Post-Christendom

Some comments on Christianity and politics
A narrative missiology and where it gets us
Christendom, exile, and the kingdom of God
Missional reflections on Olivier Roy’s Is Europe Christian?
Opposite-sex relationships and the narratives of evangelical mission
(Re-)defining the kingdom of God in nine words
If the Bible is history, what are we supposed to do?
The biblical story, part three
Blessed are those who mourn in Western Europe
How would Jesus teach the church to pray today?
The rise and fall of the modern evangelical paradigm
New year, new attempt to explain what this blog is all about
Beyond the violence of God: a narrative-historical perspective
The Nashville Statement and the future of the church
“Our job is to plant the story… in ways that make sense…”
Christian political witness and the stone of stumbling
Faith, politics and salvation by Christ alone
Mission from anywhere to Europe
Five (reinforced) fundamentals for an evangelical future
All the world’s the stage: a narrative-historical revision of Wright’s five act play hermeneutic
The place of the cross in the biblical narrative
What must the church become? Narrative and praxis
Why the Lord’s Prayer should be banned in cinemas
Tom Wright on religion and politics: the beginning and end of theocracy
Is the church in the post-Christian West in exile?
10 good reasons to switch to a narrative-historical hermeneutic
What should we expect apostles to do today?
Mission after Christendom: beyond the incarnational-missional paradigm
The wisdom of Trinitarianism
Concerning the times and seasons