Showing posts with label missional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missional. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

First steps

I thought of another way our open house was like a wedding—lots of great food that I didn’t have time to eat! (I’m sure our wedding cake was good, but I certainly don’t remember eating any of it.) I was pretty focused in on greeting people and on what needed to be said; so it was hard to want to munch on chips and seven layer dip.

Exactly fifty people attended our open house. A number of people brought great munchies and desserts. Justin brought a bouncy castle and set it up in the front yard, which had the kids (and some adults) jumping for joy.

After spending some time meeting each other and finding out silly facts about ourselves, we got into looking at what this new church will be like. We looked at what it means to be missional—getting into the community to transform it—rather than focusing on trying to attract people with super cool programs. We saw how our primary mission field is... Helena. We explored what it would be like for the front door of our church to be our small community groups rather than a worship service. We looked at how our children could participate in the life of the church. We discussed where we go from here.

And just where do we go from here? Over the next few months we’ll be focusing on gathering people to join on this church planting endeavor. We’ll host more events for people to come and catch the vision of what we’re about. And toward the latter part of the fall we’ll take our first steps toward publicly worshiping together.

So stay tuned. Get involved. Pray.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Who needs another church?

“If we come to plant a church in a particular area, we’re not perceived as doing anyone any favors. But if we’re starting a cafĂ©, an Internet launderette, or a day-care center, we’re seen as bringing something of intrinsic value to the community. We’re serving those to whom we’re sent.”

That’s from Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch, authors of The Shaping of Things to Come.

We may be excited to plant a new church in Helena, but do you think the people of our community will be excited as well? Will we be seen as bringing anything of value to the neighborhood?

As we think missionally and incarnationally, we must consider our community. What it needs, what it’s lacking, how we can contribute to its well-being. We must ask, “How can we bless our community?”

This is a glimpse of what it means to be missional in our church planting efforts. Attractional thinking says, “How can we package the gospel so that people will come to us?” Missional thinking says, “How can we get involved in what is already going on in the community and bring the transforming power of the gospel with us?”

Again, it's about getting in to the community.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Questions, questions

I’d like to write more about what a missional approach could look like, but first I put the question to you: how can we take a missional approach to ministry in Helena? What would it look like to be incarnational in reaching different people groups in our community?

On a personal level, what kind of people are you connected with? Think about the places where you are a regular, where people know you by name. Maybe it’s at the club or a restaurant, a civic group or service organization, an arts group or a local sports league. Wherever you have connection is where you can have influence, where you can incarnate the gospel of Christ.

Now what could a missional approach look like?

Attractional… or missional?

How do we reach people with the gospel? So many churches have completely bought into the idea of “attractional ministry”—that we just need to do something cool enough, compelling enough, amazing enough, and people will come. We gotta get the hippest music, the coolest video effects, throw the most raging events and people will break down our doors to join us. “If you build it, they will come.”

There’s just one problem: it doesn’t work. Sure, some people will come. But we can’t be hipper than the Wachowski brothers, cooler than Death Cab for Cutie, or as wildly creative as Burning Man. We can’t wow people into salvation.

The alternative? A missional approach. Getting into the community you want to impact, rather than standing on the sidelines trying to pull people out.

Sound intriguing? More later.