Books
Excerpt

Your Church Is Too Safe

Why following Christ turns the world upside-down.

Historian Daniel Boorstin documents a momentous shift that occurred in North America in the nineteenth century: we stopped calling people who went on trips travelers and started calling them tourists.

Your Church Is Too Safe: Why Following Christ Turns the World Upside-Down

Your Church Is Too Safe: Why Following Christ Turns the World Upside-Down

Zondervan

240 pages

$23.77

Traveler literally means “one who travails.” He labors, suffers, endures. A traveler—a travailer—gets impregnated with a new and strange reality, grows huge and awkward trying to carry it, and finally, in agony, births something new and beautiful. To get there, he immerses himself in a culture, learns the language and customs, lives with the locals, imitates the dress, eats what’s set before him. He takes risks, some enormous, and makes sacrifices, some extravagant. He has tight scrapes and narrow escapes. He is gone a long time. If ever he returns, he returns forever altered ….

A tourist, not so. Tourist means, literally, “one who goes in circles.” He’s just taking an exotic detour home. He’s only passing through, sampling wares, acquiring souvenirs. He tastes more than eats what’s put before him. He retreats each night to what’s safe and familiar. He picks up a word here, a phrase there, but the language, and the world it’s embedded in, remains opaque and cryptic, and vaguely menacing. He spectates and consumes. He returns to where he’s come from with an album of photos, a few mementos, a cheap hat. He’s happy to be back. He declares there’s no place like home.

We’ve made a similar shift in the church. At some point we stopped calling Christians disciples and started calling them believers. A disciple is one who follows and imitates Jesus. She loses her life in order to find it. She steeps in the language and culture of Christ until his Word and his world reshape hers, redefine her, change inside out how she sees and thinks and dreams and, finally, lives ….

A believer, not so. She holds certain beliefs, but how deep down these go depends on the weather or her mood. She can get defensive, sometimes bristlingly so, about her beliefs, but in her honest moments she wonders why they’ve made such scant difference ….

You can’t be a disciple without being a believer. But—here’s the rub—you can be a believer and not a disciple. You can say all the right things, think all the right things, believe all the right things, do all the right things, and still not follow and imitate Jesus.

The kingdom of God is made up of travailers, but our churches are largely populated with tourists. The kingdom is full of disciples, but our churches are filled with believers.

Used and condensed by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved. www.zondervan.com

Copyright © 2012 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Your Church Is Too Safe is available from Christianbook.com and other retailers.

Previous articles by or about Mark Buchanan include:

Spiritual Rhythm | Being with Jesus every season of your soul. (October 21, 2010)

Messy, Costly, Dirty Ministry | The risk of welcoming those nobody else wants. (Leadership Journal, May 15, 2009)

This Is It | What kind of groundwork leads to real community? (Leadership Journal, April 25, 2008)

Relentless Pursuit | Mark Buchanan examines the fruit of spiritual disciplines. (March 26, 2007)

Wreck the Roof | Are you willing to take apart the church to bring people to Jesus? (Leadership Journal, January 1, 2007)

Schedule, Interrupted | Discovering God’s time-management. (February 6, 2006)

CT also has more books, film, and music reviews.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

The Missing Factor in Higher Education

Perry L. Glanzer

Vicarious Humanity: By His Birth We Are Healed

Oliver D. Crisp

Wilson's Bookmarks

John Wilson

Review

Could God Have Created a World Without Suffering?

Douglas Groothuis

Michael Patton Brews a Potent Theology

Mark Moring

My Top 5 Books On Archaeology

Craig A. Evans

Review

The Heart of Christian Life: Pillars of Hospitality

Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove

Are Secular Television Shows with Moral Messages Good for Christian Children?

Carla Barnhill, Phil Vischer, and Vincent Bacote

Why Are Our Communion Meals So Paltry?

Interview: Julie Lee

Mark Moring

The 'Above All' Commandment of the Sabbath

Kevin Emmert

Family as Calling: Finding Vocation In and Near the Home

Interview by Caryn Rivadeneira

News

Evangelical Foundations See Surge in Donations

Chris Norton

Editorial

The Supreme Court's Religious Freedom Reality Check

A Christianity Today Editorial

The Evangelistic Question That Died

News

Persecution in VBS Materials: How Much Information is Too Much for Children?

Rob Moll

News

Tsunami Aftermath: Second Chances in Japan

Alanna Foxwell-Barajas in northeast Japan

Sailing into the Storm: Philip Ryken and D. Michael Lindsay on the Challenges in Christian Higher Education

Interview by Timothy C. Morgan

News

Presbyterians Form a New Denomination, Court Upholds Ultrasound Law, and More

Letters to the Editor

News

City Shuts Down Church Club

Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra

Learning Life Lessons from Russian Babushkas

Timothy C. Morgan

Little Colleges That Could

Jocelyn Green

GCB: Desperate Christian Housewives

Mark Moring

News

Quotation Marks

News

Is Mercury Pollution's Effect on Newborns a Pro-Life Issue?

Compiled by Ruth Moon

Review

Out of the Darkness of Porn

Mark Moring

More Media

Books to Note

Two Minutes With ... Julie Lee

Mark Moring

Folkie Finds Love

Kristin Garrett

Online Poll

News

Go Figure

News

Passages

Why Last Saturday's Political Conclave of Evangelical Leaders Was Dangerous

View issue

Our Latest

Blaming Women Harms Us All

Dorothy Littel Greco

When we fail to protect and honor women like Jesus, we all lose.

Synthetic Love Will Tear Us Apart

Chris Poblete

When we outsource intimacy to machines, we become what we practice. And we’re practicing the wrong things.

The Russell Moore Show

N.T. Wright on The Vision of Ephesians

The Professor is in – and he’s talking about Ephesians.

The Bulletin

Kidnappings in Nigeria, Rep. Greene Resigns, Mamdani Meets Trump

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Persecution in Nigeria, Marjorie Taylor Greene resigns, Mamdani and Trump have a friendly meeting, and listeners give thanks.

Our Prayers Don’t Disappear into Thin Air

Bohye Kim

Why Scripture talks of our entreaties to God as rising like incense.

From Outer Space to Rome

In 1962, CT engaged friends and enemies in the Cold War and the Second Vatican Council.

May Cause a Spontaneous Outburst of Festive Joy

8 new Christmas albums for holiday parties, praise, and playlists.

Excerpt

Meet CT’s New President

The Bulletin with Nicole Martin and Walter Kim

Nicole Martin seeks to mend evangelical divides and uphold biblical truth.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube