Rev.Espiritu.net — Rex Espiritu’s blog for Leadership.NewCastleFPC.org

April 6, 2007

Examining our life together

Filed under: Leadership, Missional, PCUSA, PGF, Polity, Reformed — rexespiritu @ 4:48 am
Examining our life together
In 1910, the United Presbyterian Church in North American formally adopted a set of mission statements that was intended to define its life and work. Called the “Six Great Ends of the Church,” these brief phrases attempted to draw together elements of belief and practice that could be traced throughout our own confessional history to the very teachings of Jesus himself. Nearly one hundred years and two denominational mergers later, these statements remain in the Constitution of the PC(USA), and they appear in the opening pages of the Book of Order

  • The proclamation of the gospel for the salvation of humankind
  • The shelter, nurture, and spiritual fellowship of the children of God
  • The maintenance of divine worship 
  • The preservation of the truth 
  • The promotion of social righteousness 
  • The exhibition of the Kingdom of Heaven to the world

While the whole of the plan and purpose of God can never be reduced to a short list, statements like this are useful tools in helping us to evaluate the overall health of our churches. There have been other markers of health used over the years.

Church historian George Marsden, for example, observes that healthy churches throughout history always have at least three characteristics. They are confessional (they know what they believe); they are conversional (there is a lively, transformational experience of Jesus); and they are missional (they keep their face turned toward the world). Marsden says that churches will eventually go “into the ditch” if one or more of these is missing.

We should also confront the challenge of what some have called the “3-fold priority of the Christian life”: Growing more in love with [the Triune] God—growing more in love with the Body of Christ—and growing more in love with the work of Christ in the world.

There are common elements of each of these statements regarding our life as a community of faith. Each helps us to think afresh about our identity, our purpose and our activity. Each is centered in the work of God, includes a focus on the care and nurture of one another, and has a missional emphasis.

We should not forget that the Great Ends begins with proclamation and ends with exhibition. It embraces both the Gospel “about” Jesus, which is centered in his life, death, resurrection and ascension on behalf of all humankind, and the Gospel “of” Jesus, which focuses on his own preaching of the Kingdom and his call that others join him in the life of that Kingdom beginning now and continuing through eternity.

As we look at our life as God’s people in light of these simple statements, what do we see? Our churches seem to be better at sheltering, nurturing, maintaining and preserving, than in proclaiming, promoting, and exhibiting. Our churches often emphasize being confessional (how we think about faith), but give less time to true transformation or mission. Our churches are often more known for our love of God and perhaps each other, than for our love of Christ’s work in the world. Just look at how we spend our resources.

We do well from time to time to take a look at how we are doing as communities of faith in light of some simple criteria derived from Scripture which articulates the marks of healthy church life.

We might also back up and ask such questions as: 1) What is God doing in the world? 2) What is God’s purpose for the church in the world? 3) How can we align ourselves with the purposes and activity of God?

Adapted from the » e-Newsletter August 1, 2006 of the Presbyterian Global Fellowship  http://PresbyterianGlobalFellowship.org/eNewsletters.aspx 

April 4, 2007

Doing Mission? Or Being Missional?

Filed under: Missional, PGF — rexespiritu @ 10:00 pm

Pastoral Perspective On the Purpose of the Church  Rev.Espiritu.net

Doing Mission?  Or Being Missional?  

In his book Missional Church, one of my professors at Princeton Theological Seminary, Darrell Guder quotes South African theologian David Bosch (author of Transforming Mission) to help his readers understand how churches shaped by the Reformation came to view themselves as “a place where certain things happen” (a view not intended by the Reformers, asserts Dr. Guder). 

“Church” has become a place where we gather on Sunday morning for worship and Sunday school.  This is a misunderstanding that many of us have fallen into including clergy, who are thought to be those professionals who are authorized to perform certain activities in certain places.  Dr. Guder goes on to say that in this view of the church as a “place where certain things happen,” the church’s identity becomes embedded in its institutional structures (local and national) and in its professional class, the clergy.  And the church becomes just another societal place to “go to,” like you would go to the mall or attend school or join a club. 

In this view the church can forget its purpose while being so concerned about programs and institutional maintenance.  Under this view “mission” is viewed as a program of the church rather than the purpose of the church, something that happens at great physical or social distance, another place you “go to.”  We thereby lose the capacity to see mission as the purpose of God’s people in every time and place. 

But the church is beginning to see itself in a new way.  “Mission” is not a program of the church – it is its essence.  “The church’s essence is missional, for the calling and sending action of God forms its identity.  
Mission is founded on the mission of God in the world, rather than the church’s effort to extend itself.” (Guder, p. 80-81) 

Tim Dearborn has put it this way: “It is not the Church that has a mission, but the God of mission who has the Church.” 

So, what is a missional church rather than a church that “goes” to or “does” mission?  What might it look like?  

Ø      The missional church sees its purpose as discovering what Jesus Christ is doing in the world and being a witness to him.  

Ø      The missional church spends more time equipping people to be the church scattered more than just the church gathered.  It challenges its people to grow more alive in their faith, to look out to the world and seek out those places where God is already at work and join him in that work, whether in families or neighborhoods and workplaces or beyond.  

Ø      It is more concerned about getting the message out than bringing people in.           

The missional church is all of this and much more.  Can we get there from here?  Yes, I believe God, by the Spirit’s power that raised the Lord Jesus Christ from the dead, is already doing so. 

And God is able to make all grace abound to you so that in all things, at all times [and places], having all that you need, you will abound in every good work.  –2 Corinthians 9:8

In Christ,

Pastor Rex

 

Adapted from the » e-Newsletter July 18, 2006 of the Presbyterian Global Fellowship  http://PresbyterianGlobalFellowship.org/eNewsletters.aspx 

 

March 28, 2007

Fw: Presbyterian Global Fellowship E-Newsletter (ANNOUNCING John Ortberg and Michael Frost as Keynote Speakers)

Filed under: Leadership, Missional, PCUSA, PGF — rexespiritu @ 5:54 pm

TO:       Missional Leadership at NewCastleFPC

FYI – I am looking at a number of possible conferences this year for study leave and for y/our leadership development, particularly with regard to exploring further growth in the application of missional theology in our fellowship toward becoming more of a missional church.  Here is one excellent opportunity for folks to consider attending in Houston, Texas this summer in mid-August. 



From: Presbyterian Global Fellowship [mailto:newsletter@presbyterianglobalfellowship.org]
Sent
: Tuesday, March 20, 2007 10:48 PM
Subject: Presbyterian Global Fellowship E-Newsletter

Annual PGF Conference Announces John Ortberg and Michael Frost as Keynote Speakers
Save the date and plan to attend PGF’s annual conference on August 16-18, 2007, in
Houston, Texas.
Speakers include:

  • John Ortberg, Teaching Pastor,
    Menlo Park Presbyterian Church
    , and author of If You Want to Walk on Water, You’ve Got to Get Out of the Boat and The Life You’ve Always Wanted: Spiritual Growth for Ordinary People
  • Michael Frost, Founding Director of Australia’s Centre for Evangelism & Global
    Mission, evangelist, church planter and author of six books, including The Shaping of Things to Come and Exiles: Living Missionally in a Post-Christian Culture

     
  • Elias Chacour, Palestinian peace activist, Nobel Peace Prize nominee and author of the bestselling Blood Brothers and We Belong to the Land
     
  • Gary Haugen, President, International Justice Mission
     
  • Li Mei Lan, Pastor, Emmanuel Church and
    Nangang
    Church,
    Harbin, China

     
  • Alex Gee, Founder of AGAPPE, Inc., Spiritual Life Coach, national speaker, author of When God Lets You Down and co-author of Jesus & the Hip Hop Prophets .
     
  • John Teter, Lead Pastor, Fountain of
    Life Covenant Church, California and co-author of Get the Word Out
    and Jesus & the Hip Hop Prophets.

In addition, dozens of workshops will equip you and your church with an enriched understanding of how to be missional in a post-Christian world. Among them are:

  • Stewardship: Resourcing the Missional Church
     
  • Innovative Evangelism in Today’s Culture
     
  • The Clash of Civilizations: American Power and Culture and Its Effect on the World

Registration will be available online beginning April 1, 2007 at www.presbyterianglobalfellowship.org .For more information, please contact PGF Team Coordinator Kristina Robb-Dover at (404)846-4386 or pgf@presbyterianglobalfellowship.org .
 



MISSIONAL CHURCH IN ACTION:
LAKE GROVE PRESBYTERIAN FINDS THREE HANDS BETTER THAN ONE
Some love stories need to be told over and over again. At least that is the sense one gets from a conversation with Bob Sanders. When the senior pastor of Lake Grove Presbyterian shares how his church of 1,300 fell in love with an “unreached” people group in a remote region of West Africa, and began an adventurous experiment in mission partnership, Sanders’ enthusiasm is contagious…it radiates even over the line of a long-distance telephone call, all the way from an office in Lake Oswego, Oregon. Click here to read on…



PGF HIRES FIRST STAFFPERSON- MEET KRISTINA ROBB-DOVER
Kristina joined Presbyterian Global Fellowship in January as Team Coordinator. Click here to get better acquainted…



SESSION NOTES
This document is provided by the Steering Committee of the Presbyterian Global Fellowship as a resource to you and to your session. Click here to download this one-page resource.



Remember to check out The Outbox , the missional resource blog of the Presbyterian Global Fellowship. It is updated frequently and offers reflections and stories on missional renewal and links to resources for you and your congregation.



If you were forwarded this message and wish to receive future mailings directly, send an email with “subscribe pgf” in the subject line to lyris@mail.ppclist1.com



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