Posts Tagged Church 2.0

Ministry 2.0 in World 2.0

Wow! What a great post! It’s a completely different way of thinking and it seems only fitting that Willow Creek is starting to lead the charge in this direction. Interesting!

http://blog.christianitytoday.com/outofur/archives/2008/04/live_from_shift_2.html

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Intentionally Missional Seminar

I had the opportunity today to attend the Wesleyan Headquarters’ Intentionally Missional Seminar today at the Brookings Wesleyan Church in Brookings, South Dakota. All I could say that if you have the opportunity to go to the seminar – by all means go. Besides the opportunity to interact with other pastors, Jim Dunn and Phil Stevenson do a great job not just talking about being missional – but in addressing various concepts that are vital for the success of the church in today’s culture.

I walked away from the seminar with three main ideas that I thought I’d share with my lone reader.

Intentional
The first idea that I picked up on is that the church must be intentional in what it’s doing. Fairly simple concept to grasp, but the ramifications of what being intentional represents is something that bears discussion – maybe we’ll do that in a later post.

Authentic
The concept of being authentic is definitely not a new one – but rather it’s something that MUST be on the forefront of the minds of the church and it’s leader. It’s a far too slippery slope when our leaders and our churches choose to hide behind a facade of who they really are. Those who are not in the church can see right through that facade and that without a doubt turns them off! Again – bears discussion at a later time.

Stagnation
The final concept that I walked away from was the idea of stagnation. Odd that I picked up on this concept, but that’s what I heard. Stagnation is more than just a lack of growth – it’s the idea that things are not going to change and that things are not going to ever move forward. Again – more about this later.

There will probably be a few people who go to the seminar who are going to walk away completely unchanged. I feel bad for those people because they don’t get it and they more than likely never will. BUT – for those who can take the concepts that they learned I sincerely believe that something extraordinary will happen in their churches.

So, bottom line is that this was a seminar that presented material not for the sake of necessarily introducing new ideas, but rather it appears to have been designed to send out a message. A message that says that it’s time to get out of the pulpit and back into the streets where everyday people with everyday problems need to encounter our Living God.

Oh – one last thing – it seems that the speakers have stopped calling it the Wesleyan Denomination and are now calling it the Wesleyan Movement – I hope it’s true and not just a clever name change!

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Abortion movement becomes GREEN movement? – YES!

Keith Drury wrote a GREAT post entitled “Abortion movement becomes GREEN movement” and in this post he talks about the idea that he is suspecting that environmentalism will replace the anti-abortion movement in the next decade. I’m confident that the comments that Keith receives on this post will be ALL over the board from Boomers who just refuse to believe this is a good thing -  to uninformed but well-intended individuals who can’t see past the secular version of the environmental movement -  to people like me who TOTALLY agree with him! Whatever your position – here’s my thoughts – I think he’s right on target and this was my response to his post!

KEITH!!!!! YOU GET IT – YOU TOTALLY GET IT!!! I had to read your post a couple of times to make sure that I actually read it correctly! I don’t think you are an early adapter of this thinking as well – I first heard about this concept from a Christian movement last year when I read the book “Serve God, Save the Planet” by J. Matthew Sleeth, MD. While I was starting to go green, that book really helped put the pieces together for me!

Here’s what appeals to me about the Green movement. It’s not necessarily a Green movement as much as it is a Creation movement. I don’t care at ALL about the political agenda that the Green movement has. Global Warming could be happening – but that’s not my reasoning for taking care of the environment! What I care about is that fact God has given us this place to live and to dwell upon for a short while. But instead of caring for our earth and working to make it better for future generations, I see that this creation that God has given us is being abused. I figure that if God gave Adam charge of the earth – then it still applies to me today and because of that I need to be responsible with my actions.

Yes – I recycle FANATICALLY. Yes – I take my own bags to the grocery store. Yes – my wife and I only have one paid-off car (in South Dakota during winter – it’s definitely a necessity!). Yes – I use CFL lights in my home. YES – I freeze during the winter and sweat during the summer for the sake of a few degrees on my thermostat. YES – I’m planning on commuting the 5 miles to and from work this summer on a bicycle so that we can save money on gas. YES – my wife and I INTENTIONALLY purchased a home that was highly efficient with a footprint that was small enough for my wife and I to live beneath our means. Those are choices that we have intentionally made because we want to be better stewards of the world that God has given us.

Why do I do this? Because, Keith, we live in a flat world – and I’m not just talking about the book by Thomas L. Friedman. Our world is flat in the sense that the example that I set by the slight uncomfortableness of bringing my own bags to the grocery store to cut down on my plastic bag consumption is NOTHING compared to the miles that people walk in Africa just to have clean drinking water. Just because I live in America does NOT mean that I’m entitled to live in such a way that other countries and people are DRASTICALLY affected by my mass consumerism! Case in point – look at the pollution that is having such a catastrophic affect on the land and rivers in China and then when you’re in Wal-Mart to get what ever convenience you MUST have, look at where it’s being made! Shocking and sobering!

Gotta finish up on this because I could write forever on this post, but I would go as far to say that if you are not environmentally conscious – you’ve got no business calling yourself a Christian. If we can’t take care of the very world that we live in – how can we ever expect to take care of each other??? After all, How we take care of the Creation tells us how we feel about the Creator – (I think Rob Bell said that). That’s my thoughts!

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What is the Emerging Church?

Eddie Gibbs and Ryan Bolger, in their book, Emerging Churches: Creating Christian Community in Postmodern Cultures (Baker Academic, 2005) define emerging in this way:

Emerging churches are communities that practice the way of Jesus within postmodern cultures. This definition encompasses nine practices. Emerging churches (1) identify with the life of Jesus, (2) transform the secular realm, and (3) live highly communal lives. Because of these three activities, they (4) welcome the stranger, (5) serve with generosity, (6) participate as producers, (7) create as created beings, (8) lead as a body, and (9) take part in spiritual activities.

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