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  • Mark 11:15 pm on December 1, 2007 Permalink | Reply
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    We’re Change Agents 

    change-agent.jpg

    Let me give you just a peak into my childhood.

    The church I grew up in was pretty dang conservative. Without going into unnecessary ruminations over things long since gone, one particular concept in this church has sparked my interest as of late. It’s the two words that struck both anger and fear into the hearts of even the most staunch and legalistic.

    “CHANGE AGENT”

    Beware the accursed label for, much like a pirate’s “Black Spot”, once it has been given to you, you will wear it to your grave. Because the church brotherhood I grew up in believed that the church was perfect and fully “restored” to the pristine blueprint of the New Testament (is there only one model of church in the NT?), anyone who attempted to change the model or expression of how church was done or developed was labeled with attempting to derail the entire holy experiment. For this particular group, “be-holding the pattern” was of utmost importance, and anyone to varied from this pattern was heretical.

    It is ironic how God brings people to terms with their own terms. Over the last few years, “change agent” has become a life goal of mine, and I pray regularly for “change agents” all over this continent. Not just the church needs changing either. I’m praying for change agents who change the world. For scores of people who, with eyes fixed on a completely different culture, subvert the culture they’re working undercover in.

    I’m hoping to partner and network with as many change agents as I can in Chicago.  I think the church is in deep need of change; maybe the supposed “pattern” of the New Testament is about change anyway!  What I mean is – wasn’t Jesus a change agent?  Weren’t his followers agents of transformation that eventually swept across an Empire stuck in its ways?  Isn’t the Kingdom of God itself an agent of change?

    Where would this world be today if more of us refused to sit back and let things rot as they are?  Why is complacency revered?  Why are whole systems built on the assumption that no one will have the gumption to do something about the wrongs they see?  When will there be justice?  When will there be creative life bubbling over into the church?  Our schools?  Our homes?  Our government?  We desperately need change agents to break the pre-conceived “blueprints” and perfect ideas of our world.

    Change agents were chided and run out of town in my church growing up – but I say we kick out the squatters.  This world is a changin’.

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    • miller 10:21 am on December 2, 2007 Permalink

      yeah,

      the dogs bark, but the caravan moves on…

      strength!

    • Agent B 8:56 pm on December 3, 2007 Permalink

      You’ve come out from a lot of stuff.

      That’s quite a change, agent.

    • Trey 1:13 pm on December 20, 2007 Permalink

      I don’t think the two terms are the same. I think you know that. I think you’d agree that “change agent” is pretty broad. If someone came into my church and tried to introduce, hmmm, lets say snake-handling or indulgences, I’d have a problem with that “change agent”. However, if you are talking about helping a sinner change his heart with the power of the redemption through Jesus Christ, then I *LOVE* that kind of “change agent”. Maybe “holy change agent” is better.

    • Mark 12:56 am on December 21, 2007 Permalink

      good distinction trey. i guess mostly i was just doing a play on words.

  • Mark 9:59 pm on September 22, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Friends of Mine in Church Planting and Churches of Christ 

    Recently there was a series of articles published in the Christian Chronicle on church planting within Churches of Christ. (here here and here) Since I have roots that go pretty deep within that heritage, I read each of them, and was really encouraged to see that while church planting is becoming more recognized in the fellowship – even if its far from being a renewal…Churches of Christ are still way behind the population’s growth curve – seen in the figure below.

    pop-vs-coc-church-growth.jpg

    Still – there is cause for hope. Churches of Christ (and across denominational lines) are beginning to add “church planting” to their vocabulary – and all sorts of things are beginning to happen. For a denomination that grew out of a heritage that pushed “the priesthood of all believers” and strong evangelistic impulse, (to speak nothing of the church planting movement in the 1830-60′s that the Churches of Christ, Christian Church and Disciples of Christ were born from), church planting is certainly in our DNA.

    What remains fascinating to me is the multiplicity of expressions of what church planting looks like for Church of Christ related church planters. When “order of worship” was what split the growing Stone-Campbell Movement in 1860′s and again in 1906 (of which Churches of Christ were born), it amazes me that church planters are so willing to break out of the mold. And I mean MOLD.

    The past week at ACU’s Lectureship has been really encouraging to me. I spent a good portion of the sessions with church planters, listening to presentations and sharing stories. Networking and conversation filled the room as we heard the dreams of those who had traveled across the country to Abilene, TX in order to tell them. Passion and excitement were in their eyes. Could they really be that excited about planting more churches of Christ? (little “c”)

    f0703s1.jpg

    The fact is – this is DNA from our heritage’s past that has become reactivated as we boldly move into a new understanding of church. Simple worship, lay leadership, evangelistic impulse, and autonomous governance have always been core factors to a movement that had its beginnings in the backwoods of Kentucky and spread like wildfire across the US. Now that the Stone-Campbell dynamic “movement” has become a rigid “monument”, it is refreshing for many of its adherents to hear stories of others in their fellowship who are pioneering once again. Below is just a few of the people I’m in connection with in Church of Christ circles who are engaged in church planting:

    Chadd Schroeder – educated at Sunset School of Preaching and ACU, Chadd has worked as a career missionary in Mexico. He has planted several churches of different types and models, but is focused on training Mexicans to become local leaders who can plant authentically Mexican models of churches, in taquerias, bars, and homes.

    Ben Cheek, Jared Looney, and “Metro Soul” – connected in the Northeast from the Bronx to Jersey City, live in the world’s most diverse city, and are developing a organic network of churches and communities that is becoming just as diverse as their city. Their focus on discipleship and missional leadership is pioneering a vision of church planting for many others.

    p01_mccollum_1007.jpgPhil McCollum – ministering to the poorest of the poor in East Hollywood (the side that no one talks about). Because he believes that Jesus “had friends in low places” he and his family have moved into the neighborhood, and are living with love for the people of that area.

    Kester Smith – planted an emergent church in the alternative communities in Austin, TX. They experience true life together and offer real conversations among skeptics and seekers. Kester works on the edgy Sixth St at Book People, a sweet bookshop and a gathering place of ideas and people of all walks of life. The church they planted is Immanuel Fellowship, and I can’t think of a better name.

    Steve and Chrissy Holt – are living incarnationally among people groups in Boston, MA. They have been praying about developing an intentional Christian community (see also, The New Monasticism) and living out practices of peace and restoration among the people in their lives.

    n666721972_140771_9614.jpgDillon Ross – having recently graduated from Harding University, Dillon has begun working with Chicago District Evangelistic Association to plant simple churches in the Chicago area.

    Greg ScottThe Blessing Place network is planting simple churches in the southwest suburbs of Chicago, Greg and his wife Sam work intentionally with native Americans (she lived on a reservation with Rich Mullins!)

    nowells_31.jpgBenny and Niki Nowell – work with the homeless youth and basically bless the socks off anyone that comes in their path. They provide a summer experience called “Sabbath” for urban kids, and offer mentoring love and God’s Shalom to many of the brokenhearted in Denver, CO.

    Miller Talbot – is preparing the soil of Abilene, TX and the working poor with prayer and incarnational love. His “church plant” looks more like a garden, and his “mission work” looks more like digging a hole in the ground…to find water for a dry and weary land. Check out his imaginative vision here.

    There are LOTS of church planting teams in formation, among which my wife and I are a part. To just get a glimpse at some of them, check out here, here and here.

    Of course, this is only a slice of the pie. These are friends of mine that are (at different levels) connected to my religious heritage within Churches of Christ. I am proud to be in the family of Christ with them, and look forward to seeing how our paths cross in the future.

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    • PK 10:02 am on September 29, 2007 Permalink

      Mark,

      Thanks for the encouraging overview!

    • Daniel 2:25 am on October 7, 2007 Permalink

      I couldn’t understand some parts of this article Friends of Mine in Church Planting and Churches of Christ, but I guess I just need to check some more resources regarding this, because it sounds interesting.

    • priest 12:21 am on October 10, 2007 Permalink

      sweet, I found it. great post. I might cite you and have some q’s for you at some point.

    • Linda Clark 1:03 pm on March 8, 2009 Permalink

      Thanks be to God for any souls won from the hearing of the Gospel preached via these perceived “church planters.” Very soon, the Lord will deliver us from the capricious need to abridge and redefine the sincere beauty of the pure WORD as it was originally written by the Church’s founding Fathers. THE EARLY CHURCH WAS ESTABLISHED BY “APOSTLES,” like Paul, WHO ORDAINED more Apostles as the Church grew, moving from house to house, and from city to city, and so on… These Elders of the Church were qualified to establish Churches on proper foundations. Is a “Church Planter,” as they so-call themselves, saying they indeed are an “APOSTLE?” for that is what the BIBLICAL equivalent INDEED would have to be! A “CHURCH PLANTER” is an “APOSTLE” a BIBLICAL HEAVY-WEIGHT–plain and simple! Not a job for the beginner!!…That is why we should not go around coining new phrases and changing words like “Apostle” into “Church Planter” although powerful $ funded ministries say its cool to do so. “Apostle” works just fine for me–It carries more weight. It needs too! An Apostle must teach the basic doctrines of the Faith, which are the immutible unchanging orders of Jesus’ Blood Sacrifice for our Salvation, Repentance From Dead Works, Jesus Virgin Birth, His Suffering on the Cross, Death, Burial and Ressurection, and Soon Coming. A true Apostle can and should establish a Church with as few as two or three members. They can gather informally in a tent, a home or a cathedral.

  • Mark 8:46 am on March 6, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    An Incomplete List 

    3701-003234.jpgYesterday we met with a man who has been on a journey to find Christ’s abundant life and has been desperate about getting this life to the poor, and socially oppressed. For decades Gary has been searching for a means of not only bringing someone to a decision to follow Christ, but to a healthy, sane lifestyle that radiates God’s shalom all the while still seeking after that life himself. He knows that’s what the Gospel looks like with skin on. He also knows how hard it is to try to introduce someone to that lifestyle by a simple weekly sermon or 6-week Bible Study.

    Our conversations yesterday had nothing to do with where to go to church, or what we should do when we meet together. It focused on a dream that had been lost back in ancient Ireland, where Celtic Christianity found its wings. For the Celts in that area, life was consumed by fear, starvation, barbarian conquest, competition, and early death. People lived lives that didn’t expect rescue because that concept was simply never introduced to them. In was among these crazed people that 8-10 Christ-followers would settle, set up a shelter, community garden, simple farm life, and a general sense of peace. People in a town would soon be given the choice: live this life of madness and trepidation, or be welcomed with warmth, share veggies, and work together as a team for something that matters. The choice was simple: share in life together.

    That is what it meant to become a Christian in those days. Not moral truths to be shelved next to contradicting values – it was sharing a life that didn’t happen just one hour on Sundays and Wednesdays.

    Yesterday’s conversation came down to two reflections: To bring someone to not only a decision to follow Christ, but to a mature journey in the Lord, it takes at least these two things: (1) A belief in the comprehensive power of the workings of the Holy Spirit to transform lives [this is something those of us from Churches of Christ have a lot to learn] and (2) the kinds of vibrant communities that display a complete lifestyle of love before a disbelieving world.

    This isn’t a complete list, but it got us thinking.

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