Updates from September, 2007 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • 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 6:08 am on March 15, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Urban Immersion 2007 

    This morning we leave for Austin, TX!  Just like last year, it has become a pretty cool tradition in MRNA to head down to the Austin area for the last half of Spring Break to enjoy some rock climbing, good food, the SXSW Music Festival, and meet up with a whole host of teams and individuals working as missionaries and leaders in one of the world’s most diverse mission fields.

    I’m so glad that Trina is going down with me – I honestly can’t emphasize that enough.  Her support and enjoyment of this journey we are on together is sometimes the only thing that keeps me going.  Her creativity and insight is so pervasive (again, many kudos to her for the new design of this blog) that I wonder where I might be in my ministry and life without her!  That is why I’m so glad she’s coming along.  Her instincts for a simple, organic life in the kingdom will be encouraged and reaffirmed as she talks with national leaders and vision casters – the real apostles of our day.  Thank you Father for this gift.

    I’m already anticipating the return from A-town to A-town (ahem, Austin to Abilene) to give you the 4-1-1 on what happened, who we met, and how Father showed up!

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  • Mark 3:19 pm on January 11, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    The ups and downs of Neighborhood Life 

    Chicago has more and more tables these days.

    While reading the latest exposé from ABC News (a great read by the way) on organic churches multiplying around the country, I noticed that Randy Frazee, a pastor at Willow Creek Community Church has been finding new ways to make their 20,000 strong membership feel as if each member can participate and contribute in healthy ways. Boy, I would not want that job!

    But Frazee seems to be taking a page from the house church movement sweeping across America and running with it. He has constructed “Neighborhood Life” a sprawling neighborhood ministry made available to anyone who can ring a doorbell or make a phone call. This is how Frazee plans to lead “an effort to restructure the church’s small group programs toward more holistic church experiences centered in homes“. Apparently, these are stand-alone churches of their own right, and yet they have an indirect connection with Willow Creek Church through the 21 area pastors who oversee the groups and provide occasional guidance.

    In some ways, this kind of partnership between house churches and a megachurch is a wonderful example of how the two models can work together. The Tables’ vision for multiple pastor system spread over focused neighborhoods also gives us a glimpse into one kind of emerging leadership structure that is blossoming out of this new way of “doing church.” And people are responding. In fact, in the year and a half since this program has begun, there are already about 7,000 who attend an extension of this ministry throughout Chicagoland.

    But there are a few major flaws as I read deeper into Frazee’s vision for Neighborhood Life and the “Tables” (house churches) that are being introduced. First, this is for Willowpeople, by Willowpeople. Willow Creek members can go to The Willow Neighborhood Life website and sign up to “Host a Table”. Once approved by the higher-ups, are then contacted by other church members who have noticed their presence on the Willow website and connect there. Sounds okay, right? …But when do we ever meet our own neighbors? When do we bump into lost people? This is a system designed to keep our garage doors closed and our backyard fences erected. When we have to “apply for community” on the internet, we are too afraid of each other.
    Second, it is a monthly event, hosted by Willow Creek leaders focused on Willow Creek materials. What can a group of strangers do once a month? What sort of discipleship occurs in a two hour block once a month?! The curriculum for the evening’s conversation is given to approved Willowcreek leadership to be followed and completed each time they meet…

    ::I can already tell people are excited::

    …in the end this comes down to keeping this Neighborhood “Life” firmly in the grips of Willowcreek, rather than in the hands of the people who chose to gather together that night.

    Maybe this is just the first stage of something much bigger; maybe this is a good way to ease into learning to become the Church God has called his Bride to be.

    Then again, maybe its like Martin Luther King’s fear of the northern white brothers who thought that the current compromise was good enough.

    I am still thinking through all this. I want to commend Randy Frazee for working so diligently at dragging people off the pews and into the intimate setting of people’s homes. But is he doing them a disservice if he never gives them a vision that they are truly and fully capable of starting a new church with their neighbors down the street without Big-Brother-Willow-Creek’s consent? Will these Table groups forever have to fill-in-the-blanks of some workbook when all they want to do is hear what Jesus has been saying to each of them? My prayer is that of the 7,000 people involved, a few will catch a whiff of what God is doing worldwide:

    He is giving the Church back to his people.

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    • Mark 10:40 am on January 15, 2007 Permalink

      Just wanted to say that the Neighborhood Life thing is still being fazed in. There are 3 aspects to it, and we’re just starting the second one next week. The vision definitely includes reaching out to neighbors, but they thought it would be good for all the “Willow” neighbors to meet first.

    • Mark 5:24 pm on January 15, 2007 Permalink

      Thanks Mark, are you a part of Neighborhood Life? If so, could you give a little more insight into what/how it functions?

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