I remember talking with John Mark during the height of his mega church career and trying to talk about my frustrations and questions with the church and people not being transformed and discipled. I was pretty much shutdown and put in my place as a naive, less educated person working in youth ministry. I too am thankful for JM's journey and honesty in this podcast as it does clearly communicate both the dangers of the American church structure and what is needed. I am glad some of our American "christian stars and hero's" are beginning to speak out because the voice of the common practitioner who is trying to follow Jesus and mature as a disciple most times gets squashed by those in power in the pulpit. I have very much appreciated JM's Practicing the Way material as I believe it is so much more helpful in the work of helping people mature and experience Christ than his mega church every did.
Small is beautiful. The Kingdom of God grows smaller and smaller as we lean into Jesus and his way… the deepest levels of growth happen in this space. Amen JMC. Jesus had 70, invested in 12, and was most deeply invested in the three.
So appreciating what JMC is bringing to the table, specifically, the courage to talk about the non-conventional, out of the box, very abiding creativity of relationship with Jesus and others who desire to follow Him. His perspective as a pastor who internally struggled with the role brings a needed human candidness to the role in a setting where there is much harm being done by both shepherds and sheep who are missing the heart of the matter - Church is the Body of Christ, not a business. Thank you, JMC, for breaking out of the pressure to perform and speaking the truth over worrying about image. May we all have the courage for this He gives if we are willing.
That subtle bomb about the civil war between a dad’s career and how work will almost assuredly crank up at about the same time kids need more from dad is fascinating. I’ve never heard that before, but now that I’m thinking about it I see it all the time. Super helpful. Thanks for the interview, both of you!
Long story short... THIS was my "church" today and I can't THANK YALL enough!!! Holy Spirit met me here and spoke right into my wilderness of the last 4 years! SO GRATEFUL!!!
JMC - actually identifies a major problem in modern worship and I don’t think he even realizes it. He talks about being underwhelmed in worship but notice how he describes worship. It’s always in relation to a sermon series. If that’s worship is defined by the sermon series or the set list then yea it will be underwhelming after awhile. The loss of the liturgy in so many places creates this. I have found the liturgy to be this incredible tool to draw the focus off of me and on to Christ. And Christ is never underwhelming.
Yes, critical insight. It's a rich interview but found the reduction of worship to sermon is significant, especially with much work around the formative power of the practice of worship.
I did not hear that reduction. I heard him refer to the Sunday worship service that limits fellowship (my paraphrase here) to two parts: sermon and singing.
There is nothing magical about liturgy. If there was, Catholicism and other main line denominations wouldn’t have nose dived the past 40 years. No doubt liturgy can be helpful for those that have a history with it and crave it, but The issue is a lack of fellowship and discipleship.
@griddlefiddle I think the OP is contrasting modern worship services with the ancient liturgy. Which one is more focused on individual emotions and entertainment? What seems more reverent and sacred? What is at the center of the church building? What truly worships God is what removes the attention on the self. Forgive me if I misunderstood your point.
I went to John Marks church for many years and directly in the middle of the collapse of his head pastor time, but haven’t listened to him in at least 5 years. What an amazing transformation to see someone so purposely changing for the positive. I’ll never forget how brilliant he was back then - but now he’s brilliant and humble. Amazing.
One of the best conversations I've heard on the issues facing the modern American evangelical. Thank you so much for doing this. I could relate to almost everything John Mark Comer talked about.
OMG. I’ve been talking about these things for decades cross referencing studies and thinking I was all alone! Thank you for this amazing conversation Carey and John
I know right?! We're not alone 🥹🙏🙏🙏 Thank you JMC and Carey for reading my journal out loud but making it even more articulate 😂 Wow. Love this nuanced, grace-filled, honest "spiritually real" convo so much, and can resonate a lot as someone who used to be in church leadership and had to wrestle with the "nakedness" afterwards also. I'm similarly also still deep in the "inner journey" / "the journey outward" where thankfully God has been radically transforming me and my motivational structure by revealing the shadows I never would've discovered if I hadn't stepped into the "windy road wilderness" - but this conversation really encourages me that I'm not alone, and that what I've been going through and thinking about (in terms of "there has to be more that God has for us!) is healthy/normal even if it might not be understood by those who haven't experienced it (yet). Lord, continue working in and transforming me... I want to be a vessel of your pure love. 🥹
Carey had a season of his podcast where I missed a few episodes when it was approaching the business side. But all in all, I think he is the best interviewer there is out there. And I have found a new hero, this guy John Mark is literally a carbon copy of myself hahahahahah! Thanks@@withthetrans
@@CareyNieuwhof As always, you're superseedig any expectations! I really wish there could be a conversation about your experience when you're here in Australia. I could get our team to set it up for our podcast. There would be a great contribution for the church planters we serve. We could talk about this very subject.
Carey & JMC....this is just fantastic. I could listen to you two in this long form discussion endlessly. Please stay connected - you'll never run out of material. Love you both - you both are incredible gifts to all of us walking this life. The deeper we grow in Christ, the more complicated and beautiful these discussions become.
I have been waiting with bated breath from the moment I heard you mention bringing John Mark back on the show. I knew it would be excellent and it did not disappoint. YOU have truly been a tremendous blessing to my life Carey - thank you for exposing me to so many wonderful voices in the Christian leadership space. God bless you! 🙏🏾
I am Catholic and I have listened to your sermons and followed you because you speak so much truth. Your theology closely aligns to Catholicism. I invite you, John Mark, to attend a Catholic mass. If you open your mind and listen to the prayers with each liturgical action, I guarantee you will not be bored and if you pray to understand what is happening, you might be moved. Blessings to you and your family, John Mark
@@troyboldon1 Understood :) I apologize if my comment came across as judgmental. That was not even close to my intent. It is such a blessing to have a spirit filled church! ❤️Peace.
I am amazed at how much he aligns with Catholicism too! I have just discovered John Mark's teachings and they are life changing and I am awestruck as to how many Catholics he quotes! I think the Lord may have a beautiful *Catholic* future in store for this man and his family.
One of the best podcasts episodes I’ve listened to. Thank you. 👏 I have relistened to it because it feels like God was/is speaking to me right where I am in my walk with him but also in ministry as I look to the next chapter. Thank you Carey.
I have heard all the interest around JMC, have his first book at home but haven’t read it yet. I can see why he is a populist name. His ideas resonate with all the noise, distraction and disillusionment each of us wade through daily. Clearly a very bright guy but also a clear communicator who has radical authenticity.
Very refreshing to find this level of authenticity… I got ostracised bc I wanted more than ankle or knee deep faith; seems it wasn’t just me being a bad person lol
Great talk with John Mark Comer! Been serving the Lord for over 30 yrs & now desire to 'transition' into Stages 4-6 with God's wisdom & guidance, as well as help others grow spiritually too!
Thanks for your podcasts Carey, they’re are breath of fresh air bro with so much honesty with the things you discuss. It takes lots of courage to discuss the things you do bro and not sweep things under the carpet. Amazing deep stuff bro 👍
Just stumbled onto JMC. One of his books came up on Amazon as a suggestion while I was searching for a Matt Chandler book. Wow! How have I not heard of this guy before! Just ordered 3 of his books and came to YT to find his content. This is the first one I hit play on. Great interview! Thanks so much for sharing.
Fantastic interview! Thankyou. John Mark Comer you are voice to the body of Christ in this season. I’ve only just started listening to your podcasts and reading your books. Hoping you continue to teach and write (don’t stop 😢) your work is encouraging many believers who question where they fit in the body of Christ in this current climate. Thank you for your prophetic voice of wisdom.
Thanks for this, Carey. I really enjoyed this conversation. I haven't listened to your other interviews but you did so well by asking thoughtful questions and truly listening. Too many podcast hosts talk over their guests and insert their own thoughts and ideas. Your thoughts and questions added to the conversation, they didn't detract. Well done.
I’m so grateful for all of the reading and research and experience and self reflection that JMC brings. Everything he said was so thought provoking and helpful. He has been a gift to my spiritual walk and is most certainly a gift to the church.
Thank you for this important conversation. One of your best. Thank you Carey for the well thought out questions and then stepping back to listen and actually allowing your guest to be heard. JMC is a 'breath of fresh air' in this season.
I guess I’m struggling a bit when I feel like I’m hearing JM shut down preaching in the local church and how he “lost his passion for hearing sermons” when God’s word is what’s supposed to be exposited from the pulpit. The local pastor should not be a motivational speaker, but a shepherd to the flock. He has no authority on his own apart from the word of God. No one should ever be burned out by “hearing too many sermons”. Not if God’s word is being faithful preached week after week. I totally agree with the church becoming way to consumeristic, but let’s have more faithful preaching from the pulpit in the local church addressing that problem. Pastors need to help their flock learn how to dwell well in the bride of Christ and that means loving those who are in it and respecting and encouraging their pastors.
He’s selling you a book and a lifestyle. The only life is Jesus. Don’t follow John Mark. Follow Jesus. The struggle you’re having is the Holy Spirit in you realizing you’re being sold another repackaged mega church pastor trying to tell you he has The Way when The Way was made thousands of years ago by a humble servant who came to set the captives free. Every church before John Marks hasn’t done it wrong. We all struggle because this is the Way. The Way is realizing none of us have it right without Jesus. And we will never get it right. That’s why we follow instead of lead and we follow Jesus because he is the only perfect source of truth. The church isn’t. Jesus is.
I was homeless, got into drugs, went into prisons, then i got to know Jesus, He changed my life.. Now i make 22k weekly. have a home, a wife, a lovely daughter... A child of God. HALLELUJAH.
Thanks for such an insightful conversation on dealing with mixed motives and learning to value goodness rather than perfection. Your obsession with podcasting is greatly appreciated!
Initially, I was quite skeptical about this conversation since I often hear and see pastors diverging into secular psychology. However, the more I listened, the more value I found in this discussion. It’s likely because I’ve always wondered if there’s anything beyond what the church currently offers. I see so many people struggling within the church because they hit a wall where information and inspiration are no longer sufficient. Instead, we face real-life issues that aren’t being addressed from within ourselves and critical issues that we deal with on a daily basis, which are not explained from a pulpit and are certainly not being addressed in these discipleship conversations. I really hope that we can have more of these conversations because I believe they are incredibly needed. Very valuable. Thank you for this interview.
The church service is for gathering, fellowship, worship, teaching, and encouraging each other. Discipleship, deeper spiritual training, accountability, etc needs to happen outside of the broader gathering. As more mature Christian’s, it’s our responsibility to make that stuff happen vs being frustrated if a church isn’t doing that work for us.
I really appreciate this conversation. I’ve felt disconnected from the church I joined. I am in a small group there too. But I go to BSF - Bible Study Fellowship every week and I feel much more connected there. We have a lecture which is like a sermon over what we studied that week, then we have our small discussion group, who we also have fellowship meetings with. That model feels more aligned for me right now. And lately my husband has been going to a silent worship service at a house church and so I’ve been joining him there. It’s nice bc it’s an hour of stillness to commune with God.
My friend bought that book on audible. He lets me use his account .And I kept thinking this book is so good but I went through it so fast. I gotta go listen to It again.
Thank you for merging body mind and spirit. I think I’m somewhere in stage five. I’m thinking of going to seminary. I have such a hunger for the Lord and it did feel like a rebirth in stage four. Lord is doing so much in my heart as I start viewing people differently than I ever did. I’ve been a Christian for 24 years and was in ministry for 10. The wall was death and divorce and personal inward crisis. I’m so thankful that my rebellious stage and lasted only a year and the Lord convicted my heart and has drawn me closer to him in a way I have never been before. Thank you, Jesus for your redemptive love and Grace covered and mercy.
Such a meaningful conversation. I loved the book too. I thought if I just learned more I transform faster. Not. Love hearing about everyones brokeness and journey. Thanks guys.
I am in a small church of 30 max including the preacher, wife, 4 kids, and grandmother with occasional visitor's. I like the small group. It feels like family. We do meet on Sunday morning and Wednesday evening. Our oldest is 92 and youngest is 4 years old. I also observe Sabbath from Friday night and end on Saturday night meeting with my daughters. I had kept Sabbath myself for years and really enjoyed Comer's teaching on Sabbath. It enriched my plans on celebrating it. I have always listened to various people and studies to gain more teaching other than just my church.
Yes been hanging out for this one. We are studying Practising the day in our Bible study group and it is fantastic! Carey this was a great interview . Thank you!
I think John Mark is bringing up some interesting ideas. I am a pastor of a small church. His comment pastors want to pastor, bigger, churches, and people want to attend smaller churches. I think maybe a result of his own life. One of the best churches I went to had several thousand people on Sundays but we sat with those from our small group so we simultaneously had a small congregation with the benefits of large church worship. I do wonder if his comment is self reflective. In other words when I’m in charge. I want a big church. When I’m no longer in charge I want a small church. I have noticed that there are speakers that are genuinely gifted and also genuinely spiritual. I can tell because I immediately want to start taking notes. I don’t just mean facts or clever sayings, but genuine insights that seem empowered by the Holy Spirit. I think those of us who speak for a living wish we were that quality of speaker.
I would love to hear John Mark in conversation with Brian Zahnd. I feel like BZ is a couple decades down the road from John but both share very similar trajectories and sensibilities toward rediscovering deeper faith through Christian history and formation and are both very critical of cultural evangelical churchianity that they both have proximity to. Both of them represent a hope for me in a new movement away from cultural fluff faith and toward a more raw honest and time tested faith that we so desperately need today
This seems to be a pattern with John Mark Comer and Francis Chan where they were big in megachurches but the "success" itself gives them the space to come to this position that is opposite of how they did church. Could they have come to this place without going through what they went through? It seems like their past success gives them a space to critique the past methods. That is sort of what John Mark Comer mentions when he says now my career and finances aren't tied to "how" I do things, like being in ministry is a matter of performance. So my question is, can the ordinary pastor really implement this without first the success that gives them a comfortable landing when they get out of the megachurch style of doing church? I think many feel too stuck, too afraid, motivated by finances and the fear of never being able to do church how they really know it should be because of all the time and effort they've already put into things. The time is lost to cultivate something deeper in a smaller setting. But these men who have had "success" have an easy transition, riding the wave of past success. It just seems to be a pattern and I'm not sure how to think about it.
Alex, I've thought about this a lot. I followed Hybels for many years, and before "the fall" he started to talk openly about running at a slower pace, about being in circles of loss being better than riding high, about deep work in the counselor's office, about time off and not using people to achieve your goals... But like you say, he said this AFTER he has achieved the privilege of margin, which was won by the very things he now criticized. The message for me was, "do great things for Jesus like I did, but don't do it like I did." Well, if I do it slow, and small, and deep, it won't be "great" - always defined as bigger numbers. My reaction is always, "easy for you to say... now". Name a person who has always had this message who didn't first build their brand and platform.
To say he’s underwhelmed with Sunday services because preaching doesn’t help him at this stage in his life while in the same vein criticizing the consumerism in the church is ironic 😂😂😂 But go off
So many wonderful things worth commenting on - I found this so relatable, challenging and encouraging. But since it came right at the end, the thing that sticks out to me is… JMC is a Star Wars fan?!?! Honoured to have Jyn Erso grace the podcast with her presence 😄
I have no idea who John Mark Comer is. My friend forwarded this to me. My family and I went through a season where we "followed" the kids to Hillsong, long story short, so when I saw a man with the tattoos, the black t shirt, etc, I thought, "OK.." Mea culpa 🙂 But, as someone who has no idea who JMC is, or was, I was fascinated with your conversation with him. Partly because I had no "Is/n't this the man.." preconceptions, and then, well, it was just a down to earth, well-constructed, thoughtful conversation. Some things that have crossed my mind over the years, some perspectives on things that made me.. look at my own spiritual life in the mirror. It was a blessing. So, whoever you are, and whoever he is... I praise God (and thank my good friend) that this was sent my way. Kind regards from Australia.
When JMC says he believes the future of church (Sunday morning context) is around "tables" I got a quick thought of AA meetings "around these tables" and "in these rooms" and felt so at peace.
I appreciate John Mark’s thoughts. He is very articulate and transparent. I wonder, though, if the problem is how we define “spiritual maturity?” What if stage 4 is where we transition from focusing on ourselves to focusing on others (helping people far from God discover Jesus, helping people who are new to faith grow in their faith, etc)? After following Jesus for many years, I don’t need another sermon. I need to live it out and give it away to others. In my personal experience, when I’ve made it less about “me” and more about others, my passion and desire to follow Jesus has increased exponentially. It doesn’t mean I don’t continue to grow personally and deal with my “shadows,” but I find it so much more compelling to take what God is doing in my life (even in my brokenness) and give it away to others.
Cary, thanks for this next-level episode ! This is one I saved to listen to again, so much great content from JMC. AND . . . any guy who likes Steinbeck and has a dog named Jin Urso (she was the main character in Star Wars Rogue One :-). Jumps immediately to my 'very cool' list - thanks John Mark, I want to check out more of your writing! - Rob from Creekside Waterloo Ont.
I remember once hearing Matt Chandler talk about the need for pastors who stay… He spoke of the trend of young celebrity pastors growing a church, gaining an audience, getting a book deal, then leaving the church to go into itinerant speaking tours where they would speak on podcasts and to megachurches and at mega-Xian-conferences and sell their Christian books to Christians (who wouldn’t exist without the church)-all the while speaking and writing about how “the institutional church” basically has it all wrong and it’s really all about this or that form of spirituality or evangelism or discipleship or “community,” whatever it is they’re promoting and writing about… Feed my sheep.
As well as an emphasis on smaller groups I think it’s very helpful for people who don’t feel comfortable diving into a small group right away, to have larger meetings that emphasize getting to know and meet people in a less” in your face” situation . The emphasis is on fellowship and prayer, not on teaching. It’s a good place for testimonies as well. In this larger setting that’s not so intimidating, comfortability and friendships can begin to form and smaller life groups can be birthed from there. Also there’s a sense of “tribe” as JC mentioned that is formed as you get to know more people that you see at church but don’t know a thing about them. But it has to be emphasized that the purpose is to get to know new people each time the church has these brunches, or breakfasts or teas etc. I’ve seen this work. I’m in a life group right now, where most of the men met at a men’s retreat! I’ve seen it happen in a women’s monthly dinner where lasting connections were made and needs were met for newer members who felt seen. They then got into smaller studies and life groups. Great conversation! I agree that leaders have to open up to thinking of how to do things better. Gotta be more vulnerable and let Holy Spirit lead! Thanks guys!!! Love the transparency!
Finally all I've written ultimately comes down to the fact that I can read scripture and listen to christian messages dedicatedly over years but still not have a true conversion experience or be missing something so that faith true faith is not yet the result within me. and the last perhaps for some of us this journey may go on for 15 to 20 years, all the while moving forward we are still on the journey trying to get an access true faith in Christ, true conversion. I myself do not have true conversion yet. That's the Bible is a collection of stories which appears to point to a depiction of God. However this God and Jesus that churches and the Bible speaks about, I still as of yet recognize that I do not have to faith or belief in.
I appreciate the plagiarism call out on Grochell. Went through one of his books with a Bible study and it was ALL lifted content from Jocko, Peterson, and a whole series of other large podcasts. I struggled with feeling furious over reading mostly theft.
very interested in the reference to the evangelical church in late 1970s and discipleship ( I'm in UK not US so not exactly the same picture - but close enough ) I was in my late 20s then and can see now how we could have been trained better - indeed lots of 'try harder' stuff accomplished nothing for me. With the coming of 'new monasticism' and the growing theme of rewilding the church etc. I feel I finally have found who I am supposed to be in the Christian community. Am now retired and have *time* to be still and contemplate etc. how I'd cope if still working for a living ?? Bless you both for this conversation.