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| Pop Goes the Church |
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I love this book already and I haven't even read it. Every except that gets posted somewhere just seems so on target. What do you think? "Would your community be any different if your church disappeared tomorrow? Have you ever asked yourself this question? Have you ever considered it with others at your church? If your church suddenly disappeared, could the community even recover? Or would they go on as though nothing at all had changed?
What is happening at your church that is worth talking about? When people leave your service, are they thinking about the e-mails they need to send and the football game they want to watch—or are they thinking deeply about their own choices and thinking how they might make a difference in someone's life this week?
Sadly, for most of us, the answer is a resounding “no.” We didn't even have to think that long about the answer. Our church is great for our friends, our family, and us, but there is little measurable impact on the community. There is little happening that is making a difference outside of the few dozen or couple hundred who regularly attend.
Wouldn't it be great if a local church had a vision big enough to capture people's hearts and motivate them to action, so it had an impact on the community? Wouldn't it be awesome if a church was so effective people began following Jesus, growing in their faith, and as a result, the community was being loved and served?
I love the way John 1:14 is written in The Message. It says Christ “became flesh and blood and moved into the neighborhood.” He came to us—met us where we were. In Jesus' case, the neighborhood was a rural, agricultural society in first century Palestine. He immersed himself in that culture. He wore the clothes, used the language, and illustrated his stories with the signs and symbols of the day to communicate the Gospel of an upside down kingdom here on earth.
If Jesus physically entered twenty-first century America, I believe he would do much as he did in the first century. He would hang out with normal people in the real world, and he would reserve his strongest words for the entrenched religious leaders who love their traditions more than they love their people. I believe he expects no less from us.
The goal of Pop Goes the Church is to stretch your thinking. If you have bought into the belief that church is exclusively for building up the believers, I want you to reconsider. If you think a church service cannot help believers grow AND be attractive to non-believers, I want to convince you that it can. If you have never experienced a church service that stays true to the Bible AND is comfortable for your non-religious friends and you don't think it is even possible, I want you to explore the possibility. The community around you is dying without Jesus, and it is your God-ordained duty to wrestle until you find the best way to reach them. And once you do, don't apologize." - Pop Goes the Church excerpt copied from wiredchurches.com |
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First, I love my church. Not for the "chapel-like" building, which is pretty in its own way. Not for the type of worship services it has, which are pretty good I think. Not for Pastor John, or Vicar David, who are loving and skilled at their vocation, either. Our church is not the biggest, the loudest, the most progressive, nor the most traditional -- I suppose that depending on which metric you use, and what norm you select, you could argue that Peace is awesome, or pretty full of itself. That the question is even asked among us, is perhaps a sign that we (as a congregation) are on a journey, but have only just begun. And, maybe that's how it always will be. And should be. Moving, not still. Listening, but not silent. Thanks, Kim, for being part of that movement, and excitement, that shines, and encourages others to twinkle along.
--es. |
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