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  • Mark 4:07 pm on December 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ABC News, Jared Looney   

    Jared Looney, NYC Bronx House Churches and ABC News 

    Hey all – one of my dear friends and mentors, Jared Looney of the Bronx, NYC, (and ACU alumni) was recently covered in an ABC news story. He is resourcing a network of organic churches in that part of the world, and has been about the project for almost 10 years. Recent reports are stating that almost 6 million (1 in 5) American Christians now meet exclusively in someone’s home for worship. This is astounding!

    Check out his story here: http://abcnews.go.com/US/worshipping-home-household-churches-norm-families/story?id=12450779

    Watch the video:

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    • Jhshlooney 9:59 pm on March 1, 2011 Permalink

      Hi..I am Jared’s mom, who lives in Texas…

    • Mark W 10:07 pm on March 1, 2011 Permalink

      Hey there! You’ve gotta great son! I’ll be talking to him this Thursday. :)

  • Mark 2:30 pm on June 24, 2010 Permalink | Reply
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    Layers of Christian Community: Mondo 

    God’s sights for Jesus’ mission was not merely set on religious renewal among the Jews, starting the Church, or even creating a new religion for all peoples.  God’s sights were and still are set on world transformation – on creating a new heaven and new earth!  The game plan since the beginning, since the Garden, has always been about up-ending the brokenness of this world and cultivating a new heaven and new earth right here in our neighborhood.  That’s why Jesus came as a human, to introduce a new kind of human, a new kind of world – what he called “The Kingdom of God.”

    This world transformation is the central mission of God, meaning that “the church” is not God’s only project on earth.  God’s glory fills the WHOLE earth (Hab 2:14)  Unfortunately, too often “church growth” and even “church planting” is the ultimate goal of many Christians today.  But the true purpose of the Church must be the same goal as Jesus’ mission - showing the world the Kingdom of God is near! (Mark 1:15)  This Kingdom of God is our world-transformed.  And our proclaiming that brand-new-in-every-way world is the WHOLE GOSPEL.

    Unfortunately, the Church is better at proclaiming a part of the Gospel (“saving souls for heaven” or merely “doing good works for earth”).  In addition, the church as a whole often is many times so distrusting of itself and so disorganized that it rarely makes any real strategic attempt at accomplishing its goal – to display the WHOLE GOSPEL before the world.

    The church in many places is about as unified as a box of toothpicks dumped out onto a table. But with a little intentionality, those toothpicks can begin to spread out over the table like spokes on a wheel.  The same is true for the church – we must work together to see a saturation of Jesus Christ presented before every tongue, tribe and nation; not uniting under one denomination, doctrine, or project, but under one mission:

    …getting the WHOLE CHURCH to give the WHOLE GOSPEL to the WHOLE WORLD!

    Mondo Layer

    So what is the Mondo Layer?  It is the “Church Universal” as many have called it before.  Throughout all time and space, there is only one Body, one Faith, and one Lord over all of us. (Eph 4:1-4) Its the common bond we can feel with St. Francis of Assisi or Martin Luther King Jr. or a Christian from the other side of the world.

    The Mondo Layer gives us access to the same Holy Spirit that inspired the Church Fathers and Mothers to write the classics that are with us to this day.  The Syriac Fathers to Margery Kempe, Celtic Spirituality to the Anabaptists… they offer us multiple streams of living water and each display for us a piece of the Kingdom that would otherwise be lost to us today.  Many Christians are anemic – even though they live deeply into the Mono, Micro, Meso and Macro Layers, simply because they do not access the Mondo Layer – the Church Universal, where the Holy Spirit is waiting to bring unity and family to us through time and space.

    There are three measures for unity in the Universal Church (not just anyone can be a part of God’s called-out people), theological (doctrine, right belief), functional (producing fruit that resembles Christ’s life), and relational unity (we are only unified when we practice unity!).  But truthfully, there is something even more important in discovering Christian unity.  What Barton Stone called “Fire Unity” – which is the union of God’s Spirit to humanity.  In Stone’s words,

    How vain are all human attempts to unite a bundle of twigs together, so as to make them grow together and bear fruit! They must first be united with the living stock, and receive its sap and spirit, before they can ever be united with each other. So must we be first united with Christ, and receive his spirit [sic], before we can ever be in spirit united with one another. The members of the body cannot live unless by union with the head—nor can the members of the church be united, unless first united with Christ, the living head. His spirit is the bond of union. Men have devised many plans to unite Christians – all are vain. There is but one effectual plan, which is, that all be united with Christ and walk in him.”

    Mondo Lived Out

    The Church Universal is a great feel-good concept- that we are all one in Christ.  The problem is, you cannot work toward unity with the Pope, because you’ll (likely) never meet him.  You can only express unity with Christians in your actual life - where you actually have some practical say over whether or not you live in unity with your brothers and sisters so vastly different from you.  So, maybe you’ll never meet the Pope, but what about the church on other side of town?  What about the mega-church down the street, or the black church downtown?  The truth is – the functional portion of the Mondo Layer is seen in the city-church.

    “In the NT, there are three fundamental dimensions of the church: the believers who frequently gather as a house church; the believers that periodically gather as a local (city) church; and the entire community of believers in Christ who do not have an opportunity to meet but of which each believer is a part.” — Rex Koivisto

    This is bigger than any one congregation or church network (also called the Macro Layer).  It is the entire Christ-centered community in a given city or area. It is the City-Church you hear about it Acts 14:23, Titus 1:5, and the seven churches in Revelation.  There is no “North Side Ephesian Church” or “1st Church of Philippi.”  Paul either addressed “the church that meets in Lydia’s house” (the Meso Layer) or “to the church in Ephesus,” (the Mondo Layer).  This was how Paul understood God’s people – not divided, but united – each house church living out the Kingdom life locally, and all the Christians living in a certain city or region working together to display the Kingdom to their own local Empire.

    How does this get lived out today?  How does the churches-in-the-city become one city church?  Well, to start, it is more organic than organizational.  Built around the love-centered relationship of the Trinity, it overcomes ethnic, denominational, ecclesiastical and socioeconomic prejudice.  Second, a shift must take place in the hearts of churches and church leaders in particular.  So many churches today are territorial, and short-sighted on seeing their own church succeed.  We must begin to see ourselves as one network of God’s people.

    So, we don’t all meet downtown at the civic center as one church – we remain lots of congregations and organic church networks all doing lots of ministries and mission efforts …but we are one Church with one goal for our city – to see it transformed into God’s vision for his world!

    Mondo Strategy

    Living out the Mondo Layer means the church working together as a “network of networks.”  It means fighting the apathy, rugged individualism and frankly ignorance that turn the mission work of God into a box of toothpicks randomly dumped onto the table.

    Living into the Mondo Layer means living into the strategy of Christ – the Great Commandment (love) and the Great Commission (love sent).  The result is “saturation church planting.”  Churches across the city must find unity in the goal of city-wide transformation through the process of seeing a vibrant family of Jesus in close reach of every single person in their city.  This is a comprehensive look at the city, and doing everything in their power (nothing more, nothing less) to offer the Gospel for every people, and a spiritual family for every person.  Only 30-40% of our city will/can be reached by traditional churches, which is why we must invest (spiritually, financially) into emerging, organic, and neo-monastic expressions of Christ’s church.

    Leaders with this vision might be called “Missional Resource Teams,”  listening to God and living out the life of God for a particular area with the core conviction that “mission flows from listening.”  Spiritual mapping aides in the process of saturation church planting (Pray4Chicago is an example of such a project), as does praying for workers through a Luke 10:2 prayer.

    Its possible that each year, major city-wide celebrations and worship festivals can begin to breakout.  Leadership conferences, mission efforts, and  other gatherings emerge, as families grow in Christ and peace reigns on earth.  These and other pictures of heaven CAN happen this side of eternity, if we have eyes to see it and the heart to live it out in our lives.

    The Layers

    Mono, Micro, Meso, Macro, and Mondo.  They are all wrapped up together like an onion, or a sea shell.  You cannot live in one and not the others if you want to be healthy.  They are a part of God’s life for us here on earth – the expression of his church at work in the world.

    Living into these layers, we can begin to know ourselves better, experience love and trust from others, belong to a meaningful family, and engage in significant mission.  But it all spirals out from a life of intimacy with a loving God, who is at the center of it all.

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    • Jay Abels 3:15 pm on June 30, 2010 Permalink

      It is interesting how the onion analogy has migrated. Decades ago it was used to describe the stripping away of material in the Gospels that was not authentic to reveal the true core Jesus. See Bultmann’s demythologizing. Many have observed that no matter how much you strip away the layers of an onion, it is still onion all the way down. Sadly some have stripped away selectively to come up with a twisted Jesus, but no matter how much they have tried to warp him, there is always that onion smell that won’t go away. I like your use of the onion. It is interesting how they grow new layers from the inside out, but the outer layers also keep growing so they don’t split open. Keep up the good work.

    • Mike H 8:59 pm on February 10, 2011 Permalink

      Nice Article. I guess its a little over my head tho. What happend to just reading the bible and going to church. Does it really need to be this difficult.

  • Mark 1:03 am on January 13, 2008 Permalink | Reply  

    Should We have a Pagan Christianity? 

    pagan1.jpg

    (see my earlier related post here)

    I just found out that there will be a sequel to the new book Pagan Christianity by Frank Viola and George Barna coming out this summer. I’m thrilled. From what I hear, it will focus on some of the topics discussed below. I’d love your feedback!

    First off, Pagan Christianity is a bold book that uncovers the Greco-Roman influences of many of the origins of today’s current church practices and beliefs. The first edition of the book (2002) also called for a specific response – return to the original impulses of the early church.

    The 2008 edition (as I understand from an interview with Viola here [props to Nick and Josh]) eases off the prescription, and instead asks the question, “Do these Greco-Roman influences hinder today’s church from being the Bride of Christ she truly is?” Another way to ask the question is:

    “Must the church look/act exactly as it did when it first began, or does acculturation over the last 2,000 years also refine what it means to be God’s Church in the world?”

    Is tradition okay? What impulses in the DNA of the Church are immutable?

    Jarislov Pelikan: “Tradition is the living tradition of dead men, traditionalism is the dead religion of living men.”

    The religious heritage I grew up in had a goal: ‘To restore the ancient order of the church to its original form.’ I am not naive enough to think that this is a obtainable goal. But like many in the Reformed Movement that helped seed the Restoration Movement,

    Ecclesia Reformata, Semper Reformanda: The church; reformed and always reforming.”

    If I catch what Viola and Barna are tossing us in their book, it means that the church is an organic reality that has both adaptability and integrity in its structure. We are sinners that don’t truly understand God’s vision of what his people look like, and God throughout time is always revealing more of himself to us as his Church. With humility, we learn that there is a moldable, shapable quality to the church, no matter what the age. And there is also a core DNA that most purely points to God and his purposes in the world.
    This is just another reminder that the Church is not the Kingdom. The Church, through the ages points to the Kingdom of God. It shapes and changes, and its influences must continually be discerned. Are we following the Spirit of God, or the spirit of the age?

    I believe that Viola and Barna are asserting that there has long been dead traditionalism and pagan spirits leeching off of Christ’s Bride, and the authors are begging God’s people to open their eyes to it. Some of these influences are okay – I don’t want to “go back to the good ole days” of earliest Christianity, nor can we – but we can all agree that Easter has just as many connections with Pan as it does Christ. And that the term “laity” only keeps God’s people paralyzed. And that Church as described by Christ looked more like a family than an 2oth Century American business. And…the list goes on.

    The million dollar question for Barna and Viola is this: will people change once they know the truth?

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    • Nicholas 10:25 am on January 13, 2008 Permalink

      Great thoughts here and thank you for linking to the interview!
      I love that Jarislov Pelikan quote as well, I will be lifting it very soon.

    • thepriesthood 12:23 am on January 14, 2008 Permalink

      after reading your and Nic’s reviews, i’m hungry to read this book. i think i may be smelling sola scriptura, which would be a common Restoration impulse. i’ll have to check it out…

    • Tia Lynn 12:37 am on January 14, 2008 Permalink

      Sounds very interesting. Thanks for the recommendation. I will add these books to my reading list.

    • Trey 2:52 pm on January 18, 2008 Permalink

      Sounds really good.

      I think a good question is that I hope is addressed in the book is: Can paganism be “redeemed” by Christ? Sort of a different spin on syncretism, if the ancient pagan traditions are subsumed and altered so much that the original intent is lost and only Jesus remains, is that really so bad? Nobody cares about Pan anymore. 99.999% of people associate Easter with Jesus.

    • J. 7:31 am on January 25, 2008 Permalink

      The scope of the book isn’t toward trying to redeem pagan practices. Other books do that (they tackle things like Christmas, Easter). This book instead shows that our very understanding and practice of “church” and “Christianity” that we all draw from the New Testament have been shaped by pagan practices as far back as the third and fourth century. The argument is that what Jesus and Paul taught regarding the church were hijacked later by pagan influences and what we call church today has very few connections with what God had in mind in the beginning or what Jesus taught us. I feel that that question need to be addressed first before we can go on to discuss what things from paganism can be redeemed and used for God. The book is great and every Christian should read it, if nothing else but for the lesson in history.

    • Mark 8:22 am on January 25, 2008 Permalink

      I agree that it is not trying to offer a solution or intending to redeem pagan practices. It shows the evidence of a mired Christianity, one that Jesus Christ never really saw in his paradigm, in my opinion.

      But you have to agree that Viola is pretty prescriptive when it comes to what the church IS and what it should be. My fear is that we can be anachronistic in thinking that ALL pagan, Greco-Roman, etc influences are all together bad.

      J, keep it up – I’d like to think through this some more…

    • J. 3:17 pm on January 25, 2008 Permalink

      His next book is supposed to be prescriptive. I didn’t see too much that was prescriptive in Pagan Christianity? except a plea for the organic church which is pretty general. This book is virtually all deconstructive.

    • Mark 1:22 am on January 27, 2008 Permalink

      J,

      yeah, i guess i just didn’t see the point in making his plea for a church model in a book that was all about deconstruction. i really do look forward to what he has to say in his next book – I do happen to think that some prescriptions are healthier than others!

    • Joe Miller 3:16 am on February 17, 2008 Permalink

      Hi, an excellent alternative to Viola’s book is “The Ancient Church As Family” by Dr. Joe Hellerman. His work is well researched and addresses many of the “pagan” influences on our faith. Dr. Hellerman’s contribution is a blend of good history AND respectful discourse.

    • God Lover 8:07 pm on February 26, 2009 Permalink

      I have recently begun to embrace the Lord’s feasts. Coming out of the mixture of the traditions of Churchianity has set me free!!!
      And the reason so many who I know are unfufilled in the body is because of the misdirection this mixture has led us into. The whole church model has deffinitely lost its first intention.
      Still I wonder why we would embrace Easter when Passover is an awesome time in the Lord. Passover being the death of Messiah and First Fruits two days later which is the resurection. To celebrate as prescribed in the word of God by the Lord himself.
      Pentacost the first fruits celebration and Tabernacles which is said to be the estimated time of the actual coming of Messiah in the manger.
      It trips me out that we would adopt these pagan (grosley evil and considered though by God) appointments. When God set these times to be observed for generation after generation.
      Come on let’s come out of Babylon.
      Are we serving God himself or church?
      Bad roots equals bad fruit, let’s cut off the tree of mixture that God from the begining has stated his position on, And return to the Lord!

    • Christian 11:42 am on November 26, 2010 Permalink

      Many church practices of today are even to the point of contrary to the word of God. I think it is time that we begin to stand up for the truth in God’s word. Pagan christianity must go.

    • Steve Burris 12:32 pm on December 7, 2010 Permalink

      Agreed, check out Frank Viola’s “Pagan Christianity” for more pagan church practices.

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