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The New Adapters: Shaping Ideas to Fit Your Congregation

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Learn how new and
young pastors from across the country are translating eight time-tested
principles of church leadership. Adam Hamilton and Mike Slaughter
introduce each principle and discuss its importance in their ministries.
Author Jacob Armstrong then shows how the principle works in new
contexts today. The New Adapters is full of energy, wisdom, and stories of hope.
“If you have wondered
what adaptive leadership looks like in practice, here it is. Jacob
Armstrong offers a road map for reaching the mission field, writing with
honesty, clarity, humility, and a heart attuned to the gospel. He
invites us into a conversation with Adam Hamilton and Mike Slaughter
that is both substantial and practical. Gather a team around you and let
this book guide you to become New Adapters!” —Bishop Bill McAlilly,
Nashville Episcopal Area of The United Methodist Church
“ The New Adapters
is a fantastic read — a clarion call for what is needed in
congregations today. It will immediately start to shift the way you
think about ministry.” —F. Douglas Powe Jr., Professor and Associate
Director of the Center for the Missional Church, Wesley Theological
Seminary, Washington, DC
“A wonderful,
hopeful, and practical volume for pastors, laity, and judicatory leaders
who want to facilitate and participate in adaptive change. Armstrong
draws wisdom from practitioners while refusing to offer a cookie cutter
for the church.” —Elaine A. Heath, McCreless Professor of Evangelism,
Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX
“This practical book
should be in every church leader’s library. Armstrong invites us to
reclaim our love for the church, practice Holy Spirit dependence, and
become New Adapters in living the mission of Jesus Christ. Jacob is
calling us toward a new kind of church, one that gives me hope for the
future!” —Bishop Mark J. Webb, Upper New York Episcopal Area of The
United Methodist Church

120 pages, Paperback

First published April 21, 2015

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
72 reviews3 followers
December 2, 2015
A good quick read. An overview of some of the current practices as churches try to learn new ways to be church in the current setting. And I have to explain - two stars is not a bad review - if I finish the book I don't think it's a not a good read. So beginning from the basic point - it's a good read - the two stars is more indicative of level of enthusiasm.
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23 reviews2 followers
July 16, 2021
Wonderful Ideas!

Loved the insight from this book as the author not only offers ideas, but experiences. He does so in a way that invites contextualization. This book is not a cookie cutter model of how to build a big church but a thought provoking work that can lead to the insightful work of growing a community focused beyond the numbers.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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