BOOK
REVIEW: THE CELTIC
WAY OF EVANGELISM
The Celtic Way of Evangelism:
How Christianity Can Reach the West … Again by George G.
Hunter III. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2000. ISBN
0-687-08585-3. Paperback 144 pages counting index.
After he read my article "The
Leaven Community," my bishop Dan Morse sent me a copy of this
book. You have to read books – especially books written by
professors at mainstream Protestant seminaries – the same way
you eat catfish: swallow the meat and spit out the bones. If
you won’t do that, you’ll just waste all your time fussing
about the bones.
I know that the present Celtic
revival in music, art, and religion is chockfull of
exaggeration. Still, there is enough to learn from Celtic
Christianity that we ought to persevere past the faddish
fluff. Most Christians don’t know that there a strong native
Celtic Church flourished in Ireland before the Roman church
reached the Emerald Isle, or that St. Patrick belonged to it.
Further, this amazing church evangelised Scotland, most of
England, and parts of Europe.
In this book you’ll have to dig
through a lot of professional church-person jargon and some
academic cant to reach the points, but your finds will repay
the excavation. Unlike the model of overseas evangelism we
know, Celtic Church first created communities that
served as beachheads into pagan nations, converting their
neighbourhoods as much by example, hospitality, worship, and
daily life as by confrontational preaching. Hunter argues that
we face today exactly what Patrick faced in evangelising
Ireland in the fifth century: pagan barbarians. Given the
de-christianisation of America in the last century, he’s
right.
The result of Patrick’s mission
and method was an explosion of practical Christianity in
Ireland, a deep commitment whose blessings extend to this day.
"Their Christian faith and community addressed life as a whole
and may have addressed the middle level more specifically,
comprehensively, and powerfully than any other Christian
movement ever has. A folk Christianity of, by, and for the
people developed. It helped common people to live and cope as
Christians day by day in the face of poverty, enemies, evil
forces, nature’s uncertainties, and frequent threats from many
quarters." (p. 32).
While I certainly agree with
Hunter’s call for "indigenous" churches, he flops over into
"seeker-friendly" churches as well. What, shouldn’t
every church be seeker friendly? Frankly, no,
not if they can only do it at a cost of capitulating to
the childish self-centeredness of the American psyche.
(Hootenannies, anyone? Twelve step sin-recovery?) Christianity
is more than, "I’m OK, you’re OK, and God’s OK, too." People
who think that way have never met the Jesus who invades your
life and re-arranges all the furniture – permanently –
without consulting you..
Never mind all that --- here I
am choking on the very bones I warned to avoid. Every
Christian could benefit from reading this book because it will
make him examine his own life and practice toward unbelievers
– and how you can best woo them to the Gospel. And
possibly, it just might start you thinking in terms of
"Christian community." – F. Sanders
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