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Review of The Gospel According to
Starbucks, by Leonard Sweet

BookDisciple.com rating: 9.5

The Gospel According to Starbucks


The Book and its Topic

The Gospel According to Starbucks is a book about passion. If you frequent this website you would have noticed that I like passion and books about passion.

I believe we are to desire God, and that as John Piper says on the rear cover of his brilliant book, Desiring God: “The pursuit of pleasure is not optional. It is essential.” What is more pleasurable than working on something you feel passionate about?

See, I bet God gives us the desires of our heart (see Psalm 37:4) to guide us through our earthly life. If we delight ourselves in him, that is. It is very hard to go against what you want to do, what is enjoyable to you, and the big passions, dreams and discomforts inside of you. God created you like that in order to reach His goals through you.

Leonard Sweet shows us that Starbucks is known throughout the world because people enjoy the experience. Starbucks and their baristas are passionate about coffee, and it shows. It rubs off on us.

In South Africa we do not have Starbucks and I have not tasted their coffee (yet!). But my little girl has a Starbucks teddy. His name is Starbuxie… We know the Starbucks brand and talk with people from other parts of the world about Starbucks. Why is this?

Sweet explains that the Starbucks experience is an EPIC experience. It is Experiential, Participatory, Image-rich and Connective. These four elements of the Starbucks experience are the real reasons behind the Starbucks success story.

After reading the book you will know lots of interesting things about Starbucks, but more importantly…

You will know how to be the church and how to make the church more attractive to the world. You might think, “But I am not involved in ministry, not a pastor, and I do not have the calling of church growth.” Wrong. You are the church! You are the body of Jesus Christ. Apart from applying the EPIC life to your church activities, you need to start applying them to your life.

You need to become someone who lives the gospel in a contagious way. In such a way that others will stand in line for a share of it…

It is clear that The Gospel According to Starbucks is the result of some excellent, on-topic research. Leonard Sweet shows a clear insight into modern society. He thinks and argues like a secular business guru, drawing examples of ingenuity from this arena.

First Leonard Sweet illustrates the success of Starbucks and others in the business world for each topic in his EPIC way of doing life. This provides conclusive evidence of the success of the EPIC experience. Then he shows exactly what the church, you and I, need to do to offer the modern 21st century people of God the experience that the gospel is supposed to be.

If we apply The Gospel According to Starbucks, even the X-generation and the Millennial-generation will join the movement of Jesus Christ.


BookDisciple.com Power Quote


“Christians have much to learn about faith as a lived
experience, not a thought experiment. Rational faith – the form of
Christianitythat relies on argument, logic, and apologetics to
establish and defend its rightness – has failed miserable
in meeting people where they live. Intellectual arguments
over doctrine and theology are fine for divinity school, but
they lose impact at the level of daily life experience.
Starbucks knows that people live for engagement, connection,
symbols, and meaningful experiences. If you read the Bible,
you’ll see that the people of God throughout history have
known the same thing. Life at its very best is a passionate
experience, not a doctrinal dissertation. The problem
is not that Christianity can’t be believed, but that it can’t
be practiced because of its lack of lived experience. And it
can’t be observed by others because there are too few
Christians who are radical enough to manifest what the
gospel really looks like.”


– The Gospel According to Starbucks, p. 5.


So, how does it read?

To be blatantly honest, I have read easier books. Leonard Sweet has a PhD, and that might be the reason why he has a tendency to use big words. Oooh, jealousy makes me nasty…

Leonard, I am not really jealous or nasty, and if a PhD is a requirement for such insight and brilliance then I should start studying immediately.

I have learned quite a few new words while reading this book. Provenance, spizzerinctum and sprezzatura to name but a few. The English is heavy and sweet is not ashamed to pull out the big words.

That caused me some tough going and some re-reading of paragraphs and phrases. But you have to remember that I speak English as a second-language. The Gospel According to Starbucks is not a thick book (the main work is 157 pages), but I have read easier books.


What did this book mean to me personally?

The Gospel According to Starbucks gave me some clear guidelines on how to live a life that is experiential, participatory, image-rich and connective. Then it showed me how to offer others this life.

There will definitely be a few changes and additions to this website to make it a more EPIC experience. Watch this space…


What do others say about the book?


“Cultural barista Leonard Sweet serves up a triple venti cup of relevant insights to wake up decaffeinated Christians. Careful, the book you’re about to enjoy is extremely hot.”

Ben Young, pastor, author of Why Mike’s Not a Christian


“Reading this book is a caffeine jolt. Get ready to be accelerated into the future, with Jesus a central part of the experience.”

Dan Kimball, pastor, author of The Emerging Church and They Like Jesus, But Not the Church


The Gospel According to Starbucks inspires us to quit playing safe and mediocre lives and to fulfill our God-given potential. Leonard Sweet uncovers God’s purpose for people not just as individuals but also as communities. An outstanding and thought-provoking book.”

Paul McGee, international speaker, best-selling author of S.U.M.O. (Shut Up, Move On)


“I have a massive passion for passion. It’s my favorite spiritual topic. And I have a nominal coffee obsession, Starbucks being my ritual more often than not. So what a treat to read Leonard Sweet’s extra-shot weaving together of the two–all in the hope that each of us will drink in the meaningful and passion-filled life we were designed for.”

Mark Oestreicher, president of Youth Specialties


Conclusion

You need to start “turning your activities into EPIC-tivities.” We all do. Why do we feel passion is a sin? Leonard tells us that “A driving hunger for God is passion at its best.”

Let us turn our worldview into a worldstage (p. 53).

If we start living The Gospel According to Starbucks, which incidentally is the real gospel (according to Jesus), we will not be able to keep people away. Let’s offer the world an adventure to become a part of. A true experience of God. Read this book to learn how.

If you decide against reading The Gospel According to Starbucks, at least go and read Matt. 5:16, and start being the light.




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