The Gap Between Belief and Everyday Life
In my Transforming Contemporary Culture class, one of the books we are reading is The Shaping of Things to Come: Innovation and Mission for the 21st-Century Church by Michael Frost & Alan Hirsch. I am really enjoying this book so far (which makes up for the ones I'm not).
One interesting discussion that the authors bring up is in reference to Robert Banks' discussion in Redeeming the Routines about the gap that exists for many of us between "church life" and "real life." Hmmm, sounds like a thread of she said that they said that he said...'cuz it is...
Take a look at these 10 points that Banks makes. How many of them ring true in your life?
- Few of us apply or know how to apply our belief to our work, or lack of work.
- We only make minimal connections between our faith and our spare time activities.
- We have little sense of a Christian approach to regular activities like domestic chores.
- Our everyday attitudes are partly shaped by the dominant values of our society.
- Many of our spiritual difficulties stem from the daily pressure we experience (lack of time, exhaustion, family pressures, etc.).
- Our everyday concerns receive little attention in the church.
- Only occasionally do professional theologians address routine activities.
- When addressed, everyday issues tend to be approached too theoretically.
- Only a minority of Christians read religious books or attend theological courses.
- Most churchgoers reject the idea of a gap between their beliefs and their ways of life.
[Taken from Frost & Hirsch, The Shaping of Things to Come: Innovation and Mission for the 21st-Century Church, 19-20.]









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