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Letters to a Young Congregation: Nurturing the Growth of a Faithful Church

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Eugene Peterson instilled the love of the local church in his family, and especially his son, pastor Eric E. Peterson. This collection of letters, written over several years by Eric, offers a poignant, pastoral vision for what the people of God are to be about in their personal lives and their life together. You'll find this wisdom for one local church to be warm, winsome, knowing, understanding, and universally relevant.

Eric E. Peterson addresses essential questions such as “What is a church? What should a church be doing? What do we owe each other? What can we expect from one another? How do we follow Christ together?” A pastor in the state of Washington, he wrestled with how to grow his infant church into a mature Christian community. This book was born in the midst of a church coming to life, and is a compelling read for any pastor, church leader, or congregant.

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Published June 23, 2020

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Eric E. Peterson

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Judy.
1,157 reviews
November 19, 2020
An inspiring collections of letters to a congregation by the pastor who serves there over many years. Eric Peterson ponders, gives advice and encourages. His writing style is personal, yet universal. He has grown and learned much from being a pastor in the same place for a long time.
Profile Image for Cameron Barham.
374 reviews1 follower
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May 14, 2022
“Jesus didn’t come to deliver us from our humanity and its accompanying heartaches, but to join us in it all (the good, the bad, the beautiful, and the ugly) and to use it as the raw material to redeem our lives.”, p. 25
Profile Image for Josh Olds.
1,013 reviews107 followers
July 20, 2020
Letters to a Young Congregation is the companion book to Letters to a Young Pastor. Where the latter was written by Eugene Peterson to his son, Eric, this is written from Eric to his congregation. These letters were written over the course of Eric’s still-ongoing ministry at Colbert Presbyterian, the church he founded, and showcase his thoughts and feelings about the church at various times in the church’s relatively young life.

Unlike Letters to a Young Pastor, Letters to a Young Congregation is structured topically, rather than chronologically. While this best fits the nature of the writing, I do also feel like there might be something lost by not knowing if a letter was written one year or twenty years into the journey. (Although one can determine some generalization from context.)

Eric writes with a pastor’s heart to a fledgling congregation, hoping to set up the foundation of a Christian community that lives a life of liturgy. The book is divided into four themes:

What My Life is About
What God is About
What the Church is About
What Following Jesus is About
My favorite letters, I think, come from that third part, where Peterson writes on the nature of the local church. Church has, too often, been commodified and consumerized. It is a production to attend, not a community to join. It is so obvious in this book that Rev. Peterson has taken great pains to avoid that pitfall and truly create community. The personalness and passion that flow through the book—particularly in this section—is a case study for how pastors should care for their churches.

Whether you’re a church leader or layperson, Letters to a Young Congregation will be influential in helping you develop a theology of the local church and the church service as spiritual practice. The focuses that Peterson brings to his congregation, and therefore to his readers, are all too often lost in many churches.

As a pastor, I found a great solidarity in reading this book. What Peterson asks of his congregation is not easy—which is why it often goes unasked. The missional type of community he desires is an ideal, one that is messy by nature in its implementation, one that results in more conflict, stress, and attention than if one simply ran a church as an organization. To know that others are going through this same process, that have the same goals, that aren’t content with the normal, superficial life of the church, but truly desire to live in and lead a community like this…it gives me hope that the church can truly be the church and live as a transformational community.

Letters to a Young Congregation is a modern-day epistle to a modern-day church. It had a specific application to a specific location, but its principles are timeless and true whatever the situation. Church growth and church planting books are often very rigid and structural, with diagrams and lists and strategies. Letters to a Young Congregation eclipses them all with its pastoral tone and relational bent that captures the true heart of ecclesia.
Profile Image for Ryan Linkous.
407 reviews43 followers
May 2, 2025
A great compendium of well-written pastoral essays/newsletters. They are organized under four sections (my life, God, church, and following Jesus). There isn’t a sustained or developed argument, but these are delightful morsels on the Christian life. Being shaped by his father Eugene, Eric has a wonderful vision on the Christian life.

In particular, his thoughts about baptism sparkle. As a Baptist, I find myself wanting to appropriate nearly all that he has to say about it. I hope to explore this further in his book on Baptism.
636 reviews3 followers
March 7, 2021
I won a copy of this book in a Goodreads Giveaway. Thank you!

While I do not consider myself to be particularly religious, nor am I a member of a specific faith community, I found the letters in this anthology thought provoking. I read this somewhat slowly, thinking about and even meditating on what Pastor Peterson had to say. While I can’t say I agree whole heartedly with everything he writes, there is much to consider in terms of being the kind of person I aspire to be.
Profile Image for Jon Anderson.
522 reviews8 followers
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December 22, 2020
Mediations on church life, taken from years of weekly newsletters. Father's influence evident, which is not a bad thing at all.
Profile Image for Luke McCarnan.
161 reviews2 followers
April 10, 2021
This book is pastoral and poetic. It was refreshing in its simplicity, honesty, and love. As a congregant, it was challenging for life and encouraging about pastors.
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