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Tim keller
Tim keller









tim keller

Located in Ventura, California, Barna Group has been conducting and analyzing primary research to understand cultural trends related to values, beliefs, attitudes and behaviors since 1984.I have spent a good part of my life talking with people about the role of faith in the face of imminent death. īarna is a private, non-partisan, for-profit organization under the umbrella of the Issachar Companies. Interested in how you can be involved in your city? Barna is partnering with Gloo to kick off a new initiative to do research on a local city level- sign up for a launch event in your city today!Ĭomment on this article and follow our work:įeatured image by Vicky Bufano on Unsplash. Still, at the same time, we have to use the digital to woo people into face-to-face relationships, or they are not really going to be changed by the Gospel.” We are going to be able to do better education and outreach. He adds, “There are a lot of things we can do digitally that are actually going to involve more people. In light of this, Keller imagines a middle, hybrid approach will be how the church moves forward into the future. He notes that while getting content from a leader is better-“there’s a discipline to it and nobody misses”-people are struggling to get to know one another as they have in the past. At the same time, one of the biggest drawbacks Keller sees to digital gatherings is that people are not connecting with one another quite as much. On one hand, Keller expresses gratitude for the ways in which an online platform can reach more people and help those with busy lives or who are traveling to still attend church. Keller shares what he has found as the strengths and weaknesses of teaching over Zoom, even in a classroom setting. Instead, Keller proposes that every city have an “ecosystem in which you have all sizes of churches.” While micro-gatherings will be able to meet tangible needs in ways that larger churches cannot, he encourages finding a balance and recognizing how larger churches might meet other needs for a city in ways that a small church cannot.Īs the church begins to reimagine what a post-pandemic world will look like, many leaders are grappling with what digital versus in-person elements they want to keep as part of their regular church rhythms. Keller says, “The culture is anti-institutional in the extreme, but an institution is something that actually keeps going when the people are gone because it has its own being.” Overall, Keller challenges Christians to consider the ways in which their vision of the Church is being shaped by culture instead of the Biblical truth. There’s no bigger community that you can go to to form another one or to be part of and then you feel left out.” Suddenly half the people can move away over a six-month period, and it falls apart. People get very excited, but it’s a mobile world now. Keller shares his reflections on why he hasn’t seen a long-term, successful “micro-church” (or house church) movement during his time doing ministry in New York City. Keller shares that the realization of this partially-present Kingdom of God revealed in the resurrection keeps him from a “blind optimism” that gets discouraged when things go wrong in this world, while also showing the power of the Age to Come in his life right now when he gets too pessimistic or defeated. In sharing about his new book, Hope in Times of Fear: The Resurrection and the Meaning of Easter, Keller says that thinking of the resurrection keeps him from being too cynical or naïve about his perspective of the present. I can know that eventually it’s going to be okay.” He adds, “You’ve got a God who actually knows suffering, so I can get through it now when I’m in the midst of it. It’s just sitting there unused by most people.” It has been through understanding Christ’s closeness that Keller has continued to find hope in seasons of hardship. “I had to make something to help me get through the day,” notes Keller, before continuing, “The Christian theology of suffering is so potent. Keller notes that while this discovery did not cause him to rethink his view of suffering, it has challenged him to put his beliefs into action in ways like never before. In addition to challenges brought on by the pandemic, Keller also announced in June 2020 that he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

tim keller

Throughout the episode, Keller shares how he’s finding focus amidst a pandemic and offers his thoughts on new church contexts. In a recent episode of ChurchPulse Weekly, Tim Keller-founding pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church, theologian and best-selling author-joins podcast hosts Carey Nieuwhof and David Kinnaman to talk about his own journey of suffering this past year.











Tim keller