• Reflections on the Missional Learning Commons

    January 18, 2010

    Amy and I had a great time at the Missional Learning Commons in Ft. Wayne two weekends ago.

    The theme of the weekend was,”Deeper Church.”  Essentially what that meant was having discussions about certain topics which surface when we stop thinking about church as a worship service with a host of corresponding programs and begin to embrace church as a way of life in which we are joining God in his mission of reconciliation and the restoration of all things.  Some may want to try and explain how these are really two ways of saying the same thing, but for the vast majority of people who have been involved in this conversation for any length of time, the differences are too real and too important to dismiss with semantic gymnastics.

    On Friday night there were maybe 30 people in attendance to discuss Soong-chan Rah’s book, The Next Evangelicalism: Freeing the Church from Western Cultural Captivity.  This conversation was continued as the topic of the final session on Saturday.  Both conversations were engaging and helpful.  While the book had clear shortcomings and oversights, it served as a springboard for us to ask the question, “Why are missional congregations so white?”  We see this as a problem because implicit in missional theology is the value for listening to voices from the margins of society – something which should be a no-brainer to those of us who regard Scripture (a book authored by those speaking from the margins of society!) as our guiding text.  Those who live on the margins of society have much to teach those of us who don’t and the longer our congregations remain socio-economically and culturally homogeneous, the more the Body of Christ, and by implication, the world to which we testify of an alternative reality, suffers.

    In light of that, we had discussions about the practices of deeper churches, what sharing the gospel means and looks like for deeper churches, and whether or not these deeper churches should have paid staff.  This session was led by a 3-person panel: Matt Tebbe one of the pastors of Life on the Vine who is bi-vocational, JR Woodward, who raises all of his support, and Bob Havenor, who was advocating for an up-paid approach to church leadership.

    Thanks to Ben Sternke who put the missional commons site together, you can find audio from all of the sessions here.

    If you are in the midwest and interested in the missional conversation, I hope you’ll consider joining us next year – details TBD.

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    Posted in: LOV, bi-vocational, books, christendom, conference, midwest, missional

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  • Dad G said...

    1

    Very good… I often wonder how the first century church felt about this. What errors did they make and correct? How difficult was it to keep from absorbing the "Pharisee Pride" they had seen and perhaps were still seeing? What part of society were they reaching out to, and learning from? God Bless!

    01/19/10 4:19 AM | Comment Link

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