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Limited Church: Unlimited Kingdom: Uniting Church and Family in the Great Commission

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God created the institution of the family and the institution of the local church with distinct purposes. Both exist for the glory of God and the spreading of the Gospel. Limited Unlimited Kingdom seeks to reclaim the simple, transformational, and global mission revealed in Scripture for both the church and the family. Rob Rienow shares from a heart for ministry and gives significant insight based on his ministry experience as well as the experiences of others. His motivation for writing this books is to see churches and families have a lasting impact on future generations. He begin the work by setting a solid foundation on the sufficiency of Scripture followed by another vital section on the lost doctrine of jurisdiction. Rienow continues by sharing God's mission for the local church and the family followed by an excellent section on uniting the church and family in the Great Commission. Each chapter ends with discussion questions, making this an ideal read for a ministry team, small group study, or seminary class. Parents and grandparents will benefit as well from this book gaining a plan to pass faith to the next generation. Rienow brings local churches and families together to advance the gospel.

316 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 26, 2013

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About the author

Rob Rienow

23 books12 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Laura Langley.
93 reviews1 follower
April 20, 2013
Rethinking Roles of Church and Family

In his book Limited Church: Unlimited Kingdom, Uniting Church and Family in the Great Commission, author Rob Rienow searches the scriptures for the unique roles that family and the local church plan in advancing the Gospel, challenging what many of today's churches and families practice. He calls churches back to a more limited set of responsibilities and families to more expanded ones.
He purports that the church's God-given tasks include worshiping God, preaching the Bible, caring for believers, and equipping believers for works of ministry (p. 87). His conclusion: "When the local church 'limits' its focus and activities within its God-given jurisdiction, God blesses the church's ministry, and the Kingdom of God advances for His ever-increasing glory" (p. 74).
As for families, Rienow says their mission is to be discipleship centers, to impress the hearts of children with a love for God, and to be an essential engine of world evangelization through the power of multi-generational faithfulness (pp. 146-47).
In the remainder of the book, Rienow outlines how local churches and families can unite in fulfilling the Great Commission. This, for me, was the most challenging part of the book. While I can certainly agree with Rienow's theology and his conclusions, this is a paradigm shift for most churches today, and one that takes both prayer and time. You can bet I'll be thinking through a lot of Rienow's suggestions and praying over how we can implement some of them in our own family and local church.
If you're from a program-based evangelical church, get ready to wrestle with some of your "traditions." Many of us have grown up in churches that segregated age groups, where the various ages saw each other in the car on the way to church and on the way back home. According to Rienow, that's not God's intention, and he cites biblical evidence. I do appreciate that Rienow encourages the reader to study the scriptures and to even disagree with him as long as one can support his argument biblically and prayerfully.
For those who are discontent with the fact that so many young people are leaving the church today, you'll find this a helpful tool.
Limited Church: Unlimited Kingdom is a great book, biblically based with lots to think about. It's one I'll likely refer to over and over again as our family continues to grow in faith together and as we serve in our church and community.
Don't expect to finish the book quickly. While it's not difficult reading, there's so much to think about that you'll want to take your time.
*Note: I received a copy of the book from the publisher for this review. However, the opinions expressed are my own.
Profile Image for Kayla.
Author 4 books20 followers
March 4, 2015
I purchased this book on Kindle a long time ago, and it sat on my "bookshelf." After reading Visionary Marriage (also by Rienow), Limited Church: Unlimited Kingdom rapidly climbed my "eager to read" list. And I was not disappointed!

I found it to be an easy read, but not a quick one. While I could have read it quickly, I preferred to read it slowly (1-2 chapters a day) and wrestle with the material. Did I agree? If I disagreed, what Scripture supported my "side"? I spent many hours discussing sufficiency and jurisdiction with my husband. That is the kind of book worth my time.

If you are content with your current walk with Christ, this book will upset you. The sufficiency of Scripture is not normal for most Western Christians, so if you determine to live out that doctrine, many people won't understand. But obedience usually costs us something. Be encouraged... and challenged. Read this book!
Profile Image for Zachary Hanje.
62 reviews8 followers
March 3, 2015
Excellent, helpful book. Through refreshingly Scripture-centered writing, Rob seeks to establish a doctrine of 'jurisdiction' and shows that, when the church limits itself in function and purpose, it serves the Kingdom in far better ways. He exhorts families to take on the responsibilities of neighborhood evangelism, children-discipleship, etc., rather than churches forming program after program to do so.

I found his discussion of family ministry and including children in worship services helpful. I was also encouraged and challenged by Rob's continual call to base not only what we believe on Scripture, but the "who" and "how" to those beliefs on Scripture as well.
4 reviews1 follower
February 14, 2020
Excellent take on how church has encroached on the jurisdiction of the family in many areas of life and ministry.
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