Most of the people I run into who ask, "Where will your church be?" would agree with me that the church is the people, at least in some kind of belief. Most churches believe this too. However functionally, I'd argue that most churches do not really believe this, or at least live this in their day to day lives. At best, the way many of these institutions function interferes or misleads people in that the institution is sustainable outside of the people. When this happens, the tail often wags the dog. People are still involved, but their involvement shifts.
People in these organizations may see themselves as missional, because they write checks for a few others to go on their behalf, or for a staff person to live out the church calling. It is not uncommon for marketing to take the place of personal responsibility to invite new people, missions because a yearly event rather than a lifestyle, etc.
In this culture, you can complain about your church without indicting yourself. If a church doesn't meet your needs, then leave and find one that does. Church shopping is not a biblical idea. It's a western consumer idea.
When an institution is responsible for the behavior of being the church, then it lets people off the hook.
Put another way. When the church is an institution:
- I can complain about anything I want, because none of it is my responsibility.
- I can functionally separate how I live my life and what the church does.
- Spiritual growth becomes "private" which unintentionally reinforces a separation between the community members.
- My needs become paramount often simply because I don't know other peoples needs.
- Power is taken from the people to live the fullness of following Christ. This is unintentional and often clashes with stated goals, but whenever the hub of new activity comes from the institution, power has been removed.
But there is another way to live and be. Most churches would agree with what comes next theologically, but functionally their system keep it from happening.
Being the church means that:
- in-as-much as you feed the hungry, the church feeds the hungry.
- in-as-much as you comfort the grieving, the church comforts.
- in-as-much as you welcome, restore, honor, engage, love others, the church does.
- In as much as you minister to children, youth, single moms, and other, the church does.
- In as much as you go, or give, or believe, the church believes.
the church is not simply somewhere out there, it is us, now and how we live.
The church is the people committed to arranging the world the way Jesus would have it.
eikon seeks to be organized into ways that empower people to be the church functionally.
more soon.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
don't go to church... be the church: Part 2
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don't go to church
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1 comments:
I'm really excited about your blog. As a former 'pastor' and now a learner of truth and freedom I can really identify with you blog. I look forword to seeing where this blog goes and making some contributions from time to time
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