Thursday, April 29, 2010

Four Things

I have four concepts that are swimming around in my head that are clearly coming out in this blog.  I have appropriate links to help you understand.

1)  The Missional Church -- The church exists to be missionaries in the culture of which it's a part.

2)  The Emerging Church -- This is harder to define but is a "deconstructed," post-modern way of looking at church.  It is closely tied with the Missional Church.

3)  Red-Letter Christians -- This is a movement to save the church from both left and right partisan politics by focusing on the words of Jesus (the "red letters") and living according to his words.  It recognizes all of Scripture as inspired but uses the life of Christ as the lens through which the rest of Scripture is viewed.

4)  Servant Evangelism -- The notion that acts of love have a positive change on communities and is what brings persons into a relationship with Christ.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The Gospel According to Us

When we approach a reading of Scripture, we assume that our interpretation is “Gospel Truth.”  After all, if we don’t believe we understand Scripture then we are a bunch of believers be most pitied. 

Well, perhaps we are to be pitied.  Because we are far from the truth if we are to assume our understanding is the truth, that OUR gospel is, indeed, THE gospel.  This is what Michael Slaughter say about this in his book, Change the World.


In our quest to rediscover and reclaim the biblical interpretation of Jesus, it is important to remember that Jesus’ hermeneutic was at odds with the schools of biblical orthodoxy during his earthly ministry.  He was considered a blasphemer and violator of the law of Moses.  Like many reformers through the centuries, he was branded and ultimately executed for the crime of heresy.  Ironically, however, yesterday’s heresy often becomes today’s orthodoxy.  As we follow the Lord of lords, we need to continually seek the wisdom and guidance of living in his Spirit.  He said, “I have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear.  But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all the truth.  He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is to come.  He will glorify me because it is from me that he will receive what he will make known to you” (John 16:12-14)

Jesus pointed out a critical deficiency in the biblical hermeneutic of religious leaders that continues to plague the church today, “You have let go of the commands of God and are holding onto human traditions”  (Mark 7:8).  All of us bring to the interpretation of Scripture certain prejudices.   We view life through the window of our life experiences, culture of origin, and family value systems.  Each of us brings a blend of political ideology, personal prejudice, and folk religion (such as the maxim “God helps those who help themselves,” which is a quotation from Ben Franklin, not Scripture) and mixes it with some scriptural truth to form a personalized system of life doctrines.   What we emphatically proclaim as God’s absolute law becomes our version of Israel’s golden calf.   We cannot begin to grasp the eternal wisdom of the written word apart from and ongoing relationship with the Living Word!  We must approach the scripture with the humility of children and not the arrogance of Pharisaical judges.  (Mike Slaughter, Change the World, 23-24, emphasis mine).

Those who know me well know that I say, “When we all get to heaven, we’ll say, ‘Now I get it."  That’s the perspective that we need to have, for we don’t have all of our “I’s” dotted and “T’s” crossed.  We desperately need to be aware of our own limitations as we deal with others...particularly those with whom we disagree most.  Our version of “gospel truth” has been shaped by so many of our own life experiences and our learnings through life.  And, even our quests to find some “historical Jesus” puts Jesus in the box of our own cultural understandings.  Our own quest for orthodoxy is shaped by our own heresies. 

Still, it’s hard to be humble when we’re sure we have all of the answers.

 
The picture above is from  

Friday, April 23, 2010

Leadership in the church -- Vision & Followers


I just finished with an hour and a half meeting with a University of Alaska, Fairbanks student at The Grind here in Girdwood.  She wanted to talk about "Leadership" with someone who was a leader in the community...but not in a way that was based upon financial leadership.  Apparently, I qualified.   This was a good exercise.  It forced me to think about leadership qualities in general and what specifically it meant for me.  And, as I thought about it, I'm not sure I'm a great leader or even a very good one at times.  I can think of so many instances where, if I had been a better leader, better stuff would have happened.  However, as I look back, I've found myself in leadership positions for much of my life...youth group...college fraternity...church...Lions Club...PTA...etc.  And I'm not so sure I was the best person for those positions at the time but I was the one who was willing.  Perhaps a willingness to lead is part of it.



The think I kept coming back to is vision.  A leader needs to be like the champion chess player who is thinking 20 moves ahead.  A leader needs to be able to see the whole playing field.  A leader can't suffer from myopia.  A leader needs to see what's coming, have a vision, and be able to cast that vision in such a way that persons follow along.  A leader needs to communicate in such a way that others can "catch the vision."  Otherwise, you just have one crazy person with an idea and no followers.   It's like the following TED video:


Without followers there is no leading taking place.  It's just one crazy person with an idea.
Our scriptures tell us in Proverbs 29:18:



Where there is no vision, the people perish.

Leaders need to realize this and be able to look beyond what's right in front of their faces.  For us in the church, this means being able to see, demographically, what's coming.  It means knowing who it is that sees the bigger picture and listening.  And, again, presenting this preferred future in such a way that persons embrace it and go along for the ride.

I talked about a lot.

Another thing I spent some time talking about is recognizing who it is that needs to be on board for something to happen.  In my first church, I recognized that the United Methodist Women's Group was really the gatekeepers of the church. If they were on board, it could happen.  But, as pastor, if I didn't have their support, I was going to have difficulty proceeding with whatever idea, vision, thought, plan, program it was that I had.  I remember the story of Under Armor, the athletic wear.  When that company was starting out, it had what they thought was a good product and thought it would prove beneficial to athletes.  However, they had to convince them to wear clothing that was, in a real sense, modeled on female undergarments -- nylons -- stockings.  The plan of the company was to get some big stars on board and, if they liked the product and used it, others would join up.  That's what they did.  That's what happened.  And Under Armor is everywhere in the sporting world now.

So, for the church or our communities, we need to see what groups or persons need to be on board as early adopters.  We need to know who our first followers will be.  They are the ones that become the best evangelists for us.  Even Jesus needed his disciples and the apostles.  He needed someone to get on board and share the vision and message that was proclaimed to them.


Image: truemitra / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

"Thy Will, O Lord. Nothing more. Nothing less. Nothing else. Thy Will."

Those who attend our services for any length of time will recognize that as the prayer I saw at the beginning of my sermons.   I can't claim to have come up with it myself.   Indeed, most of what I say I probably need to credit someone else for saying it first.  This prayer is one that was said by Rev. Powell Osteen of the North Carolina Conference.  He was serving Resurrection United Methodist Church between Durham and Chapel HIll and was instrumental in some what went on with my spiritually during the last two years of seminary.

Resurrection UMC was an interesting church in North Carolina, or anywhere, in that it was multi-racial.  It's not like it was half African-American, but there were several persons and also some mixed race couples.  That's not something you'd see at every church in the early 90's or today.  Julie and I had the good fortune of visiting the church the first Sunday they were in a brand new facility.  It was an exciting Sunday and our participation in the celebration made it easier to join in events over the next couple of years.  We worked concessions at concerts for missions -- getting to see the Grateful Dead and Elton John among others. We attended church dinners.  And it was here that, as I was neck deep in religious work for school, Powell constructively criticized my lack of participation in the education program of their church.

For the two years we attended there, Powell began his sermons with "Thy will, O Lord.  Nothing more.  Nothing less.  Nothing else.  Thy will."  And, after that being a part of my life, it seemed like a humble and appropriate way to begin my own sermons.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Disturb Us, Lord -- A Prayer By Francis Drake

This is a prayer whose sentiments we need to heed more frequently.   It's author, Sir Francis Drake, an adventurer, wrote it as he departed to the west coast of South America. 
 
Disturb us, Lord, when
We are too pleased with ourselves,
When our dreams have come true
Because we dreamed too little,
When we arrived safely
Because we sailed too close to the shore.

Disturb us, Lord, when
With the abundance of things we possess
We have lost our thirst
For the waters of life;
Having fallen in love with life,
We have ceased to dream of eternity
And in our efforts to build a new earth,
We have allowed our vision
Of the new Heaven to dim.


Disturb us, Lord, to dare more boldly,
To venture on wilder seas
Where storms will show Your mastery;
Where losing sight of land,
We shall find the stars.

We ask you to push back
The horizons of our hopes;
And to push back the future
In strength, courage, hope, and love.

This we ask in the name of our Captain,
Who is Jesus Christ.



Sunday, April 18, 2010

Sermon From 18 April 2010 "Change The World" -- Luke 24:1-49


(NOTE:  I'm a little nervous about posting sermons.  I'll right more about that later.  However, since this gets at my understanding of church and what's been swimming around in my head for a few years, I thought I'd post it here.)

I'm going to start off this sermon offering a little insight into my perspective of theology and church and faith.  Those who have checked out my blog might recognize some of the themes.

When I got to Girdwood, I started doing some of the things I thought I should do as the only pastor here at the time and being part of a community that didn't seem quite so sure it could trust a pastor...or a church for that matter.  I got involved.  I became intimately connected with the community.  I served.  I cleaned.  I planned.  I invited.  And I attended more meetings than perhaps I needed to.  I was not and am not the only one who does this.  I've always said I thought Girdwood was a community that took "community" seriously. I still believe that.

But that involvement wasn't just because I thought Girdwood was a neat place that I wanted to be involved or that I thought community was a good thing and that if I was going to make any inroads in the community that was the way to do it.  It was because I had AND HAVE an understanding of pastoring and the church that said the church does not exist for those in pews, but exists for the world--for those that hurt, for those that have need, for those that are lost, for those who need to know they are found.  Many of you have heard me take a phrase from Disciple Bible Study and say that Jesus and the church exist for "The Least, The Last, and the Lost." And as I was assigned to Girdwood Chapel I have tried to see this particular expression of the Body of Christ not so much as a place TO DO MINISTRY but as a place TO DO MINISTRY FROM.

I guess, theologically, I understand us to be missionaries for Christ and the church then becomes a place, not so much a place to invite people to be fed, but as a place where we give people the tools whereby they can go into the world to feed others--yes, around the world...but perhaps most importantly here in the community of which we are a part (which many of you will know is a phrase I use a whole lot).

Now, the building process has kind of put a damper on this.  It's been a long process.  Some of our most involved leaders and followers have been putting more time than they might have wanted to on this particular task.  It hasn't been so much a matter of "reaching the people out there."  It's been a matter of building this structure that we need to get out of the way first.  It's been a long process.  It's been seven years since we moved to our present location. It's been five years since we moved from one side of the property, right by the entrance, to where we are today.  In 2007 and 2008, in particular, it was wearing on me.  It felt like it was kind of getting in the way of the ministry that I thought we COULD be doing...in the way of the ministry that I thought we SHOULD be doing.

With some light at the end of the proverbial tunnel of our building process, my sermons over the past year or so have been trying to push us in ways to see ourselves as missionaries in this world--sent out as bearers of the Good News on the highways and the byways...to the coffee shops...and the Merc...at the Forest Fair Meeting to the Fire Department...on the chair lift and the classroom chair...on the bike path and in our own families.  We are bearers of the Good News.  More than a list of rules and regulations, this is what it means to be a follower of Christ....something I confess to doing more haltingly than should be the case for someone who is supposed to be setting some sort of religious example.

And so, whether you've seen this coming or not...even whether I've seen this coming or not...we have embodied a theology of mission.  We've had DAYS OF SERVICE, where we've gone out in the community to do service projects.  We've had a series, called "UNCHRISTIAN" that was essentially a guide for those in church to understand how some of those outside of the church may view us.  We had a series called, "OUTFLOW," to biblically construct a framework for you to see how God's love is intended to flow into your lives and then to your families, your friends, your community, and the whole world.  We changed our mission statement, which previously talked of being a "Christian Spiritual=life center," to one saying "Love God.  Love others.  Change the world."  Sending us out.  Telling the bigness of our God and changing our communities as others are brought into the story.

God may have called us to be here, this Sunday...any Sunday...but he calls us only to send us away as lightbearers for this world.

There is a BIGNESS to a church that is doing something like this.  A SMALL church exists for itself.  But it's big when it's changing lives of those that come...and changing lives of those who come in contact with them because of the grace and mercy and love others experience in them.  There is a bigness to the faith that recognizes it is swept up in big salvation story of our God.  There is a bigness to the action.  It is an understanding of faith and Christ that says it's too big to be contained and held and sheltered.  (It's like the children's song today "Hide it under a bushel?  NO!  I'm gonna' let it shine.")

Via that long introduction, we come to the Scripture lesson for today.  In this lesson there are three sections. 

First is the resurrection account.  I know we're a couple of weeks past Easter, but the resurrection butterflies are still hanging above the altar so I thought it was appropriate to recount that story.  This is the story that shapes us and gives meaning and understanding to the power we have from Christ to be the hands and feet of God in the world.

Next we have the famous Walk to Emmaus story where Jesus walks with some unsuspecting travelers and they tell him the horrible and astounding events of the previous days.  This gives Jesus the opportunity to announce to them that it was necessary for the Messiah to suffer and go to glory.  And, my favorite line in that account, verse 27, "Then beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them the things about himself in all the Scriptures." He laid it all out there for them, telling him how everything (from Genesis, and Isaiah, and the Psalms, and everything) had brought them to this place...the place where he's telling the story.  It's a call for them and for us to place ourselves in this long salvation story.

Only one of the travelers is named...Cleopas.  They were so enthralled by the teaching of the still-unrevealed Jesus that they invited him to spend the evening with them.  And, as we know, they don't recognize who it is that's among them until Jesus "took bread, gave thanks, broke it, and began to give it to them" (24:30).  We have communion here every week in the hopes that you, too, come to recognize who it is among us.

Here's how Eugene Peterson describes what happened next in "The Message" translation:

They didn't waste a minute. They were up and on their way back to Jerusalem. They found the Eleven and their friends gathered together, talking away: "It's really happened! The Master has been raised up—Simon saw him!"
Then the two went over everything that happened on the road and how they recognized him when he broke the bread.

Jesus leaves and the two men run back to Jerusalem to share the good news that Jesus Christ is really risen. THIS is the part of the Emmaus section of the story that I want to focus on right now.  Cleopas and "the other guy" are transformed by an encounter with the risen Christ and, all of a sudden, become missionaries.  They recognize that they have encountered a message that is too important not to share with the community.  It is hoped that their lives are not just changed for this sprint back to the city but for as long as they live.  They are part of the story.

We read the scriptures, not as history. We sing our songs, not as performance.  I preach, not because I like to hear myself talk (or not ONLY because I like to hear myself talk--and make people laugh.)  We do this so that we can see ourselves in the story and learn how to share this story with the folks we meet in our daily lives...no matter where we come into contact with them.  This is not about "preaching to the choir" in this place but preaching to the world when we go from this place.

Our church then becomes an outpost for the advancement of the Good News into the world.  And how effective we're being as a church is less dependent on the building or the rear ends in the pews but how our folks -- you -- are being Christians in the world -- how much you're putting into your walk of faith with Christ.

There is a third section of our Scripture passage from Luke.  Cleopas and his friend have high-tailed it to Jerusalem and, as they are recounting all that has happened, Jesus shows up...my guess is that he's not even winded.  He shows them his hands and feet.  It says, in verse 41, "while in their joy they were disbelieving, and still wondering."  You gotta' think it seemed too good to be true.  He told them that the Messiah was to suffer and die and that this was all part of the plan.  WHY????  This is why, according to Peterson's translation, The Message:

"a total life-change through the forgiveness of sins is proclaimed in his name to all nations—starting from here, from Jerusalem! You're the first to hear and see it. You're the witnesses. What comes next is very important: I am sending what my Father promised to you, so stay here in the city until he arrives, until you're equipped with power from on high" (Luke 24:47-49).

This mission of the church as a powerful, life-giving, world-shaking, moving, holy entity springs from all that Christ was and is--and did and does.  Our mission is a response to Jesus' mission.  We are to reflect God's mission in and for and to the world in Jesus.  We may be called here, but we are sent out...and we are given the power of the Holy Spirit to be sent out and given message of Good News to take with us wherever we go.  WE ARE WITNESSES to this great story of the love of our God and invite others along for this ride.

I got an e-mail from your former pastor, Chuck Frost, this week.  He doesn't have an opportunity to preach in his current setting and wondered about the following.  Actually, what he said was, "I have a sermon idea that you are free to use.  You may think it stinks, but if you don't, it's yours."  I don't think it stinks.  Here it is...

I was at a friend’s recently playing guitar and singing Americana style songs.  When we came to a song about trains, I mentioned the fascination with trains in roots music and that even my children, who were born in the late 90’s were enamored with trains when you’d think that the modern child might move on to more advanced methods of transportation.
When we lived in Alaska, we would take the boys for a walk during the summer down to a local overpass (very tiny overpass as the town we lived in was much like the one in Northern Exposure) where the train would pass under.
This was a daily highlight…to see the train.
I can clearly remember the high-pitched toddler voices that yelled “TRAIN TRAIN” when they saw it coming around the bend
When I was younger, I am told that I loved to sing Elizabeth Cotton’s “Freight Train” and Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison Blues” (“I hear the train a comin’”).
Of course, for children the fascination extends beyond trains.  They are simply fascinated with big objects that move…airplanes, RV’s, Semi’s, motorcycles, and bulldozers.
When my oldest was almost two, we were on a plane taking off from the Mobile, Alabama airport to return home to Alaska.  We put his seat at the window and watched his eyes get bigger with childlike wonder at the enormous planes nearby as we waited to depart.  He started softly, “ehh-plane.”  Then he said it again:  “ehhhh-plane”.  And again:   “ehhhhhhhh-plane.”  Each time stretching the first syllable and increasing in volume until he was saying over and over again as loud as a toddler could get “EHHHHHHHHHHHHH-PLANE!”  The people around us were not annoyed, but amused as they were giggling along with my wife and me.
The childlike fascination with big, moving vehicles is a joy to see, but it’s the one thing that we rarely lose as we get older.   I still look up when I hear a plane or watch a train go by.  I especially take note of motorcycles since I am a rider myself.
There is something elemental about this love of big, moving things.  We are drawn to moving things that are much bigger than we are.  Whether they are physical, communal or spiritual.
We are all drawn to something that’s big and goes somewhere.

Through the death and resurrection and the coming of the Holy Spirit, we are hooked onto a story that is far bigger than ourselves.  It's big.  It's going somewhere.  We're along for the ride.
And, as a church, we go out into the community, to our community, helping others get along for the ride.  THAT is how we change the community.

And so we have "A Change the World Weekend" along with many United Methodist Churches this weekend.  We'll have an overnight to raise awareness about the world's malaria problem.   And so we hand out cookies indiscriminately (or as we call it, "Cookie Flinging") with the sole purpose of saying "we love you" to folks we share this town with.  And so we have "Bible and Brew" -- our Bible Study in a bar.   And so we have Bible and Brew.  And so we plan Vacation Bible School.  And so we'll build.  And so I preach.  And so, I hope, you listen.

How will you invite others to hop on board, latching onto the big story of our God's love for us?  For that is how we change the community.

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

The Missional Church...Simple

It's Sunday morning and I found this video on YouTube that really goes along with a lot of what I'm preaching about today.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

"Unchurched Harry and Unchurched Mary" for 2010



It's been 17 years since Lee Stroebel wrote his book, "Inside the Mind of Unchurched Harry & Mary:  How to Reach Friends and Family Who Avoid God and the Church."  It was shortly after that that I found myself at a conference at Willow Creek Community Church up near Chicago.  At the time there were a few mega-churches that were really stepping out and doing something new for the sake of the unchurched.  Fourteen years after that, in 2007, the Barna group had a study that said we were approaching 100 million unchurched folks in the US.

Think about that number for a second.  See, here in the US and, indeed, in my own church, we have a sense that mission work is something that is done "over there."  In Alaska we sent missionaries off to the deep dark corners of our state (and did some horrible things while there).  But it was all done in under the guise of "mission work."  Well, our real mission right now is with our neighbors and friends.  It's the people around us.

There was a follow-up study by a pastor and an atheist who visited a bunch of churches to experience what it was like as a visitor in them.  This, of course, was made into a book, "Jim and Casper Go to Church."  One of the things I found most interesting is the following paragraph that Barna provides:
Many of the insights drawn from the experiences of "Jim and Casper" parallel the findings of Barna Group studies among the unchurched. Some of the critical discoveries were the relative indifference of most churched Christians to unchurched people; the overt emphasis upon a personal rather than communal faith journey; the tendency of congregations to perform rituals and exercise talents rather than invite and experience the presence of God; the absence of a compelling call to action given to those who attend; and the failure to listen to dissident voices and spiritual guidance to dig deeper in one’s faith.
How often have our own churches stressed the personal rather than the communal?  How often have we put an emphasis on talents?  How often have we failed to allow dissident voices in our own congregations?  And, perhaps most troubling for me, personally, how often have we failed to call our people to action?  I, for one, am not challenging enough as a pastor.  It is said that you will get what you ask for.  If you ask for little commitment from your congregation, you'll get just that.

Maybe the problem isn't with the unchurched folk but with those of us who are already churched?

The "Missional Church"

Things are kind of coming together in my head. 
I'm reading Michael Slaughter's book, Change the World, for a three-part sermon series and preparation for our "Change the World Sunday" in 8 days.  I've been reading some other blogs.  I've been studying. And I've been reflecting about where I've been over the last year or so.   In my preaching and teaching I've been putting great stress on getting out and being involved in communities.  As Director of Communications for the Alaska United Methodist Conference, I have been inundated with all of the PR for our "RETHINK CHURCH" campaign and the slogan, "What if church were a verb?"  I am rooted in the Wesleyan understanding of "practical divinity" and Reuben Job's Three Simple Rules (Do no harm, Do good, Stay in love with God).  Even the first sermon I ever preached was on the Book of James (2:14-18) and it's connection between faith and works. 

14 What good is it, dear brothers and sisters, if you say you have faith but don’t show it by your actions? Can that kind of faith save anyone? 15 Suppose you see a brother or sister who has no food or clothing, 16 and you say, “Good-bye and have a good day; stay warm and eat well”—but then you don’t give that person any food or clothing. What good does that do?
 17 So you see, faith by itself isn’t enough. Unless it produces good deeds, it is dead and useless.
 18 Now someone may argue, “Some people have faith; others have good deeds.” But I say, “How can you show me your faith if you don’t have good deeds? I will show you my faith by my good deeds.”

I have always, as far as I remember, had an understanding that our faith was one to be lived out in the world, actively.

The problem is, for most of us Christians and for most of us Pastors, we just haven't operated that way.  And it's shown by how we've "done" church.   We've been up our churches and put our programs into place and have hoped to have a good enough product so that persons are "attracted" to us and come join us.  "If you build it, they will come."  And, with our building process, that's kind of how it's felt.

So, a lot of this has been swimming around in my head.  It's a lot of what I felt and was really how I've been preaching and teaching and hopefully acting.

But there is a term that has come to my attention that gets at what all of this is meaning to me right now.  Just today I came across Ken Carter's blog, "Bear Witness to the Love of God" and the post "Re-thinking church (change the world)."  I wanted to quote some of this for you.
I would encourage United Methodist pastors and leaders to read Slaughter's Change The World, and alongside it Introducing The Missional Church by Roxburgh and Boren (Baker, 2009). To paraphrase Roxburgh and Boren, we will likely discover in the coming years that our constituents are tiring of the attractional pattern of doing church (for many of the reasons I note in the first paragraph above); at the same time, many young adults (16-35 year olds) hunger for missional church, or at least missional experience (evidence: Katrina, Haiti, Bono, Teach for America, the Obama campaign, etc.). To be missional is to enter into the strange world of the Bible---the call of Abraham, Isaiah's prophecy to rebuild the ruined cities, the inaugural sermon of Jesus in Capernaum, the Great Commandment and the Great Commission, not to mention the Book of Acts, a neglected resource among mainline churches in general) and the tradition. At our best, United Methodists have always been missional, and when we have been missional, we have changed the world. There will continue to be attractional churches who do their ministry with excellence, but for the most part they will attract mobile United Methodists seeking similar programs and practices (I am thinking of the United Methodist who moves from Charlotte to Indianapolis, or vice versa).

I think this has bearing for how our church acts in our own community.  We need to see ourselves as missionaries going out to the world around us with the light of Christ.  And, as our church grows, we must never lose sight of the mission of the church.  It is never to have the most beautiful building...or the largest mortgage.  We need to be careful that our own building doesn't become an idol to us that gets in the way of ministry.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

The Only Hermeneutic -- A Congregation that Beleives


I have been pondering this small post over at J.R. Woodward's "Dream Awakener" for the last couple of days since I found it.  The post has a great quote from Lesslie Newbigin.  The whole post is as follows:

This next paragraph by Lesslie Newbigin, though short and concise is deep, rich and worth considerable reflection – especially for those of us who live in the West.   It first appeared in an article, "Evangelism in the City," written in 1987 for the Reformed Review.  I am taking this from Lesslie Newbigin – Missionary Theologian.

"How can this strange story of God made flesh, of a crucified Savior, of resurrection and new creation become credible for those whose entire mental training has conditioned them to believe that the real world is the world which can be satisfactorily explained and managed without the hypothesis of God? I know of only one clue to the answering of that question, only one real hermeneutic of the gospel:  a congregation which believes it."  – Lesslie Newbigin

A congregation that is growing in grace and is learning to embody the ministry of reconciliation, walk with God, follow the way of Jesus,  become peacemakers, fight for justice, immerse themselves in God’s story, who find healing and wholeness in community and are shaped the the sacred text is the kind of community that believes!


A HERMENEUTIC is an interpretation...usually referring to the Gospel or to the Bible.  So, here, Newbigin is saying that the best, or rather, "only" interpretation of the gospel is a congregation that believes it.   This floors me.  It's like Shane Claibornes' understanding that we are to "fascinate the world with grace."  We are to have congregations, people, faithful Christians who actually believe all this stuff we talk about and actually live it.

As pastor I know I suffer from a Messiah complex of sorts.  "Oh, if people could only be as faithful as me" I'm sure I secretly think to myself as I, too, let my little faith get in the way of my hopes and dreams for my church...our church...THE CHURCH.  Perhaps on this journey we all need to really believe what it is that we say we do.  How that's going to work out...I don't know.  But I'm willing, with God's help, of course, to try.