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An Agenda for Change

Joel EdwardsJoel Edwards will be making a final tour of the United Kingdom, as General Director of the Alliance. He will be connecting with Alliance members, using a combination of DVD presentation, preaching and interactive discussion to explain and explore the contents of his new book An Agenda for Change.... more

Agena for Change Book Cover 
An Agenda for Change is available from all good high street and on-line bookstores, or call 020 7207 2100 to order if you have any problems.

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A Book Review

An Agenda for Change is the beginning of a conversation. While it has a primary audience - the evangelical family across the world - it will also appeal to Christians everywhere who want to be part of the great unfolding Christian story: the church sent out to advance the Kingdom of God as servants of transforming good news .

In the global west or north it is difficult to any longer think of the Christian church as transforming. Christian faith in Europe, and even to some extent in America, has lost most of its political control. Church attendance is plummeting. And yet God is at work in the midst of this western desperation. Denominations are undergoing structural reviews. Visions and missions have been overhauled. Sacred cows have been dragged to the altar of modernisation. Fresh expressions, emerging churches and even painful discussions about the atonement are all part of an active and vibrant Christianity. It’s agonisingly bewildering, but a pain that must be embraced.

Contemporary evangelicalism is faced with an array of challenges. What is to be done? Joel Edwards presents a three point agenda for change.

Firstly the church must present Christ credibly.

For too long evangelicalism has offered a distorted version of Jesus to the world. It is time to rediscover his humanity, his storytelling, his love for the outlaws and his life-giving and generous nature. It is time to recognise that in a pluralist culture (which is nothing new) Christ must be presented with boldness and confidence amongst the gods. He must be allowed to speak for himself and not shoe-horned into a restricted moral agenda. The church must put more if its energy into lifting him up than denigrating the other gods of our age. In all of this the miraculous and supernatural must be given space to speak to a culture weary of rationalism. And Christ’s conversational model of engagement must be the template for interaction with societies moving beyond the argumentative, win/lose spirit of modernity. Questions and dialogue should be the norm. The church has a vital role to play, despite its flaws, and needs to rediscover a passion for the bible. Intelligence, prayer and moral integrity in all areas will be critical. Social action must become the inevitable outworking of faith.

Secondly the word ‘evangelical’ needs to be rehabilitated as good news.

It has become tainted by association with bigotry, fundamentalism and narrow moral agendas and party politics. There is movement to abandon the label but this would be a mistake. The word has to be reclaimed so that it can once again be synonymous with anguish rather than anger, grace rather than opposition, action rather than argument. The left, right and centre parties within evangelicalism need to see the value in the other and recognise that unity is a biblical truth not an optional extra.

Thirdly evangelicalism must recognise that the good news is for spiritual and social transformation.

It starts with the individual but never ends there. Social change is part and parcel of the gospel. Christians need to adopt citizenship mindsets which see their churches as agents of positive change in society, starting with the square miles surrounding them. The church will become part of the solution to the numerous ills afflicting western culture. This is a long-term project, a cathedral building exercise. It will require strategic and intentional thinking. Many of the benefits will be seen by future generations. The job of the church now is to lay the foundations.

Latest comments :
(The views below are the authors', and not necessarily those of the Evangelical Alliance.)

Written by Catherine Butcher on 02 June 2008 at 14.07
An Agenda for Change
A global call for spiritual and social transformation
Joel Edwards
Zondervan, £7.99, 9780310283713

After 10 years as General Director of the Evangelical Alliance UK, Joel Edwards leaves this book as a legacy to challenge the evangelical wing of the church and to help the rest of the church to understand the evangelicals' painful journey over the past few decades.

Edwards' threefold agenda is simply stated. Presenting Christ credibly and engaging in spiritual and social transformation starting in our neighbourhoods are both challenges all Christians face. His third challenge ? to rehabilitate the word 'evangelical' to again mean 'good news' -- might seem to be the impossible task.

Extremists might not like to see themselves as Edwards sees them. Others will criticise his willingness to admit that evangelicals don't hold a monopoly on truth. But his gracious, self-deprecating style and engagement with people who have different perspectives, mean the book makes stimulating reading for all who would seek to be God's 'good news' people.

Catherine Butcher
Editor of the Mothers' Union magazine Home & Family
www.familiesfirstmagazine.com
Written by Phil Groom on 30 April 2008 at 11.05
From the Christian Bookshops Blog, christianbookshopsblog.org.uk:

An Agenda for Change
Posted by Phil Groom under Bookshop Ramblings | Tags: Evangelical, Gay |

It was a privilege to meet Joel Edwards yesterday, retiring General Director of the Evangelical Alliance. Joel was visiting LST as part of his An Agenda for Change Tour and kindly stopped off at the Bookshop to sign copies of his new book of the same title (minus the 'Tour', of course).

As the first black man at the top of the EA, it seems that Joel has never been far from controversy, most recently about his appointment to the Equality and Human Rights Commission, with questions being raised from both sides ? conservative evangelicals suspecting him of selling out, the gay lobby wanting to know how a representative of evangelicalism could ever possibly defend equality.

I'd say the gay lobby have a good point there: evangelicals are not exactly renowned for promoting equal rights for gays. In fact, the term 'evangelical' itself seems to have become something of a dirty word: synonymous with bigoted, prejudiced, short-sighted, narrow-minded, obnoxious, homophobic? I could go on, but I won't: I'm happy to say that, in my brief encounter at least, Joel Edwards didn't come over as any of these things; a charming, urbane gentleman, rather.

And much of his book, if I've understood things correctly - have to say I haven't read it yet, but yes, it's on the agenda; and I did take the opportunity to grab a signed copy - is about rescuing the word 'evangelical' from all these negative connotations. Is that possible? Time will tell?

Book Details
An Agenda for Change: A Global Call for Spiritual and Social Transformation
Zondervan, 2008
9780310283713 | 031028371X
£7.99

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