Brian Nall's Blog
Guiding People in Authentic Faith
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Book Review: The Treasure Principle
Randy Alcorn's The Treasure Principle is a must read for every Christian. So often our heart and faith is intricately attached to our finances, thereby limiting our spiritual development according to how much we have in our checking account.
The 6 chapters of TTP break apart our faith-restricting financial hold by discovering how valuable the kingdom of God is in comparison to our selfish pursuits, freeing us up to maximize our resources for eternal payoffs through giving, gaining a perspective on our money by keeping our focus on eternity and not the now, overcoming various roadblocks and excuses that we so readily throw up to generous giving and eternal living, and providing a step by step process for launching into a life of giving
Besides the richness of the first 6 chapters, the last part of the book is with the investment. The giving covenant (pg. 96) helps to formalize our commitment to the giving principle. Lastly, the last section "31 Radical, Liberating Questions to Ask God About Your Giving" will bring the principles of the book into the backyard of every reader causing personal reflection rooted in biblical references.
Pick it up today and get another for a new Christian.
"I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review"
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Review of "Radical Together"
Just as in Radical, David’s first book, Radical Together (RT) is 6 chapters that will drive every pastor, church leader, and even church-goer to consider the Christian journey, and in this case the collective journey of the church, as the Bible designed it instead of how the American dream has reshaped it. Chapter 1: “Tyranny of the Good” – Platt combats the present–Church philosophy that busyness equals godliness by recognizing that within the organization of the church there are a plethora of “good” options to keep oneself busy but very few that lead a person to embrace why the church exists – to make disciples. Therefore, it is essential to put everything up for sacrifice in order to achieve the God-ordained mission of the church.
Chapter 2: “The Gospel Misunderstood” – Many faithful church attendees live out their Christian life attached to the church pew under the guise that they are entering heaven on the wings of grace of which works plays no part. Platt reaffirms the God’s sole plan of grace, but drives the principle that the way grace is completely embraced is when it is lived out in works that accomplish the will of God. RT gives numerous examples of how the Church of Brook Hills, the church Platt Pastors in Birmingham, is living out what they learn from scripture.
Chapter 3: “God is Saying Something” – In this chapter Platt elevates the role of the Bible within the church due to recent trends within evangelicalism to promote other forms of connecting with God under the belief that scripture has a challenge to connect with present culture. But RT practically leads you to “trust the word” and in so doing it will “unleash the potential of God’s people in the world.” And when this occurs the church relies on the infinite power of scripture instead of the abilities of the church leadership.
Chapter 4: “The Genius of Wrong” - This chapter puts the frequent used model of “just get’em here and the pastor will do the rest” on its head by pointing out the exponential affect the church can have when people are trained to engage their community and disciple those who are around them. Platt (as does scripture) places the responsibility of discipleship upon all Christians and not just those who are deemed professional.
Chapter 5: “Our Unmistakable Task” – The world is the focus. Responding from his first assignment as Pastor of Brook Hills to identify the target in to community, Platt shows how the focus must be the world (while not ignoring the community). To this end the church must participate in all forms of reaching the world’s people groups
Chapter 6: “The God Who Exalts God” – “We are to be selfless followers of a self-centered God. But the problem is that we often reverse this in the church. We become self-centered followers of a selfless God.” (that about says it all.)
I intend to use the Small-Group Discussion Guide located in the back of the book to guide my church and others to evaluate how well we are aligned to the biblical principles Platt puts forth in Radical Together.
"I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review"
Monday, April 18, 2011
A Life Lesson without the Training Wheels

As I was feeling like Forest Gump running across America, a discipleship lesson began to flood through my mind. All too often churches can be guilty of meeting people with a deep resolve to grow in their faith but often the next step is to just put them in a class to hear oral instruction from those who are already experiencing faith on two wheels. But such a process isn't good enough (and was not what Jesus modeled). I don't believe people are looking for another class to attend; rather, i believe people desire someone who has been where they are to run behind them throughout life in order for them to strengthen their walk (or ride) through this world.
People need those who will run behind them encouraging, instructing, adjusting, and reassuring. Is it exhausting work, yes. But whoever said coming alongside someone else was easy.
So if you have ever had the desire to grow in your faith but found yourself in a classroom still needing training wheels, I'm sorry. As a pastor, we should have done better. We must do better. I'll run with you.
FYI: by the end of day 3 Baleigh was riding around the block (w/o training wheels).
Happy Monday,
BNall
