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So Beautiful

Divine Design for Life and the Church

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

More than 50 years ago scientists made a remarkable discovery, proclaiming, "We have found the secret of life ... and it's so pretty!" The secret was the discovery that life is helixical, two strands wound around a single axis—what most of us know today as the model for DNA.

Over the course of his ministry, author Leonard Sweet has discovered that this divine design also informs God's blueprint for the church. In this seminal work, he shares the woven strands that form the church: missional, relational, and incarnational. Sweet declares that this secret is not just pretty, but beautiful. In fact, So Beautiful!

Using the poignant life of John Newton as a touchstone, Sweet calls for the re-union of these three essential, complementary strands of the Christian life. Far from a novel idea, Sweet shows how this structure is God's original intent, and shares the simply beautiful design for His church.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 9, 2009
      The prolific Sweet—author of articles, sermons, books—turns his vast knowledge of culture and faith toward what he calls “the secret of life”: an “MRI church where 'M' = Missional, 'R' = Relational, and 'I' = Incarnational.” He digs deep into “MRI theology,” calling it “the only theology worth bothering with” and offering leaders and laypeople a new paradigm for bringing Christ to the world. Sweet outlines the characteristics of each element: missional—”The church is 'sent' to be Jesus”; relational—”Biblical truth... feasts on relationship and revelation”; incarnational—”The Incarnational life strikes it rich by multiple connections with community and context.” Readers will find much to ponder, but they'll have to wade through Sweet's metaphor-heavy, rambling and jumpy writing style, plus his confusing, frequent use of quotation marks around words and phrases as if tweaking their meaning. His vision for following Christ individually and as the church is commendable; his presentation, however, is confounding.

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  • English

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