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The Least, the Last and the Lost

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This book is the product of over 20 years of thought and thousands of hours of research. This book is for any and every Christian who has an interest in the poor and the oppressed.

At heart, this is a book about how to love God better by loving the least, the last and the lost.

530 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2021

17 people are currently reading
96 people want to read

About the author

Mez McConnell

21 books25 followers

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Peter.
25 reviews2 followers
February 25, 2022
I don’t even know what to say about this book.
It has been and will be on my mind a lot.
Profile Image for Rebekah Hanna.
36 reviews3 followers
April 3, 2022
I don’t think I can think about ministry in the same way again after reading Mez’s book, serious change and movement is needed now for the least, the last and the lost. “Come and migrate to the spiritual wastelands of the UK and work long hours, in difficult circumstances, with some beautiful glimpses of gospel light, with many discouragements and little financial reward. And then die here. Nameless and forgotten by all but Him who we serve: King Jesus”.
202 reviews5 followers
February 3, 2023
Having grown up going to school in Liverpool, this book made me weep as I learnt that the area I spent most of my childhood is in the top 3 most deprived areas in the UK and one of the most unreached with the gospel.

The scale of the need in the working class areas of the UK is staggering and desperate. It certainly is forcing me to ask 'If not me, then who?'

“Come and migrate to the spiritual wastelands of the UK and work long hours, in difficult circumstances, with some beautiful glimpses of gospel light, with many discouragements and little financial reward. And then die here. Nameless and forgotten by all but Him who we serve: King Jesus”.
Profile Image for Katie Gibbs.
149 reviews99 followers
April 5, 2023
Too long for the amount it's saying, and much of it very sweeping/unsubstantiated except by "this is my experience/opinion as someone of this background working in this context". That being said, that in itself is very useful, in the same way a long conversation with someone knowledgeable and passionate (and willing to say difficult things!) about the topic would be. I found it challenging but also slightly alienating, especially as McConnell is explicitly trying to attack tokenistic or small-scale service, so really the only way he thinks you can make a change (except by giving money) is to give your whole life, for the rest of your life. But he's probably right, and he probably needs to say it, I just felt a bit helpless by the end.
Profile Image for Bex Purdue .
15 reviews
February 20, 2022
Do not read this book if you don’t want your middle class “christian” lifestyle and approach to ministry to be challenged.
Profile Image for Thomas Creedy.
427 reviews38 followers
July 5, 2022
It isn’t perfect - could’ve been shorter and had a fair few unsubstantiated side-swipes, but the core message of this vital book is bang on the nail. Mez - and friends - build a careful, cumulative, biblically informed and reality-aware picture to show the church a big problem. Recommended for church leaders and those thinking about ministry.
Profile Image for Eddie.
24 reviews3 followers
July 4, 2022
This is an incredibly helpful and well thought through understanding of poverty, and provides a challenging critique of conservative evangelicalism's approach to reaching and discipling people who have grown up and live in areas very different to middle class culture. Mez, and his guest authors, have provided many practical ways to counter the growing trend towards city-centre and student focussed churches, neglecting huge areas of the population as a result - the most challenging being to sacrifice the idols we cling to and come and die in these 'hard' places.

One let down of the book is that it perhaps hammers it's point a little too much and becomes repetitive.
24 reviews
April 28, 2023
I had been looking for a book about class in the UK and how it relates to evangelism and discipleship. This book was very enlightening. Sometimes it was uncomfortable, embarrassing even, as I began to see my own naivety and prejudice. In some ways it’s easier to feel burdened about the spiritual and physical needs of the poor across the world than those on our doorstep. But it also answered a lot of my questions, about class and about evangelical Christianity in the UK. It really challenged my assumptions about what true mercy and justice, as God would have us practice it, might look like. Mez McConnell doesn’t mince his words about middle-class apathy toward the unreached poor of our nation, or about the failure of what most churches think of as ‘mercy ministry’. However, nor does he sugar coat the hard graft and heartache of reaching the least, last and lost in the UK. It is helpful I think that (since he’s going to be writing to a primarily middle class readership) that he has contributions from a whole range of voices. I particularly appreciated how the book addressed the vital role for female pastoral workers in these contexts and had contributions from one such worker.
I hope I can act on many of the challenges and not just find it ‘interesting’ and move on. I’m especially thinking of how this impacts how I raise my own children - do I genuinely aspire more for them to have a good education, a good job, social mobility and material comfort more than I desire for them to lead lives of self-sacrifice in obedience to Christ’s command to take the gospel to all, especially ‘the least of these’?
Profile Image for J.
539 reviews11 followers
November 12, 2024
“What is your church’s vision for the least, the last and the lost where you are? Which church will take the light of the gospel to the darkest corners of your town, city or village if you don’t? Let me tell you who does have a vision for these communities.
Satan.
He loves hanging out in these communities. He loves to see prosperity heretics moving in. He loves a mad charismatic with little grasp of the gospel. He really likes the Spiritualists. He has a real soft spot for all the Witches’ covens and tarot card readers…”
(p.470)

The author does not pull very many punches, but, then, he’s not very middle class.
A passionate cry for the middle class British Christian to take seriously the spiritual needs of deprived areas of the UK. This is a book that I will be returning to. There’s a lot more to say about it. More importantly, there’s a lot more to pray about it and do about it.
138 reviews3 followers
December 24, 2021
Mez looks at the state of the church in the UK in terms of reaching the deprived and working class, the least, the lost and the last of the title. It’s a huge undertaking but we’ll written with challenges to the church throughout. Would be well worth elders, pastors and leadership teams reading and praying through.
Profile Image for David Meiklejohn.
385 reviews
July 9, 2022
Mez takes no prisoners as he examines the state of British schemes, and the church’s efforts to lend aid to them. The problems are many but the main thrust is that the schemes need local churches, working within, staffed by locals and supported by wealthier churches. Mez’s challenge is what are you doing to help?
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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