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The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical

The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical

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Author: Shane Claiborne
Publisher: Zondervan
Category: Book

List Price: $14.99
Buy New: $7.80
You Save: $7.19 (48%)



New (53) Used (28) from $7.50

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 135 reviews
Sales Rank: 1532

Media: Paperback
Pages: 368
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5 x 0.9

ISBN: 0310266300
Dewey Decimal Number: 277.3083092
EAN: 9780310266303

Publication Date: February 1, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Using unconventional examples from his own life, Shane Claiborne stirs up questions about the church and the world, and challenges readers to truly live out their Christian faith.


Customer Reviews:   Read 130 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Kingdom is a Revolution   March 19, 2006
MES-DocTheology (Rochester, MN)
38 out of 42 found this review helpful

Shane has captured the complacency found in western Christianity. Personally I prefer deep books on theology, but this author has given us "street-wise" theology that needs to be read by every teen, collegiate, and adult. Shane has taken the essence of the message of Jesus and given a practical and pastoral theology. That does not mean it has become domesticated, not in the least. Shane Claiborne sees the phrase "Kingdom of God" and exchanged the world "Revolution" for the word "Kingdom." Does that make a difference? Not in what Jesus meant, but it greatly changes how people view the practicaly day to day workings of Jesus' life, ministry, teachings, and words. He freely shows how even the words of Jesus existed in the flesh through the works of Ghandi and Mother Teresa. Whether it is sleeping with the lepers or giving away everything he has to feed an empty stomach, Irresistible Revolution grabs the westernized, domesticated, once-a-week Christian and shakes them to the core with ideas and thoughts that rarely enter most church doors on a given Sunday. Does that mean I agree with it all? No. But reading a good book, like Shane's, is like eating fish...there is a lot of meat and a few bones to spit out. But in the end, I think every reader will be greatly satisfied with the meal after feasting on this book.


5 out of 5 stars Funny and challenging...   February 3, 2006
C. Swanson (New Hampshire)
14 out of 14 found this review helpful

This book is a quick read that will leave you thinking (and praying) long after you're done with it. Shane's writting is witty and self-depricating, and yet he takes himself seriously as a disciple of Christ. He is not interested in finger-pointing or placing blame for what he sees as a chasm between what the Church is and what Christ called her to be, neither is he interested in glossing over each of our complicity in "the system". His book is a paper version of his tireless invitation to anyone who asks about his community, The Simple Way, "Come and see!" I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in following Christ--it would make a great introduction to radical Christian living. I can't wait to share it with friends and family and see what they think about the challenge of the Gospel as Shane lays it out.


5 out of 5 stars Inner and Outer in Harmony   February 6, 2006
Mike Morrell (Atlanta, GA, USA)
12 out of 12 found this review helpful

As someone who lives in an intentional Christian community that emphasizes the inner, contemplative life of the church, it has been difficult for me to articulate and put flesh on my longings for this life of Christ within me to spill out onto the streets. Shane Claiborne succeeds in telling his community's--the Simple Way's--story...admirably.

For him, there is no dichotomy between the rich mystical experience of God's fellowship and the urgent need for ordinary radicals to live out God's justice and shalom. Page after page, the two go hand in hand.

The story of Shane and his friends will convict you--through Scripture, church history, struggle, and experience--in the best of all possible ways: not by piling on guilt but by assuring you that another world is indeed possible, one where the glory of the Lord covers the earth as the waters cover the sea.



5 out of 5 stars Challenging, Extrordinary, and Within Grasp   March 2, 2006
John P. Harris (Pasadena, CA)
12 out of 12 found this review helpful

In his book, The Irresistable Revolution: Life as an Ordinary Radical, Shane Claiborne speaks of his journey into love. He tells the stories of his life, a path that has led an upwardly mobile Christian young man into one of the worst neighborhoods I have ever been in. Although this book is full of radical theology (stuff that gets you to really fall in love with loving God's poor), it is communicated by stories. These tales are always delightful, often funny, and very confrontive to the ways of a middle-class suburbanite. Yet I don't feel guilty about my life by the time I am done with the book: I feel invited into serving God's poor and working to bring about a more just world, bit by bit. Shane shares with gentleness and care.

Shane is very careful to embrace the Christian church while at the same time challenge it to be more persistent with God's call to involve our lives with the poor and work for justice. It is not a riducule of evangelicalism, as he is clear that he is an evangelical; it is merely a relook at what evangelicalism can and should be about: living in the way that Jesus would have us to live.

And with all that said, Shane presents the downsides of solidarity with the poor while also sharing about the wonderful lifestyle of joy that can come about through creating what he calls the Kingdom of God. Life as an ordinary radical might lower your economic social status and it might put you on the FBI list of ones to watch, but it also allows you the opportunity to depend on your neighbors, play with children, and live without a lot of the worries that a materialistic culture brings.

The book reads easy enough for a middle schooler to get, and deep enough for a PhD to be moved. It is excellent material for group study. Pick up ten copies and have your Sunday School class dig in, and then go try some of the lifestyle stuff for yourself. It'll be awesome!!!



5 out of 5 stars Hard and Beautiful   April 7, 2006
Sam Alito (Hagerstown, MD, USA)
11 out of 11 found this review helpful

I'm telling you, this book will shake you. It shook me. As I read it, I had this gnawing feeling, like I was sitting on the side of the mountain when Jesus said for the first time to Turn the Other Cheek,and I was one of the ones saying "He can't be serious."
Seriously, this book is very hard and challenging. There are moments when I wanted to let myself off the hook. To say that Shane was too radical. Taking the words of Christ too literally. Being a little too extreme. But I couldn't let myself off the hook, because no matter what loophole I tried to theologically climb through, they were all closed. What Shane is talking about is really what Jesus meant, and there is no way around it. And it hurts. It stings. It bites. But it brings hope, joy, and spiritual depth unlike any message I've heard in some time.
Here is a book that made me feel the kind of conviction and movement that the original followers must have felt when these revolutionary ideas were first set forth by Christ himself.


 
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