Summary
This book is reviewed here as a ministry resource that explores the relationship between mission and the shape of Christian life, with particular attention to Paul and the theme of participation. The argument seeks to show how the gospel forms a people who embody what they proclaim. The writing is reflective and theological, moving from Pauline themes to implications for the church’s witness. The book aims to help readers connect doctrine and discipleship, so that mission is framed not only as activity but as a community shaped by the message it carries.
Strengths
A helpful strength of a participation emphasis is that it presses mission beyond slogans into lived reality. Many churches struggle to connect proclamation and character, and this kind of work can sharpen a conviction that the gospel forms both message and manner. The book also encourages readers to think carefully about how Paul connects union with Christ, new creation life, and public witness. That can strengthen preaching and teaching by reminding pastors that discipleship is not an optional extra but the soil in which gospel witness grows. For pastors and students, the book can provide language and categories that help diagnose why mission initiatives sometimes produce activity without spiritual depth. It can also encourage churches to consider how communal practices and patterns of life either support or contradict the message they proclaim.
Limitations
Theological reflection can sometimes feel indirect for readers looking for immediate practical steps. The book does not function like a strategy manual, so leaders will need to translate principles into concrete practices suited to their setting. Readers should also take care to keep the biblical message central and to ensure that participation language serves the gospel rather than replacing it with moral aspiration. The book is best used alongside careful biblical study, so that the church learns to ground mission and discipleship in Scripture rather than in conceptual frameworks alone.
How We Would Use It
We would use this book as a supplement for leaders and students who want to think deeply about how mission and discipleship connect. It could serve in training programmes, reading groups, or leadership cohorts, especially where the aim is to form shared convictions about the church as a gospel shaped community. For preachers, it may provide helpful angles for application and church formation, but it should be paired with close text work in Paul to keep the discussion anchored.
Closing Recommendation
A useful supplement for thoughtful leaders who want mission framed as gospel shaped community life, best read slowly and tested by Scripture.
Michael J. Gorman
Michael J. Gorman is an American New Testament scholar of the contemporary era, writing within the broader evangelical academic tradition.
He is known especially for his work on the theology of Paul and the theme of participation in Christ. Through books and commentaries on letters such as Romans and First Corinthians, Gorman has explored how the apostle presents salvation as union with Christ that reshapes both belief and daily life.
His writing continues to attract attention for its focus on discipleship and the ethical implications of the gospel. Gorman encourages readers to see how Pauline theology calls the church to embody the character of Christ in worship, mission, and community life.
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical