A Church Called Tov: Forming a Goodness Culture That Resists Abuses of Power and Promotes Healing
A Church Called Tov: Forming a Goodness Culture That Resists Abuses of Power and Promotes Healing book cover

A Church Called Tov: Forming a Goodness Culture That Resists Abuses of Power and Promotes Healing

Hardcover – October 6, 2020

Price
$21.69
Format
Hardcover
Pages
256
Publisher
Tyndale Elevate
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1496446008
Dimensions
5.75 x 1 x 8.25 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

What a theologically savvy and empathy-embracing book for today’s church! Reading A Church Called Tov reminded me of why I love the church, and how that affection can also mean telling the truth about her missteps and broken pieces. In a world of high profile failures and scandals, this book offers a prophetic reimagining of the Acts 2 church. It is hopeful, relevant, and encouraging. Mary DeMuth, author of We Too: How the Church Can Respond Redemptively to the Sexual Abuse Crisis It is tragic that a book like this has to be written. However, if good can come of tragedy, this book is a testimony to that. In this volume, Scot and Laura have given the church a way of identifying, naming, and addressing toxic church cultures with a view to retraining our thinking to create cultures of goodness and healthy churches. It is full of wisdom, insight, and truthful exegesis which brings its own light. It is a gift to leaders, pastors in training, and importantly, victims of abuse who desperately need champions. In my view, this should be essential reading for anyone who has any leadership responsibility in a church. Lucy Peppiatt, principal, Westminster Theological Centre, Cheltenham, UK This profoundly important book addresses the problem of toxic church culture and shows how we change it. It is brave, thoughtful, and transformational. The answers it offers are woven around the key Hebrew word tov , which means good―and so much more. If you have been wounded by your experience of church, you should read this book. If you cannot imagine how church wounds people, you should read this book. It is profound, compassionate, and―sadly―timely. Paula Gooder, New Testament scholar and Canon Chancellor of St Paul's Cathedral in London If the church is going to become what she was designed to be, women must be at equal places of responsibility, authority, and influence in all spaces. If there has ever been a time to write a better story―a tov story―it is now! The broken stories in this book offer a beautiful transformational pathway forward. I wish this book weren’t necessary, but it is imperative for leaders committed to integrity and creating a better future. April L. Diaz, founder, Ezer + Co. A Church Called Tov is a desperately needed book, full of eye-opening truths. The church is supposed to be, and can be, a place of goodness, not toxicity. Scot and Laura help us discern the difference. It is clear they have seen and understand both sides and therefore can serve as guides to help us see what is good and avoid what is evil. I hope this work spreads through every church. Wade Mullen, author of Something's Not Right In a time when scores of people who grew up in the church are walking away wounded, disillusioned, and understandably cynical about a culture that seldom reflects the Jesus it claims to love and follow, Scot McKnight brings us much-needed hope. He does this by helping the reader diagnose and explain what creates and fosters the toxicity that is so pervasive within our modern Christian culture. Fortunately, Scot doesn’t stop there. He follows up his diagnosis with an informed and practical wisdom that empowers and equips us cynics to understand how the church can actually become what it was created to be . . . the community of true health, safe refuge, and genuine hope for the weary and the wounded. In other words, the reflection of the Jesus. I’m grateful that A Church Called Tov helped me begin deconstructing my own cynicism about the church. Baby steps forward. Thanks, Scot! Boz Tchividjian, victim rights attorney and founder of GRACE (Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment) One of the questions I’m frequently asked is how to find a good church. I appreciate the inquiry every time because I believe strongly in the church. I’m so grateful to God for Scot McKnight and Laura Barringer because they do an amazing job of teaching us what a good one looks like in A Church Called Tov. Beth Moore, bestselling author and speaker

Features & Highlights

  • “Scot and Laura do an amazing job of teaching us what a good church looks like.” ―Beth Moore
  • What is the way forward for the church?
  • Tragically, in recent years, Christians have gotten used to revelations of abuses of many kinds in our most respected churches―from Willow Creek to Harvest, from Southern Baptist pastors to Sovereign Grace churches. Respected author and theologian Scot McKnight and former Willow Creek member Laura Barringer wrote this book to paint a pathway forward for the church.We need a better way. The sad truth is that churches of all shapes and sizes are susceptible to abuses of power, sexual abuse, and spiritual abuse. Abuses occur most frequently when Christians neglect to create a culture that resists abuse and promotes healing, safety, and spiritual growth.How do we keep these devastating events from repeating themselves? We need a map to get us from where we are today to where we ought to be as the body of Christ. That map is in a mysterious and beautiful little Hebrew word in Scripture that we translate “good,” the word
  • tov
  • .In this book, McKnight and Barringer explore the concept of
  • tov
  • ―unpacking its richness and how it can help Christians and churches rise up to fulfill their true calling as imitators of Jesus.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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A Remedy for Toxic Church Cultures

Disclosure: Scot is one of my professors and I won a free copy of this book through his podcast.

A much-needed antidote to many of the Western Church's problems with celebrity culture and abuse. Laura and Scot have written a timely and insightful work that should be, in my opinion, required reading for every Bible College and Seminary student.

Anyone looking for seedy details on the Willow Creek story is likely to be left disappointed. Willow features prominently as an example of a toxic church culture, but the focus of the book is not on uncovering more seedy details but on the remedy for the larger systemic issues infecting the church in America. That is, a culture of TOV, a culture of goodness.
1 people found this helpful
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Toxic Leadership and Culture

McKnight, S., & Barringer, L. (2020). A church called Tov: Forming a goodness culture that resists abuses of power and promotes healing. Tyndale House Publishers.

Scot McKnight is a US based New Testament scholar, historian of early Christianity, theologian, and author who has written widely on the historical Jesus, early Christianity and Christian living. Laura Barringer is a teacher of primary-grade students and a graduate of Wheaton College.

A response to ethical and moral failures within the Church, the McKnight and Barringer assert a way forward by fostering a culture of goodness that "resists evil and promotes healing, safety, and spiritual growth." Tov, a Hebrew word meaning good is put forth as a way for believers to be image bearers representing who God is. An underlying assumption is that toxic leaders do not stand alone, instead behaviors express the culture of the church created and reinforced by leaders and members. Policies, teachings, actions, and narratives serve to communicate and reinforce the prevailing culture. Toxic cultures can be observed in terms of how they respond to criticism, communicate the truth, and use false narratives. Alternatively, Tov churches nurture: empathy, grace, people first culture, and truth telling.

This book offers an interesting perspective on what toxic leadership looks like within a church culture including how the leaders and the members co-create and reinforce the culture. For a good read on toxic leadership - see Lipman-Blumen, J. (2005). The allure of toxic leaders: Why we follow destructive bosses and corrupt politicians–and how we can survive them. Oxford University Press.