Is Our Church On Mission? by Kurt Miller

Kurt Miller

Being an on mission church is not about size, staff or structure. Neither is it about a specific program. The magnitude of its mission giving or the multitude of its outreach efforts does not make a church an on mission church. An on mission church is more about a congregations passion than its percentages. It focuses more on its burden than its bigness. Gods mission in the world and His biblical mandate drives an on mission church to become a world mission strategy center.

An on mission church embraces the Great Commission and engages the world with the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is a church committed to starting new churches, strengthening existing churches and sending workers into the harvest fields. It is a church that encourages, equips, empowers and expects every member to be personally involved in Gods mission enterprise. An on mission congregation prays, gives, knows and goes on mission with God. Its a church of people burdened for the lostness of all nations that seeks to create ways to reach its Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8). Most of all, its a church with the glory of God as its ultimate goal and primary purpose.

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From thechurchplanter blog by Kurt Miller

The Day of Small Beginnings

Earlier this year I heard a message by another pastor entitled “Not by Might, Nor by Power” from Zechariah 4:1-14.

This phrase which bounces around in Christian circles- “not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit says the Lord” has held great power through the ages. That was the first point- It is about the Holy Spirit. He must be at the center of things. We can’t do anything without Him. Our dependence must be on His guidance, not our own. This was a great reminder….

Pastor Terry’s third point looked intently into verse 10. In the story of the passage, it is a prophecy from the Lord about the completion of the Temple project by Zerubbabel. Listen in:

Zerubbabel is the one who laid the foundation of this Temple, and he will complete it. Then you will know that the LORD Almighty has sent me. Do not despise these small beginnings, for the LORD rejoices to see the work begin, to see the plumb line in Zerubbabel’s hand. (Zech 4:9-10 NLT)

Embedded in this passage is that amazing statement–Do not despise these small beginnings. Actually in the original it is a rhetorical question:

Who despises the day of small things?

or consider this contemporary translation which gets the spirit of this question:

“For who dares make light of small beginnings?” (from the NET Bible)

The idea behind a rhetorical question is that everyone knows the answer. If I ask this: Isn’t it true that the Buckeyes are the best college football team in the country? Everyone knows (even the polls) the answer to that. Now don’t get side-tracked by my illustration.

The answer that everyone knows to God’s question: Who dares make light of small beginnings? NOBODY. Small is the way things get started. From building the Temple to growing an apple tree, it always starts small.

I was moved by this truth. Beyond that, I really began to embrace that this is the common sense design of our God for the way things work in our world.

In our culture of XL, mega and super-size, the small things get the shaft. They are overlooked. Maybe even despised by some. God’s rhetorical question helps us set out to do the small things. To encourage our co-worker, smile at people on the street, pick up the laundry, make a meal for a neighbor, share more about Jesus in a conversation, etc… All small things, but don’t despise those small things, they pave the way to bigger things.

Small churches ought not be despised either–from without or from within. Rather than bemoan what you don’t have, look at all the benefits you do. You can know each other, reach out to many, serve each other and meet in all kinds of places and times. Don’t despise the small things…. That’s the way God made things to get started.

For who dares make light of small beginnings?


Originally from thequest’s weekly email update August 2006 found here: https://www.thequestcolumbus.com/emailarchive/email08.17.06.html

A View of the Emerging Church – From USA Today, November 12, 2007

Kurt Miller

This post should not be viewed as an endorsement of the Emerging Church (EC) or of what is said in the article. It is my sincere desire to help all of us better understand this conversation. – Kurt Miller

A force for good

For a growing movement of believers, an activist faith means more than proselytizing about Jesus and stoking the fires of our culture wars. Welcome to the new (and yes, liberal) world of evangelical Christianity.

By Tom Krattenmaker

A passerby might not have known: Was this going to be a church service or a concert by an alternative rock band? The set-up on the stage suggested the latter — a drum kit, guitars on stands, several microphones, and large screens flashing iconic Portland scenes — and so did the look of the young, urban-hip crowd filling up the auditorium.

Then the band hit the stage with a loud, infectious groove, the front man singing passionately about God, and it was clear that the Sunday gathering of Portland’s Imago Dei Community was both alt-rock concert and church service, or neither, exactly. So it goes in the new world of alternative evangelical Christianity, better known as the emerging church.

(Illustration by Sam Ward, USA TODAY)

There’s a growing buzz about the emerging movement, and depending on your point of view, its robust growth and rising influence are worthy of applause, scorn, or perhaps just puzzlement. Fitting for a movement that eschews hierarchy and dogma, emergents defy simple definition. Perhaps the best one can say is that they’re new-style Christians for the postmodern age, the evangelicals of whom the late Rev. Jerry Falwell disapproved.

Postmodernity is nothing new. Philosophers will tell you we’ve been living in the postmodern age for decades. But its expression in the context of fervent Christianity, in the form of the emerging church, is a fairly recent phenomenon, only about a decade old.

Like the postmodern philosophy it embraces, the emerging church values complexity, ambiguity and decentralized authority. Emergents are quite certain about some things, nevertheless, especially Jesus and his clear instruction about the way Christians are to live out their faith — not primarily as respectable, middle-class pillars of status quo society, but as servants to the poor and to people in the margins. In the words of Gideon Tsang, a 33-year-old Texas emergent who moved himself and his family to a smaller home in a poorer part of town, “The path of Christ is not in upward mobility; it’s in downward.”

Nothing to resent

To the many Americans cynical about religion, news of the emerging church might come as a stereotype-busting surprise. Christians fired up not about wedge-driving culture-war issues, but about spreading non-judgmental love and compassion? What’s to resent about this public face of religion?

According to best estimates, several hundred emerging church congregations, or “communities,” have sprung up around the country. Although some are quite large, with memberships well into the thousands, emergents are still bit players on the national religious stage. But the emerging church is making its presence felt, with new groups forming rapidly and major secular and religious media outlets chronicling its influence and potential to dramatically change religion in this country.

Rick McKinley is a goateed thirty-something who leads Imago Dei (which means “image of God” in Latin). McKinley is not your mother’s minister. He threads his sermons and two books with youthful slang, as in being “stoked” about things that excite him and acknowledging that “it can really suck” to live with sin.

Ask McKinley whether he and his community are evangelical Christians, and he’ll tell you yes — and no. “We’d say ‘yes’ in terms of what we think about the authority of Scripture and those things,” says McKinley, who is finishing his theology doctorate this year. “What you have is evangelicalism defined doctrinally, which we’d agree with, and defined culturally, where we would disagree. Culturally, it has been hijacked by a right-wing political movement.

“Like mainstream evangelicals, emergents believe in spreading the Gospel and in the necessity of believers having a personal relationship with Jesus. The difference lies in how faith is applied — the way it’s acted out “in the culture,” as emergents typically put it. In the eyes of the emerging church, Christianity lived out in the respectable confines of megachurches and suburbia is fading into irrelevance as a new generation comes of age with a passion for healing society and a reluctance to shout moralistic dogma. “If the church doesn’t love its neighbors,” McKinley says, “I don’t understand how it can say anything that’s going to have meaning in the culture.”

Emergents tend to be more tolerant than establishment evangelicals on issues such as abortion and homosexuality. Do emergents believe in heaven and hell? Yes, McKinley explains, but according to emergent theology, the point of being Christian is not solely to achieve heaven in the next life, but to bring some heaven to this life by doing the work of Jesus.

That conviction recently translated into “Love Portland,” a Saturday of service around the city. Groups from Imago Dei fanned out to perform service projects — beautifying a school in a poor neighborhood, refurbishing a rundown community theater, and the like — and then gathered to celebrate at their Sunday service the next day with music, video clips and stories from those who partook of the service work. Of course, most evangelical churches perform community service. What makes groups such as Imago Dei different is “sustainability,” McKinley says — a commitment to serving the community day after day, week after week — and a soft-sell approach to evangelizing to those on the receiving end of their good works.

Serve the community

The “downward mobility” cited by the Texas emergent applies as well to the church-growth strategy, or lack thereof, of emerging communities. Unlike the megachurches of mainstream evangelicalism, emerging groups do not emphasize attracting new members (although it seems to happen anyway) or constructing church buildings. Some emerging groups meet in rented auditoriums, some in people’s homes, some in pubs. There is less emphasis, too, on programming for members. In their view, the church exists not primarily to serve members but to serve the community.

Typical of the movement’s critics, Falwell accused the emerging church of trying to “modernize and recreate the church so as not to offend sinners.” That’s probably code for “liberal,” a shoe that would certainly fit.

Writer Scot McKnight, a supporter of the movement, says emergents are seen as “a latte-drinking, backpack-lugging, Birkenstock-wearing group of 21st-century, left-wing, hippie wannabes. Put directly, they are Democrats.”

As is so often the case with religious movements in this country, the emerging church is both old and new: Old, in that Christianity in America has seemingly always been in a state of re-invention in response to the ever-changing culture; and new, in that we see in the emerging church a group of Jesus followers who reject the social conservatism modeled by Falwell and many other leading evangelicals this past quarter-century.

Is the emerging church compromising biblical truth for the sake of being hip? That debate won’t be resolved here. Whatever the case, there is something hopeful about the appearance of a youthful, idealistic form of faith focused more on healing broken neighborhoods than accumulating members and political power.

For those hoping religion can more consistently serve as a force for kindness, unity and society’s renewal — and not so much as an argument-starter — the verdict seems simple: Let the emerging church, and its larger ideals, continue to emerge.

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Tom Krattenmaker, who lives in Portland, Ore., specializes in religion in public life and is a member of USA TODAY’s board of contributors. He is working on a book about Christianity in professional sports.

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From thechurchplanter blog by Kurt Miller

What is Success?

There is a preoccupation in the western world with the pursuit of success generally measured by increased numbers, increased revenue, the development and implementation of strategic plans and the accomplishment of one’s goals. I am increasingly concerned that Christian leaders are seeking the answer to success through books written from a secular humansitic mindset, which may have some measure of wisdom to be sure, but there seems to be little comparison of the advice given in these books with the advice given in the Bible.

I have dozens of books on my shelves regarding management, leadership principles, sound business practices and changing organizational structures. I am a Christian leader who has bought these books and enjoyed, for the most part, reading them. Unfortunately, in our quick-fix, super-sized western culture, Christian leaders are buying these books in record numbers and are often making potentially fatal decisions within the church and ministry organizations as they follow this or that latest fad in leadership and management practice with little or no evaluation of that advice against God’s Word. Although some of the advice offered in these books may be good advice, a good dose of Godly wisdom and discernment would go along way in avoiding painful mistakes. The Christian’s measure of success is not based on humanistic assumptions, i.e. strategic accomplishment, production, increased revenue, and other “bottom-line” concerns of the corporate world.

God’s “bottom-line” is not man’s “bottom-line.” We often forget what we know, that God’s ways are not man’s ways. Jesus stated in the Beatitudes, at the beginning of His Sermon on the Mount, that “the gentle will inherit the earth.” Does that sound like man’s ways? If we’re honest, that statement sounds a little bit odd and peculiar. We don’t have to be a Jewish person looking for a Kingdom to think these are outlandish sounding words. They were outlandish sounding words then and they are outlandish sounding works now. Even to believers who ought to know better, Jesus words go against everything we have ever been taught, observed and experienced in our world.

Conventional thinking would say that the meek get ground INTO the earth. The one-time baseball manager, Leo Derosher, once said, “Nice guys finish last.” The concept of meek people gaining anything is such a problem for us.

I use this as only one example of how God’s wisdom is often such an alien concept in our society and in human experience. Books being written from a humanistic standpoint are guiding much of the Church in the western world today, being written by successful money-making businessmen who do not run their businesses by being gentle and humble. High-powered corporations are not operated on the concept of gentleness. Human governments don’t run by meekness. Our world says that if you want something, you’ve got to be tough. You need to be assertive and aggressive and go after it. You make decisions irrespective of who gets hurt; but, you do it for the sake of the mission (bottom-line).

The philosophy of our world is the survival of the fittest, the most shrewd and the powerful. If the world could rewrite this beatitude, it would read, “Blessed are the proud, the aggressive, the intelligent, and the dominating for they shall inherit the earth.” But Jesus says that when it comes to His Kingdom, His followers are governed by a different principle.

One needs only a cursory glance at what God considers to be success to see the perils of human reasoning and measurements. Success in God’s eyes is measured by how much we love God and and how much we love our fellow man. This is observable (measurable) through our relationships with God and other people during the best and worst of circumstances. The Beatitudes (Matthew 5:3-11) really sum it up. Success is measured by these standards:

  1. A spiritually-helpless life.
  2. A spiritually-remorseful life.
  3. A gentle life.
  4. A justice-seeking life.
  5. A merciful and care-giving life.
  6. A pure life.
  7. A peacemaking life.
  8. A suffering life.
  9. A forgiving life.
  10. A rejoicing life.

There is no place in Scripture where I have found success measured by numerical or financial growth, by strategic development and implementation or by climbing the ladder of influence, power and control. These are man’s measurements that have the appearance of wisdom, to be sure, but they deny the measurements of God. In our zeal for ministry success, let’s be sure to measure the advice we are reading and hearing against the words of the ultimate determinator of success, the Lord God Almighty, found in the Word of God. Take what nugget of advice we might find in another book, evaluate it’s consequences in light of the Word of God and prayerfully implement it only after asking God to give us the wisdom to do so. Success is not doing, it is being.

“Then Jesus said to the disciples, ‘If any of you wants to be my followers, you must put aside your selfish ambition, shoulder your cross, and follow me. If you try to keep your life for yourself, you will lose it. But it you give up your life for me, you will find true life…For I, the Son of Man, will come in the glory of my Father with his angels and will judge all people according to their deeds.'” Matthew 16:24-27 NLT.

“But many who seem to be important now will be the least important then, and those who are considered least here will be the greatest then.” Matthew 19:30 NLT

“Jesus relied, ‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind. this is the first and greatest comandment. A second is equally important: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the other commandments and all the demands of the prophets are based on these two commandments.'” Matthew 22:37-40 NLT