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One of our members at North Davis sent me this resource: http://jrwoodward.net/2008/11/a-primer-on-todays-missional-church/
Great omnilink! Everything you ever wanted to know about 'missional church' but were too afraid to ask. Thanks Tanner! I'm going to spend the next year checking out the links there and I'll get back to you. Seriously Thanks.
Tanner King said:One of our members at North Davis sent me this resource: http://jrwoodward.net/2008/11/a-primer-on-todays-missional-church/
Hi all,
I nearly got tossed out of Seminary in the late 80's for suggesting that one day we might look back on the decades of the church growth movement and find that far more harm than good was done to both the body of Christ and the church's station in western culture. Now it's 2010 and many are wondering: how much bang did we get for our buck and how's that working out for the traditional church?
Alan Hirsch in The Forgotten Ways, states: "Christology determines missiology, and missiology determines Ecclesiology. This is just a smart-aleck’s way of saying that in order to align ourselves correctly as a missional movement, we first need to return to the Founder of Christianity and, having done that, recalibrate our approach from that point on. Christian mission always starts with Jesus and is defined by him. Jesus is our constant reference point—we always begin and always end with him. It is Jesus who determines the church’s mission in the world. Therefore our sense of purpose and mission comes from being sent by him in to the world." (Alan Hirsch. The Forgotten Ways. Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2006, 142.)
The difference between 'church growth science" and the 'missional movement' is like which comes first - the cart or the horse? For decades the church has been asking what kind of church do we need (want) to be to grow and pay the bills? The missional church is asking what forms do we need to adapt/adopt in order to seed and embed the gospel in the surrounding culture to which God in Christ calls/sends us?
The great danger is that once again the entrenched church will adopt all the ‘buzz’ words and nothing will really change.
If Jesus is Lord over all things for the church (including ALL relationships, not only the church’s internal relationships) then why do we so tenaciously hang on to forms that are clearly failing? Perhaps the question is no longer "WWJD" as if he were absent and not active in the world today, but rather the question for missional followers is what is Jesus doing and can we get in on it without hijacking HIS mission for our own purposes?
I'm convinced Hirsch's little formula goes to the heart of the issue and challenges (if not threatens) much of what is known as church today.
Daniel, you were ahead of your time in the 1980s! As you say, asking, How can I grow this church to pay the bills? is not a good question. How can we reach adapt our forms to reach people for Christ is a good question.
There is indeed a great danger of churches just adopting missional language without changing forms, structures, and hearts. Indeed, despite the fact that I give missional church seminars, I fear that the word has lost its meaning for many. It is still a good term, as it points back to the biblical-theological concept of being sent.
One of my concerns with the missional movement is the lack of focus at times on conversion. This is an over correction. We need to not only serve and be in proximity with people--something lacking in the past--but we also need to share Christ.
Daniel Whalen said:Hi all,
I nearly got tossed out of Seminary in the late 80's for suggesting that one day we might look back on the decades of the church growth movement and find that far more harm than good was done to both the body of Christ and the church's station in western culture. Now it's 2010 and many are wondering: how much bang did we get for our buck and how's that working out for the traditional church?
Alan Hirsch in The Forgotten Ways, states: "Christology determines missiology, and missiology determines Ecclesiology. This is just a smart-aleck’s way of saying that in order to align ourselves correctly as a missional movement, we first need to return to the Founder of Christianity and, having done that, recalibrate our approach from that point on. Christian mission always starts with Jesus and is defined by him. Jesus is our constant reference point—we always begin and always end with him. It is Jesus who determines the church’s mission in the world. Therefore our sense of purpose and mission comes from being sent by him in to the world." (Alan Hirsch. The Forgotten Ways. Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2006, 142.)
The difference between 'church growth science" and the 'missional movement' is like which comes first - the cart or the horse? For decades the church has been asking what kind of church do we need (want) to be to grow and pay the bills? The missional church is asking what forms do we need to adapt/adopt in order to seed and embed the gospel in the surrounding culture to which God in Christ calls/sends us?
The great danger is that once again the entrenched church will adopt all the ‘buzz’ words and nothing will really change.
If Jesus is Lord over all things for the church (including ALL relationships, not only the church’s internal relationships) then why do we so tenaciously hang on to forms that are clearly failing? Perhaps the question is no longer "WWJD" as if he were absent and not active in the world today, but rather the question for missional followers is what is Jesus doing and can we get in on it without hijacking HIS mission for our own purposes?
I'm convinced Hirsch's little formula goes to the heart of the issue and challenges (if not threatens) much of what is known as church today.
My dad always said that I was born about 20 years prematurely. The forms ‘church’ takes are always negotiable! It was ‘hanging onto the traditions for the fathers’ that seemed to give Jesus of Nazareth heartburn. The issue of ‘Forms’ goes to the very heart of incarnation – God becoming flesh and blood and moving into the neighborhood. When Jesus is represented and experienced, everything changes. The very way we ‘know’ the Father through the Son is the greatest change and changing factor the world has ever had to come to terms with.
A few years ago, I worked with a church agency to develop their ‘mission statement’. It ended up as “Providing resources that build churches that change lives.” It was theirs and they were happy with it. Still, something didn’t sit quite right about it with me. Today I realize it was all ‘attractional’ intended to preserve the status quo. It is the inverse of what I know to be the right ‘formula’ for Missional ecclesiology, namely that Jesus provides the recourses (his person, his Spirit and gifts) in order to change lives with which to build his ‘church’.
It is all about conversion! But, it is Jesus who does the converting, not the church. The question confronting the church today is whether we trust Jesus enough to lead and direct HIS church.
James Nored said:Daniel, you were ahead of your time in the 1980s! As you say, asking, How can I grow this church to pay the bills? is not a good question. How can we reach adapt our forms to reach people for Christ is a good question.
There is indeed a great danger of churches just adopting missional language without changing forms, structures, and hearts. Indeed, despite the fact that I give missional church seminars, I fear that the word has lost its meaning for many. It is still a good term, as it points back to the biblical-theological concept of being sent.
One of my concerns with the missional movement is the lack of focus at times on conversion. This is an over correction. We need to not only serve and be in proximity with people--something lacking in the past--but we also need to share Christ.
Daniel Whalen said:Hi all,
I nearly got tossed out of Seminary in the late 80's for suggesting that one day we might look back on the decades of the church growth movement and find that far more harm than good was done to both the body of Christ and the church's station in western culture. Now it's 2010 and many are wondering: how much bang did we get for our buck and how's that working out for the traditional church?
Alan Hirsch in The Forgotten Ways, states: "Christology determines missiology, and missiology determines Ecclesiology. This is just a smart-aleck’s way of saying that in order to align ourselves correctly as a missional movement, we first need to return to the Founder of Christianity and, having done that, recalibrate our approach from that point on. Christian mission always starts with Jesus and is defined by him. Jesus is our constant reference point—we always begin and always end with him. It is Jesus who determines the church’s mission in the world. Therefore our sense of purpose and mission comes from being sent by him in to the world." (Alan Hirsch. The Forgotten Ways. Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2006, 142.)
The difference between 'church growth science" and the 'missional movement' is like which comes first - the cart or the horse? For decades the church has been asking what kind of church do we need (want) to be to grow and pay the bills? The missional church is asking what forms do we need to adapt/adopt in order to seed and embed the gospel in the surrounding culture to which God in Christ calls/sends us?
The great danger is that once again the entrenched church will adopt all the ‘buzz’ words and nothing will really change.
If Jesus is Lord over all things for the church (including ALL relationships, not only the church’s internal relationships) then why do we so tenaciously hang on to forms that are clearly failing? Perhaps the question is no longer "WWJD" as if he were absent and not active in the world today, but rather the question for missional followers is what is Jesus doing and can we get in on it without hijacking HIS mission for our own purposes?
I'm convinced Hirsch's little formula goes to the heart of the issue and challenges (if not threatens) much of what is known as church today.
Daniel, the church's mission statement that you mention is typical of the thinking in most churches. Most churches do not say quite so explicitly that they are seeking to provide resources to build up the church.. They usually say they are trying to reach lost people, but their actions often show that this is not really the top priority.
There is such an inherent self-centeredness to us all. It is hard to love others as we love ourselves. And it is hard for churches to love the lost as much as they love themselves.
Daniel Whalen said:
Right on target, James. The Gospel is about Jesus, his mission in seeking and saving the lost and his kingdom. Only by the grace of God do any of us participate. "How dare God engage in 'evangelism' without seeking our OK." God uses the humble; the poor in spirit, Yet Jesus still seeks and saves the lost. Sometimes he lets the 'not so lost' (i.e. those endeavoring to follow him) in on what he is doing and in the words of Karl Barth we might even have an opportunity to "prompt a response". That's very different from how I 'learned to do evangelism' from the church I grew up in. I think finding the ballance, neither exagerating nor minimzing the role the church (his disciples) might play, is key.
James Nored said:Daniel, the church's mission statement that you mention is typical of the thinking in most churches. Most churches do not say quite so explicitly that they are seeking to provide resources to build up the church.. They usually say they are trying to reach lost people, but their actions often show that this is not really the top priority.
There is such an inherent self-centeredness to us all. It is hard to love others as we love ourselves. And it is hard for churches to love the lost as much as they love themselves.
Daniel Whalen said:
This may be a seperate thread or question. But in reading about missional I just understand it to mean a disciple or a Christian, and collectively a church. So why do we need the term?
It sounds to me like you are asking the question I asked two decades ago. "How would we structure a church if we were formulating it to fit the world we live in today? That question has no relationship to theology, or the churches official leaders elders, deacons, etc. For me that was a question about how we do, and what we do, when we meet. It is not about changing the truth.
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