Updates from April, 2011 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Mark 8:55 am on April 19, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    What Awaits Us 

    Last Saturday several of us from our house church went on a mission trip…all the way across the street to our city park.  Our mission?  To reclaim the green space from winter!  Winter and the boundless amounts of junk and trash that collects under bushes and in the crevices of the park.  We are building relationships with people in our neighborhood, and enjoying the company of our neighbors as we work together to restore our crumbling city park.

    It is one of the oldest parks in the city, and it is located in our neighborhood, one of the most diverse neighborhoods on the West Side of Chicago.  There is a lot of work to be done.  Graffiti and all kinds of bio-hazards awaited us as we began cleaning up the park’s gardens on Saturday.  We tried to invite some of the homeless to join us in the clean-up effort…but alas, maybe next time!

    In any case, we had a fantastic time – and it is saying to our neighbors, “We love you so much that we want to share with you not only the Gospel, but our lives as well.” (1 Thess 2:8)

    —-

    Every church, whether small group or mega-crowd, should have a mission.

    I think its more powerful if everyone in the group has the same mission, but that is not always feasible.  In fact, in our organic church network, we ask each house church NOT to begin gathering as a church family until there is a notion of what God is calling you to in his mission.  Every church must be called to mission – we are the ekklesia - the “called out” ones.

    We are the people of God on the move!

    What is your mission? Could you share it with your small group?  Could it become the raison d’être for your congregation?  There is a famous quote,

    “God’s church does not have a mission, God’s mission has a church.”

    Without it, you might say that your church has nothing to do but collectively navel gaze.  It can become pretty consuming.  Each church is called to “make disciples of all nations.”  But notice – Jesus says, “As you go…”  Your disciple-making is done “on the way.” On the way to the local park for spring cleaning, on the way to to Mexico to care for orphans, on the way to your lunch break.  Your mission quickly becomes your purpose for living – the Gospel becomes the white space between all the words you say.

    What might it look like for the mission in your heart to become the work your church focuses on each time you gather together?  Would your church become healthier if it lived with the chance they would have to give up everything they had in order to follow Jesus faithfully into that mission?

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    • doloris 5:37 pm on April 19, 2011 Permalink

      I always want to hear more on the possible relationship between the individual and her church as far as mission is concerned. Do all churches have as specific missions as all individuals do? Or is it much more complex – for example, a person may not feel pulled towards the world in a particular way, but she meets a church who does and so joins in that direction cheerfully. Or vice versa. Or a church that meets mostly to be fascinated by the varieties of ways each other is living. Or a church who does not organizationally establish a mission, but finds their individual directions quite kin (leading to encouragement, but also presumption). As multifarious as the world exists, I hope churches relate in appropriately various ways. (i also wonder if we can see such differences in structure and mission in the early churches – how does the context of mission effect our understanding of the letters written to them?)
      -jes

    • Mark W 7:22 pm on April 19, 2011 Permalink

      There is a wonderful complexity of mission, the individual, and her community. Sometimes a person with a vision helps encourage a whole group to join in the fun, whereas other times an individual finds their own purpose in the mission already owned by a congregation. Still other times a church will have multiple missions and like you said so well, “the meet mostly to be fascinated by the varieties…” Very beautiful!

      Maybe the point beneath it all is a persistent desire to be spiritually formed by the movement of mission – both in community and as an individual. VERY interesting comment Jes!

  • Mark 7:22 am on April 12, 2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Catholic Worker, Dorothy Day,   

    Whose Side I’m Fighting For 

    It is hard to say or to know what exactly matters in my line of work.  The lines get so blurry.  I wish sometimes I could lay my head on the pillow at the end of the day and have a sense of knowing for sure that the Kingdom made its way, even just one more inch, into the city of Chicago through something I did, something I participated in.  But it doesn’t work like that.

    More often than not, it is messy dance of back and forth.  It is ambiguous victories mixed with incomplete failures.  I don’t know half the time whose side I’m fighting for – and often it feels like my efforts are doing more harm for the Kingdom than good.

    Why all this self-doubt?  We’re getting toward the end of Lent, and I realize each year that no matter how much purging and confession and buffeting I do to hone myself closer to the Living God, there is simply no way to transcend the fact that I’m a person who will also be mixed with the spiritual warfare going on all around us. At times I pick up the flag of the enemy and run in the opposite direction, hell bent on destroying everything I desperately want to see accomplished in God’s work here in Chicago.

    Dorothy Day, founder of the Catholic Worker Movement once said:

    “What we do is very little.  But it is like the little boy with a few loaves and fishes.  Christ took that little and increased it.  He will do the rest.  What we do is so little that we may seem to be constantly failing.  But so did he fail.  He met with apparent failure on the Cross.  But unless the seeds fall into the earth and die, there is no harvest.”

    Being a missionary isn’t a neat and tidy job, but then again, Jesus had a fine time living in ambiguity and failure.  That brings me peace.

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    • Travis Akins 1:45 pm on April 12, 2011 Permalink

      Mark-thanks for sharing honestly and openly. HUGE encouragement. I have the same worries/struggles in my ministry. Thanks for the re-focus.

    • Mark W 4:36 pm on April 12, 2011 Permalink

      It always helps to remember that all our “castles” we build in life are SANDcastles – and every so often its sort of refreshing to kick a few over! :)

  • Mark 9:46 am on March 21, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Stupid Faith 

    Hutz-pah is the Hebrew notion of “guts.”  It means that you’ve got the gumption to do the unthinkable.  Though related, it is more than bravery – it is bravery mixed with foolishness, with just a dash of genius.

    Abraham had this sort of hutzpah when he came before God and began negotiating with him in Genesis 18:22-33.  The fear…the absolute penetrating fear of standing before the Living God and questioning him!  And yet, God was pleased with this kind of faith – in fact, we call Abraham “the father” of our faith.  It is in large part because he had real hutzpah.

    Jesus too mentions the notion of hutzpah, this wild, brazen gall – promising those that “seek and keep on seeking will find; those that knock and keep on knocking, will have the door opened…”

    He tells a story of someone banging on the door of his friend’s house in the middle of the night, demanding the friend get up and get him what he wants.  It isn’t necessarily out of kindness, but out of sheer exhaustion that the friend will do exactly as he asks.  It is this strength-in-persistence that Jesus says qualifies as real, healthy faith.

    What might a hutzpah faith look like today?

    • It is praying…without ceasing.
    • It is this borderline STUPID insistence that God cares enough to respond to your requests.
    • It is begging that God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven, then going about in God’s power, being the answer to your own prayers.
    • Want to see heaven on earth?  Then put your whole life on the line to see justice accomplished, to see salvation for the oppressed, sight for the blind…
    • Pray desperately for more workers in God’s harvest fields, as there is so few workers and so much work to be done.  These are things that God wants far more than you ever will, so go ahead and pray boldly – then go about seeing it done!

    Don’t forget, when a child asks for bread, his father will not give him a stone…and how much more wonderful is God?  When we pray with hutzpah; when we ride the line between audacity and reverence in our prayers…we can see the boundaries of hell pushed back - and God comes rushing to our aid.

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    • Greg 4:00 pm on March 21, 2011 Permalink

      Interesting post. Would love to have you explain this part of it a bit though: “It is begging that God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven, then going about in God’s power, being the answer to your own prayers.”

    • Mark W 12:55 pm on April 2, 2011 Permalink

      “Being the answer to our own prayers” sounds a bit counter-intuitive, but I believe one (not the only) reason why we pray is to seek how God wants us to live. When we beg God for workers in his harvest field (Lk 10:2) then we get up off our knees and get to work…we in essence are saying “Here am I, send me!” You can see this in Luke 10 when Jesus asks his disciples to pray for workers, and then he sends them out 2 by 2 to be the workers they just prayed for. There is a HUGE danger in simply praying, and not doing. We need “contemplative activists” in our churches.

      Great to “see ya” Greg! How is everything?

    • Rbfuzzyqjones845 2:37 am on April 28, 2011 Permalink

      Great article mark…… Street ministry here in Detroit in the month of July. We’re working on it know……
      Fuzzyqjones845

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