The Center for Gospel Culture Blog
Introverts in Evangelical America
StaffSeptember 30, 2010

Some interesting thoughts from Adam McHugh, the author of Introverts in the Church: Finding Our Place in an Extroverted Culture. Here is an excerpt from this article:
I saw the need for a book on this topic when I realized that our cultural slant had infiltrated some wings of the church, especially mainstream evangelicalism. As I say in Introverts in the Church, entering your average evangelical worship service feels like walking into a non-alcoholic cocktail party. Evangelicalism has a chatty, mingling informality about it, and no matter how well-intentioned that atmosphere is, it can be a difficult environment for those of us who are overwhelmed by large quantities of social interaction and who may connect best with God in silence. Sometimes our communities talk so much that we are not able to express the gifts that we bring to others. If we are given the space, we bring gifts of listening, insight, creativity, compassion, and a calming presence, things that our churches desperately need.
About
The Center for Gospel Culture exists to establish the centrality of the gospel as the basis for developing a gospel culture worldview in renewing every dimension of an individual's life, so that individuals would be able to think, act, and live in line with the truth of the gospel.
Subscribe via RSS
Subscribe via Email
Blog Roll
- The Gospel Coalition
- TGC New England
- City to City
- Tim Keller
- Justin Taylor
- Jared Wilson
- Tullian Tchividjian
- Collin Hansen
- Justin Buzzard
- Ray Ortlund
- Scotty Smith
- John Starke
- Kevin DeYoung
- Tim Challies
- Stephen Witmer
- Tony Reinke
- C.J. Mahaney
- Gospel Alliance NE
- CCEF
- Desiring God
- This Is Our City
- Faith & Work
- Mockingbird
- Books & Culture
- Themelios
- Reformation 21
- The Resurgence
- IX Marks
- Sovereign Grace
- Crossway

