Filed under: Mission Leadership | Tags: culture, evangelism, Holy Spirit, isolation, Jesus, Lord, New Humanity, pantomime, powers, Promises, relationships, sin, society, YWAM
In 1986, when our YWAM troupe did a pantomime drama in a public high school, I was asked to give the closing, which was typically an altar call. But I did not want to set off a political “bomb” in the public school. I simply held up the “black gloves” that represented sin and said, “you know what these are and you know now how they isolate you and cause broken relationships.” I said, “I want to invite you now to break down the barriers in response to the Star of this presentation (and you know who that is). Reach out to your fellow students and teachers and tell them you really care about them today. Be free from the powers that hold you in isolation.” That was it. That was the altar call. Be free and truly human.
I’ve struggled with the issue of a private consumer-type evangelism for years. I am not content to be part of a community that presents a private “ask Jesus in your heart” commitment to Jesus. Proclaiming Jesus is King is an afront to all principalities and powers and rulers, both human and otherwise.
I am becoming more vocal confronting powers with the “royal proclamation” and fact that “Jesus is Lord”. It has never felt anything like treason, however, it may very soon.
The message that Jesus is Lord is not private, but there are amazing private rewards. We can experience intimate fellowship with the Father, through the Holy Spirit. We are no longer waiting for the End of Days; they have come through the Person of Jesus Christ. He is the fulfillment of all the Promises to Israel. When he returns, we will all be like him. We have the Spirit now as a deposit, that we will be fully like him, a New Humanity. We will be everything we were always intended and designed by God to be, fully Human.
To say “Jesus is Lord” represents a commitment to live in such a way that the reality of the confession must be realized in all of society, in our community as well as in the surrounding culture. This profession is an afront to the personal lifestyles and religions of the surrounding people as well as to the political powers that purported to “lord it over them.”
Filed under: Church | Tags: Bolger & Gibbs, Commission Groups, Dallas Willard, Discipleship Evangelism, Divine Conspiracy, Emerging Church, evangelism, Gospels, Mark Allen Powell, Multigenerational, postmodern, Worship
Many evangelical churches have blended worship styles, including ancient hymns and contemporary choruses, for multigenerational congregations. This generation welcomes this blend of styles. Spirituality is very popular in postmodern culture. Unchurched people are open to talking about Jesus, however Christianity and the traditional church are not welcome topics. Therefore, style alone will not be enough of a change. The emerging church pattern of merging ancient and contemporary spiritualities is to be applied with the other patterns, especially outside the traditional church settings.
Commission Groups have the flexibility to go anywhere inviting neighbors, coworkers, or other associates to explore spirituality, creating environments with ancient and contemporary elements that allow them to seek and respond to God. Commission Group leaders should be equipped to encourage a holistic and mystical spirituality without resorting to confrontational methods of evangelism. Instead, Commission Groups offer the opportunity for discipleship evangelism as described by Dallas Willard’s book, Divine Conspiracy.
This question of methods of evangelism is probably the greatest fault-line dividing the modern and post-modern formations of Christian church. What should be noted is that the Gospel writers were very effective. That we tell the Gospel story today, the life & death of Jesus as well as the most important historic event which may not easily be tested, his resurrection, is definitive proof of something: the Gospel story changed the way we think and live.
The impact of Jesus upon history begs more than an “objective, dispassionate reception” to the Gospel story, the times and the lives of those who told the story and the life of Jesus. As Mark Allen Powell writes, “We are free to accept or reject, belittle or embrace, but whatever our response, we ought to understand what these books intend to do: they intend to convert us.” (Fortress Introduction to the Gospels, p. 9) Rather than confronting our unbelieving neighbors with a “decision,” a practice that did not gain prominence until the 18th & 19th Century revival meetings, perhaps we should allow the story as it is told in the Bible to do the work of bringing people to Christ.
Non-believing members of Commission Groups will respond to discussions of Jesus and the study of the Bible. Commission Groups should be prepared to “connect and communicate their faith within the spiritual language of postmodern culture.” (Bolger & Gibbs 2005: 234)
Next Week’s Emerging Church Pattern: Transforming Secular Space
Filed under: Church | Tags: adopt, Church, community, Eddie Gibbs, emerging, evangelism, Hospitality, Ryan Bolger, sacrifice, strangers, Tim Keel
Welcoming strangers is very strategic. While people in your fellowship may practice hospitality, these connections may be practiced mostly in the privacy of homes, rather than celebrated and resourced as a community commitment. According to Ryan Bolger and Eddie Gibbs, inviting strangers into community and practicing inclusion is the emerging church’s approach to sharing the good news. (Bolger & Gibbs 2005: 119) This undisguised evangelistic strategy of emerging churches is not confrontational, but invitational. Are members of your fellowship prepared to embrace the emerging church value of becoming “good news people before proclaiming it”? (2005: 145, 152)
Every Christian is adopted into the family of God through costly initiative, beginning with Christ’s sacrifice. Newly adopted babies are bonded to loving parents, unaccompanied by their conscious choice. Likewise, God has appointed men and women in his fellowship to welcome strangers as family. Welcoming strangers is also about going to where life happens, to the margins of culture, to adopt disaffected people. (See Tim Keel’s book, Intuitive Leadership 2007:98)
What may be necessary to remedy a lack of hospitality is identificational repentance, identifying with the poor while repenting from a lack of concern for the poor and needy. If we fail to be an authentically welcoming community, we cannot be a witness to the wider world. (Bolger & Gibbs 2005: 107)
Next week’s Emerging Church Pattern: Living as Community