Harvest Bible Fellowship is a network of churches on the move. It
seems as if every week brings a report of a new church plant somewhere
in the world. From what I have observed locally, these are solid
churches whose pastors love God’s Word and where people are being
transformed by the gospel. James MacDonald is the founder of this
movement and he refers to them as “vertical” churches. What MacDonald
wants is for every local church to be a place where people have “a
weekly experience with the manifest glory of God.” The local church is
to be the one place where people experience what they can experience
nowhere else.
Vertical Church is part manifesto and part
instructional guide and is one of those unusual and unfortunate books
that combines genuine strengths with disappointing weaknesses. The first
half of the book is strong and provides a biblical basis for a vertical
model of the local church; the second half is far weaker in explaining
how to create one.
The Strengths of Vertical Church
Vertical Church
has many notable strengths. The discussion of verticality is very
helpful and provoked the pastor in me to think carefully about the
worship services at my church and the role of church leaders in
providing an experience of God’s glory and majesty. Our role is not
simply to check off a list of boxes—singing, Bible-reading, preaching,
prayer—but to lead people in an encounter with the living God.
MacDonald’s desire to glorify God in every facet of the church’s life is
laudable and challenging. He shares a great deal of wisdom earned
through many years of ministry while critiquing both the church growth
movement and those traditional churches that don’t care to grow at all. Continue at Tim Challies

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