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  • Mark 2:07 pm on February 25, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: CO, Ed Waken, ,   

    Greenhouse: Tending 

    We ended the last Greenhouse post in the series by considering what it takes to be an “Organic Leader” – we made the analogy that it is much like working as an organic farmer.  What is involved in tending the plants once they have begun to grow?  Creating a “system of spiritual nurture” is essential to seeing vibrant families of Jesus in your context.

    The organic church planter in most cases does not see him/herself as the pastor of a single house church being planted, (though each house church will be facilitated and nurtured by loving spiritual parents.

    There is plenty of tending and nurturing language in the Scriptures to suggest it is a primary metaphor for God’s people.

    The Four Biggest “Issues”

    It seems that the four most asked questions in tending organic churches are:

    1. Organizing organic churches
    2. Children in organic churches
    3. Finances in organic churches
    4. Sound doctrine in organic churches

    Each of these questions deserve their own blog posts and have been answered by others elsewhere.  Suffice it to say that usually the questions we ask regarding these issues are focused wrongly, and end up confusing us further.  For instance, with regards to children, the question is not, “What do we do with the kids?”  A better question might be, “What is our responsibility as a church family to responsibly disciple our children and listen to God as HE forms them as radical agents in the Kingdom?” /// We need better questions.

    The mere formulation of a problem is far more essential than its solution, which may be merely a matter of mathematical or experimental skills. To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle requires creative imagination and marks real advances in science.                     —- Albert Einstein

    Did you know that your brain PHYSICALLY creates ruts that make it easier to remain in your mindset rather than considering and accepting new irregular information and paradigms?

    “Wikicclesia” and Truth Quest

    Often, to arrive at these better questions (and ultimately, solutions to complex issues) you need a “community of informed judgment.“  This is a group of diverse experts from various arena coming around a particular issue or question and collaborating to arrive at a matured, multi-faceted solution.  Bring in the architect, the plumber, the farmer and the theologian and ask them “how would YOU take the wisdom of your field of expertise to appropriately organize organic churches (or approach the other issues listed above)?”

    CMA Resources introduces the idea of “Truth Quest,” which is a simple theological learning system for proven leaders in an organic church network.  The scope of such a study is systematic theology applied in holistic life.  It would happen one Saturday each month for a year (9am-5pm).  Each learner (8 per year) has two textbooks from two points of view, with no duplicate books among learners.  Each learner prepares in order to (impromptu) teach on their materials. The rest of the time is spent in dialogue with learners prayerfully considering the material to tease out fresh theological insights as well as goals for living out their beliefs in their faith communities and in their mission field.

    I see this as another form of a “Wikicclesia” forming in many organic church conversations, and its a great alternative to the disappointing dichotomies of either having (1) untrained church leaders, or (2) demanding that leaders go to a seminary for a decade separating “them” from “us” and condemning them to live in debt to Sallie Mae for the rest of their life!

    A New Kind of Leader

    The big shift for church leadership is to think of itself as not being monolithic.  Not all are to be pastors and teachers.  Apostles, evangelists, et cetera in the New Testament did their work at a regional level, helping to tend the systems of the church in that region.

    1. Not necessarily doing all the teaching yourself, but equipping leaders with healthy teaching methods and shaping learning communities where people can learn together.
    2. Where you are not the “pastor” but you are nurturing environments where people care about one another and healing happens.
    3. Organic church planters keep churches linked to one another through:
    • Content: Biblical teaching that is consistent from church to church.
    • Connections: Relational interdependence that allows for time together.
    • Collaboration: Mission efforts that allow resources to be maximized for a greater harvest!

    The Microscope and the Telescope

    Where you start makes all the difference.  Take the simplest organism and multiply it enough and it quickly becomes complex (just look in the mirror for an example).  But under the microscope, your complexity is really just simple cells reproducing at the smallest level.

    Reduce the church to its smallest, most basic unit — the Micro Layer.  It is essential that the smallest unit of kingdom life be infused with the whole DNA of a healthy church, then the whole church at large will be healthy, strong, and able to reproduce.  Truly, it is our sinful nature that gets in the way of God’s healthy DNA he puts in us with his Holy Spirit when we accept him.  So infusing healthy DNA is really about removing our own mutations and living deeply into what God has already instilled in us!

    A great strategy for the Micro Layer is the Life Transformation Group (see also Church of 2 (CO2)).  It infuses the D.N.A. (Divine Truth, Nurturing Relationships, Apostolic Mission) of the whole Body of Christ into a group of two or three.

    Take your current goals and multiply them by 100,000.  If you do not have a system that can take you to those kind of numbers, then you don’t have a system that can catalyze a spontaneous church multiplication movement.

    What are some signs of a reproducible system? CMA suggests your tools/strategies/methods be…

    1. Received Personally — it has a profound effect on your own life.
    2. Repeated Easily: you can pass it on to others after just a brief encounter.
    3. Reproduced Strategically: it transfers to other cultures and languages.

    These 3 simple principles can be extrapolated out from the “Micro” to all layers of the Onion, attending to the natural span of relational care.  Use the word “chaordic” to describe such systems – they are both thoughtful and intentional, yet out of control of any person or organization.

    “The more I considered Christianity, the more I have found that while it had established a rule and order, the chief aim of that order was to give room for good things to run wild.”                  — G.K. Chesterton

    Let the DNA of Christ permeate every conversation, every worship gathering, every act of social justice.  Let it baptize every layer of your church’s community.  As Ed Waken was quoted saying at the conference — “What if discipleship was nothing more than the lifelong balance of the DNA in your life and in the lives of others in your circle of influence?”

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  • Mark 8:02 am on April 28, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flash mob   

    Pray4Chicago Reflections 

    Pray4Chicago’s “flash mob” event was so fun, exhausting and a big success!  (see pictures above or at this link)  We plan to have these once a quarter or so, and continue to develop the website all throughout the year.  Alan has been such a great help in helping make this project become a reality, and many props and thanks go out to him and Sara for letting us host the event at their place.  (Read his thoughts on the event here.)

    But the majority of time was not spent at their apartment.  It began with all the participants showing up to gain some orientation on what they were up to for the day.  For many, this was their first crack at prayer-walking, and needed some basics on what it was all about.

    We shared some of our Chicago mission’s vision, gave some practical training on how to “pray with your eyes open” (something I was never allowed to do as a kid! :) ) and how to essentially see a city with God’s eyes.  We tried to be as specific as possible, but in the end, we knew that keeping things open for imaginations to run wild was the whole idea.  After a time of Q & A, we teamed people up in pairs, and sent them out to various city neighborhoods with maps, cameras, and journals.

    Their job was to discover what they felt like God was doing in the city.  Different than other census reports or spiritual mapping projects, the goal of this event was to develop inspiration, not gather information.  Our dream is to see a vibrant family of Jesus in every neighborhood in Chicago – and then beyond that in close reach of every person in Chicago. So we need to know how to join God in planting a community of faith in each neighborhood.  What would it mean to be the church in Little Village?  In Lakeview?  In the South Loop?

    The groups came back with amazing stories, profound discoveries, and changed hearts.  Read their reports here! I hope that some will return, I hope that more will get to experience this in the future.  One thing we hope to do next time is involve more of the house churches in our network in the event, as well as incorporate a more continued presence of prayer in between the “flash mob” events we do quarterly.  (The next one is August 8th – if you want to be a part of this, contact me!)

    What if teams of people began walking the streets and praying for a neighborhood every week?  What relationships might develop?  Who might invite these teams into their lives?  Isn’t this how churches started in the first century?

    I’m really thankful for each participant who gave their Saturday to this project.  I hope that it was as meaningful and inspirational to them as it was helpful for Alan and I, who now know a LOT more about these neighborhoods and hope to cultivate a community of faith their through the power of God.  May these followers of Christ never stop prayer walking, and like tilling the soil, may their shoes plough paths for other missionaries to follow them into these Chicago neighborhoods and plant a church in the midst of the city.

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    • Tim C 8:44 pm on April 28, 2009 Permalink

      Hey Mark,

      Would love to see some of the training stuff you guys use to help people become prayer walkers. Do you have any of that stuff online?

  • Mark 12:39 pm on January 10, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags:   

    Trying to Train 

    just_say_amen

    This past week has been one of encouraging growth and of stretching my imagination.  Over the holiday break there seems to have been a turning point in the church planting work we’ve been doing.  For most of the summer and fall it has been lots of seed sowing and waiting.  Now it seems there is more fruit than this little worker can deal with.  God has brought six people independently to us within two weeks asking for companionship in the life of God and in developing a missional church in their context.  This makes me ask myself, “Do I really think I have what it takes?”

    So that’s when “praying for more workers” (Lk 10:2) seems to make immediate and practical sense.

    Prayer in mission work is essential.  I try to pray specifically for more workers (multiplying disciples of Christ) in Chicago every day at 10:02am (for Luke 10:2).  Usually I leave whatever I’m doing behind for a minute or two, get down on my knees, and face east as I pray (the earliest Christians did this, looking for Christ’s return.)  I do this because I believe God wants harvest workers even more than I do, and because he asked us to pray this prayer.

    But when it comes to dedicated prayer,  I’ve always secretly envied the spiritual diligence of Muslims.  Praying 5 times a day, facing Mecca, in anticipatory reverence.  That is in such contrast to my prayers – feeble, halting, and lonely. If only I could have the kind of commitment in prayer that they seem to have…

    Spiritual formation cannot happen when we drink deep from the Western poisonous chalices of “too much freedom” and “too much isolation.”  These cups are handed to us by our culture, and we get free-refills; but they lead to disastrous conclusions.  When its all up to me, my pitiful will power leaves me “trying” in vain.

    I go to pray with a sense of “trying my best,” and usually end up failing.  The same is true with working out.  Now is the time of year everyone is joining a gym – but everyone knows that attendance will drop off by March.

    Trying isn’t enough.  Slowly I am learning that my relationship with the Lord is like one with an intimate coach – focusing and buffing my soul to strengthen it for what is to come – I begin to see my prayers as training.

    • Training leads to godliness (1 Timothy 4:7)
    • Scripture provide the “track” for training, which equips us for every good work (2 Timothy 3:16,17)
    • Those who have trained themselves can discover new things about God (Hebrews 5:11-14)

    Growing up, I went through a process in spiritual formation.  As a kid I somehow thought that once I had committed to Christ and was baptized, I was in – no more learning or training or forming was needed.  My life was about coasting into heaven.  Awhile back I learned that life is about preparing for heaven – even practicing it here on earth.  So I thought I’d give that a try.

    Only trying did nothing but frustrate me, for the reasons mentioned above.  I think refocusing on my prayers, fastings, memorizations, etc as “training” I begin to see that, much like an athlete or an artist, I can’t be ready for what’s to come if I don’t routinely accomplish what small thing God puts in front of me today.

    A side note:  Training in spiritual discipline is a little different than cultivating an intimate relationship with Father God.  Only after we discover God is a loving, accepting Father, can he become the coach that will help you in godliness.  That is one of his roles as Father – training you to be his beloved Son or Daughter.

    So what do you say – learning to refocus my disciplines as training with a loving Lord, rather than trying under a taskmaster God – is it something that would:

    1) re-energize you to take on the task of spiritual formation, something all followers of Christ are called to and…

    2) …develop in you a deeper love for our Father who wants to save you from too much freedom and isolation?

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    • guy muse 7:19 pm on January 16, 2009 Permalink

      Great report! I enjoyed reading about what God is doing there in your midst. I often illustrate church planting with planting a crop: 1) ground has to be cleared, 2) ground plowed, 3) seed planted, 4) seed watered, 5) pull weeds, 6) harvest. Often we don’t know where in the process God has placed us, but it is important to realize that just as naturally as a seed planted bears fruit, so it is in the Kingdom!

    • Mark 7:06 am on January 17, 2009 Permalink

      thanks for those thoughts guy. which of the stages you mentioned do you feel like you do your best in? which one are you the most impatient? which one are you the least sure of yourself/least sure of God’s work in the process?

    • guy muse 7:21 pm on January 17, 2009 Permalink

      I have been working on a blog post in an attempt to answer your question. For us it is not so much which we feel we do our best in, but which do we feel God would have us focus upon. I personally feel that in evangelized cities –note I am not saying these cities are reached–the missionary task is to primarily focus on the harvest, the last phase. I personally feel it is the local church’s job to continue with the other phases, but in our context as missionaries in the large cities like Guayaquil, I feel our role is to help coordinate the harvest that so many others before us have done to plow, plant, and water.

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