As one retired from active parish ministry, I was reluctant to take up our Bishop's invitation to read this book during Eastertide & to join in the discussion, but curiosity got the better of me. I felt reasonably sure that not a whole lot of new insight would emerge, since for quite a number of years to date the Church has been struggling with the enormous cultural shift. I had read & discussed a goodly number of books over the past 20 years by thinkers who had put in their two cents' worth. The most that any were able to conclude was that 1) we're in the midst of a huge change; 2) the Church's agenda isn't working in its present form; 3) nobody seems to have a real clue as to how to proceed into the future, aside from rearranging the furniture on the deck of the Titanic.
So, when this book was suggested, personal interest wasn't a top motivating factor. Having said that & now, having read the book, I will admit to being grateful that I at least read it. Predictably, I didn't find a whole lot of anything new in most of Zscheile's suggestions, and he himself says, predictably, that he doesn't have any pat answers to give. But what Dwight Zscheile does have to offer is an extremely well-written overall analysis of the dynamics of the shift, and some well-articulated "hunches" as to how, in general, judicatories & individual churches might begin to begin a process of being more "agile" so as to cope with it all. If nothing else, Zscheile outlines the immense scope of the kind of change that faces the Church, and an honest analysis of how we've tried to manage it so far...in a word, badly. Nevertheless, he writes all this with an unrelenting sense of conviction & hope in the grace of God's Spirit, and of the power which well understood Scripture has to anchor us for the challenge. I appreciated Zscheile's sharing of his own parochial experience in this regard, and was most taken with his comments & ideas in Chapters 3, 5 & 6 (thus 1/2 of the book!). His is a motivating work, & leaders & innovators -- not only or even primarily clergy!) -- will find it more than helpful, along with the plethora of other research efforts constantly being produced.