church Students http://bit.ly/bIlWKo #FB [...]
04/29/10 11:57 AM | Comment Link
jlundewhitler said...
3Great stuff JR. Thank you.
04/29/10 6:34 PM | Comment Link
Matt Tebbe said...
4This is a FANTASTIC assignment. Wow – I might even have to steal it.
04/29/10 7:50 PM | Comment Link
Nathan said...
5I thought Scot McKnight's review was helpful. It was critical in the best sense of the word and was not uncharitable.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2010/march/3….
04/29/10 8:09 PM | Comment Link
jrrozko said...
6Thanks Ben, look forward to your letter
04/29/10 8:33 PM | Comment Link
jrrozko said...
7Thanks Josh. Wanna write a letter?
04/29/10 8:34 PM | Comment Link
jrrozko said...
8Go for it!
04/29/10 8:34 PM | Comment Link
jrrozko said...
9Agreed. Scot is a pretty even-handed guy. Still, I would have liked to have seen more consideration given to the link (or perhaps disjunction in Scot's view) of Brian's writing and Brian's life and ministry along with some reflection along the lines of, "If we take Brian seriously, here's what this means for ministry at the level of the local church." Not saying all book reviews need to tread along these lines, but I do think some of it would be tremendously helpful.
04/29/10 8:37 PM | Comment Link