The last two weeks, I've been writing about a paradigm shift in the way that the church exists and operates to perform its mission. Keep in mind as you read that I'm learning as I ponder along. I don't have an idea where my thoughts and research will lead, but I hope it brings us to a better understanding of what the church can and should be for the future.
One primary question I'm seeking to answer is to what extent the mainline institutional church can coexist alongside or with a church model that is more organic and missional. To answer this question we must first recognize that these two types of community structures have often co-existed in different forms and to different degrees. For instance, within many mainline institutional churches there are gatherings and groups that may function in missional and organic ways. Examples of this can be groups that go on mission trips together, certain small groups that operate and function without much structure and embody certain theological priorities. My observation is that the mainstream institutional community tends to accommodate larger, more anonymous, and more loosely connected gatherings of individuals. The extent to which these communities maintain a sense of closeness, mission, intimacy, and urgency usually depends on the strength of missional organic communities within the institution. Depending on the nature and size of a gathering, there are natural tendencies that help determine whether a community becomes more institutionalized or organic. There are of course major exceptions.
Take for example the Wesleyan societies in 18th century England. These gatherings were institutional in their function but missional in their orientation. They were interpersonal, but not in a fluid and flexible sense. The content of the relationships was predictable and repeatable for the sake of the mission. People came to meetings and answered the same list of questions each week, performed the same tasks for holy living each week and had their sharing and actions recorded to evaluate growth. Many large churches today have programs with a strong mission of "disciple making" that is done in a very organized and institutional way.
The reason I point this out is to acknowledge that a strong mission can be supported by institutional means. But the biblical mission, as I see it, is not only missional, it is missional in an organic way. In other words, what matters is not just what we're doing, but how we're doing it. It must also be stated that most instances of missional church that are carried out by institutional means that I find are alternative communities - meaning they are not mainstream. I'll talk more about that in subsequent posts.
"Come to him, a living stone, though rejected by mortals yet chosen and precious in God's sight, and like living stones, let yourselves be built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ" 1 Peter 2:4-5
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
The Church Transforming: Part 2
Last week I briefly defined two concepts of church, Mainline Institutional and Missional Organic. Now, I want to explore further the value and necessity of each. The scriptures themselves came into being through a combination of these two distinct kinds of community. There were moments in Israel's history and in the history of the church where community was more organic, alternative, and radical in its way of thinking and way of life. These were moments of great creativity, risk taking, and discovery theologically and they found voice mainly through rich narrative and story telling, mostly oral. This is where stories like those in Genesis, Exodus, and the accounts of Jesus' ministry were originally shared before they were written down. But at other moments, the biblical communities of faith became more organized, established, and grounded in belief and practice. The life of faith became more orderly and disciplined and was expressed in carefully written versions of the oral traditions that gave them birth. Our bible represents these oral traditions from an organic time of community being written down and organized by a institutional time of community. So the question is not which type of community of faith is best - they are both necessary for the faith to remain fresh and relevant and for it to have consistency and longevity. Rather, the question that needs to be answered is when and in what place are these types of communities most valuable and appropriate. It should also be observed that the ebb and flow between more organic and more institutionalized communities of faith through the ages seems to happen because it has to - not because someone wants it do. Like the protestant reformation, the Davidic Monarchy or the Methodist movement, each shift happens because the time is ripe for change, there is a powerful tide that demands a transformation. I believe we may be in the beginnings of one of those tides in the life of the church today. And our task is knowing whether we are to fight it, or join it.
Sunday, December 4, 2011
The Church Transforming: Part 1
Several months ago, I compared the institutional mainstream (IM) church to the Jews of Paul's missionary journeys in the book of Acts (Go to the Gentiles). I've been thinking more about the radical disconnect that exists between today's IM church and a truly missional organic church. First, let me define what I mean by those two categories. The IM church, is institutional because its structure and operation is based on a business-level organizational model. Hallmarks of the institutional church are that they depend on buildings, highly qualified staffs, procedures for assimilation, and program-based ministries. By mainstream, I am generally referring to a category of denominations that reached their climax of effectivity in the United States between the middle of the 19th to the middle of the 20th centuries. This includes Episcopalian, Congregationalist, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Baptist and United Methodist. Mainstream protestant churches are distinguished by their worship style (around an hour, once a week on Sunday Morning), their wide appeal theology, and their local church organizational structure. What I mean by the "missional organic" church is something entirely different. By missional I mean that the aim of this church effort is to fulfill a dynamic mission rather than to sustain and institutionalize a cultural practice. The participants in a missional movement are unified first and foremost not by affiliation (dogmatic, cultural, socio-economic) to an organization but by a common aim and cause. By "organic" I mean that the structure and support of the gathering grows and adapts to the dynamics of the mission. An organic church is more dependent upon inter-relationships than upon buildings, staff and programs. It relies on the flexible and strong bonds between its individual members to sustain its mission. Now, these definitions can certainly overlap. There are IM churches that depend heavily upon a mission and relationships and there or missional organic churches that may have some level of structural support. The question that I want to pursue is how the Missional organic church and the IM church can and should relate and interact. Can they coexist in active partnership? How do they support one another? What other historical examples do we see of similar relationships existing (i.e. The establishment of special orders of monks and nuns within the Easter and Roman churches, the Wesleyan Methodist movement and the Anglican church in 18th century England, the Base Ecclesial communities of Latin America and the Catholic church).
Sunday, November 20, 2011
The Unstoppable Church
"And he has put all things under his feet and has made him the head over all things for the church, which is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all." Ephesians 1:22
When the church knows who she is - she cannot help but transform the world. When the church knows who leads her - nothing can destroy her mission and charge. The church is the body of Christ, the fullness of God who fills everything. The church is not a shadow of Christ, an imitation of Christ, or a disciple of Christ - the Church is the living body of Christ. When the church, that is its substantive members, make Christ head and Lord of all, she naturally takes on the actual form of Christ's body. This body is consistent with what we see the body of Christ being and doing in the New Testament account of Jesus of Nazareth. It is also consistent with the form of Christ that is revealed in the Old Testament law and prophets. This body that is the church does not act LIKE Jesus, it IS Jesus. After the incarnate Christ ascended into heaven to sit at the right hand of the Father, the Holy Spirit was given to the gathered believers to create in them the church - the embodiment of Christ's own essence. And since every authority and power on earth and in heaven, both now and in the future, has been placed under the dominion of Christ by the Father, there is nothing that can overcome the church and there is nothing that the church cannot overcome. The church is God's ongoing revelation in the world. It is God's presence to the nations, God's open door to all who seek life. Jesus' ministry is meant to continue through his manifestation in the church. Jesus' sacrificial love and service, his prophetic word to religious leadership, his abiding hope in the face of death through his resurrection are all to be expressed through the community of believers. These tasks cannot be duplicated, imitated, or re-created by human efforts or by institutional organization. They must naturally occur by the indwelling Spirit of Christ being himself within the community. Only when Christ is being Christ's body in the church will it overcome all things and refuse to be overcome by anything but its submission to the will of God. By submitting only to the will of God and by making Christ Lord over all, you make the church all that she is meant to be.
When the church knows who she is - she cannot help but transform the world. When the church knows who leads her - nothing can destroy her mission and charge. The church is the body of Christ, the fullness of God who fills everything. The church is not a shadow of Christ, an imitation of Christ, or a disciple of Christ - the Church is the living body of Christ. When the church, that is its substantive members, make Christ head and Lord of all, she naturally takes on the actual form of Christ's body. This body is consistent with what we see the body of Christ being and doing in the New Testament account of Jesus of Nazareth. It is also consistent with the form of Christ that is revealed in the Old Testament law and prophets. This body that is the church does not act LIKE Jesus, it IS Jesus. After the incarnate Christ ascended into heaven to sit at the right hand of the Father, the Holy Spirit was given to the gathered believers to create in them the church - the embodiment of Christ's own essence. And since every authority and power on earth and in heaven, both now and in the future, has been placed under the dominion of Christ by the Father, there is nothing that can overcome the church and there is nothing that the church cannot overcome. The church is God's ongoing revelation in the world. It is God's presence to the nations, God's open door to all who seek life. Jesus' ministry is meant to continue through his manifestation in the church. Jesus' sacrificial love and service, his prophetic word to religious leadership, his abiding hope in the face of death through his resurrection are all to be expressed through the community of believers. These tasks cannot be duplicated, imitated, or re-created by human efforts or by institutional organization. They must naturally occur by the indwelling Spirit of Christ being himself within the community. Only when Christ is being Christ's body in the church will it overcome all things and refuse to be overcome by anything but its submission to the will of God. By submitting only to the will of God and by making Christ Lord over all, you make the church all that she is meant to be.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
"Letting myself be loved by God is the most important reality in my life" - Brennan Manning
There is nothing more important than being loved by God. It is the most basic ingredient to life itself. To be loved is to bask in the good intention and attention of the lover. It is to receive the irrational and unmerited affection of another. To know the love of God is an act of faith. It is the way of salvation, healing, strength, and peace. When we are truly love by God not just in principle but in our experience, we are free. Free from shame, anxiety, and emptiness. Believe it and you will live.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Preserving Corporate Worship
When an individual at their height of faith reaches an acknowledgment, celebration, and gratitude of all they know God to be, he or she worships. When individuals bring not only this deeply personal expression but also the same recognition pertaining to God's activity and character among others and the community as a whole, it is corporate worship. When corporate worship takes place there is not only a cumulative affect, but an exponential one. The truth of God grows drastically beyond ourselves and into the realm of God's love and action in the world around us. Just as a body at work depends on the natural harmony of its parts in concert to function, the church needs worship in community to accesses the subconscious salvation story in its diverse members, coming together in manifold witness. Worship, when done in Spirit and Truth is effortless. It happens in response to an awareness of God (which usually does require some effort to achieve). It is like the rain that falls when the conditions are right - it cannot remain in the clouds as it was, it must transform and become something new. So corporate worship is a building block of the body of Christ. It allows persons to become new creations, and to do so together provides mutual encouragement (watching God minister to others), unity and mutual love (through shared experience of the living God), and creates an alternative community based on the truth that the LORD alone is God (that salvation does not exist apart from God). Of course, none of these life altering and Kingdom ushering consequences of worship occur if worship becomes what it so often is in the institutional church: something painfully less than a vulnerable realization of God's own divine presence. Most commonly the expressions of God's presence themselves get in the way. The music, the sermon, the space, the clothing, the style, the order, the personalities in leadership. All represent the intention to acknowledge and honor God's presence. All run the risk of stealing our attention from the One Thing altogether. For this reason, the primary aim for both leaders and participants in corporate worship at every turn must remain a tireless pursuit of encountering the Spirit himself. Only then will these noble expressions fulfill their purpose, keep in their designated place, and provide a meaningful path to the goal itself - the Godhead.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Desert Faith
blue bird's flight against blue sky
a world below its own expectation
vast of grey and shadowed oaks
tell the disappointment of the ground
underneath flow streams so cool and distant
no root can reach their surging swell
clear fountain, flushing life into the pain
lifting dry and hardened earth - above
will you come? sighs the space-between
will you be unbroken?
there, a whisper leaves a treasure
enough maybe to fly tomorrow
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