Archive for the ‘matthew 22’ tag

Missional vs. Mega-church   2 comments

Posted at 1:24 pm in church, church relevance, ministry, missional

Let me start with a question: Can the seeker-sensitive, mega-church model really be missional? I’m one of those that thinks it can. Missional really is a matter of the heart that is realized through application. Serving others becomes relevant because it is in the very nature of who we are as missionaries. Can such an environment exist in a mega-church? I think it can.

The biggest problem facing the missional mega-church is one of how it can be organic and easily mobilized when it operates with 2-5 services per day and affects 2,000-50,000+ in attendance on any given weekend. Menlo Park Presbyterian Church actually closed its door one Sunday in April last year to be the love of Christ to the surrounding community. With about 2,600 of its 5,000 members committing to serve others as reported in the Oakland Tribune:

For only the second time in its 134 years, a church in Menlo Park today canceled Sunday morning service and shut its doors.

It’s no crisis — it’s only because the majority of its 5,000 members instead spent the weekend renovating homes, refurbishing schools, assisting the homeless or building thousands of support kits for AIDS caregivers in Africa, among scores of charitable activities throughout the Peninsula.

As Pastor David Meysembourg stated in a comment to one of the previous posts here on the blog about the missional church, “So for those who are already doing church, the real work lies in becoming missional without losing the flock. The difficulty comes in transitioning from a more traditional church (which is many of the things missional is not) to a missional church. Education and training, modeling missional values, discussion, reading, all are an important part of this process. One of the first things we’ve done is to define ‘church’.”

Ask 100 pastors to define what the church is and you may find 100 different responses. Sure, the underlying theme and overall context may be similar, but just as God calls individuals to lead/preach/teach he also inspires them with visions that complement their giftedness and passions. Another point made by Pastor Meysembourg that we as pastors must be united on though: Church is “Not a building, not program, not an event, but people living God’s plan for their lives.”

What is God’s plan for our lives? Simply stated in the eloquent words of Christ himself in Matthew 22:37-39:

37″‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ 38This is the first and greatest commandment. 39And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’”

If we gather together as the body of Christ and love God completely and love others with the love of Jesus aren’t we being missional? Must there be a 100% buy-in from all that gather in a Sunday service in order for the church to be considered missional? If we look at missional as some formula of how we can “do” church, then the answer would be no. However, if we look at being missional as a matter of the heart and an application of our love for our fellow humans and realize that not everyone may be willing to walk in the same shoes at the same time, then any body of Christ that exemplifies the Greatest Commandment is in-fact going to be missional.

As Alan Hirsch states on page 182 of his book The Forgotten Ways,

“One of the reflections arising out of my fifteen years’ experience at SMRC is that as we grew and began to operate in the classic church growth mode it became increasingly harder to find God in the midst of the progressively more machinelike apparatus required to ‘run a church.’ With numerical growth, it seemed that we were increasingly being drawn away from the natural rhythms of life, from direct ministry, and that our roles seemed to become more managerial than ever before.”

With Mr. Hirsch’s statement being a generalization of what is thought to occur in the mega-church model of ministry, there are definitely large, looming issues inherent in this model that could or would prevent a missional dna from developing as the environment can lend itself to becoming consumeristic and inwardly focused. However, with a missional vision for a mega-church committed to the Greatest Commandment, all things are possible with God.

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Written by daveingland on October 8th, 2008

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Love…it’s not better than the law, it *is* the law   no comments

Posted at 9:51 am in Bible, Christianity, God

My friend Mark posted a blog on myspace that got quite a few responses so far this morning (You can read it by clicking here.) The post was a commentary on how some Christians can be judgmental and closed-minded. However, a lot of the posts seemed to agree that the world would be a better place if Christians did what Jesus taught instead of using the scripture against people. What is it that they think Jesus taught? They agree that Jesus taught love was above the law and that we should embrace love and not the law. At least that is the way I perceived a lot of the replies to be saying.

I’m sure many people outside of that blog would agree. However, I would have to fundamentally disagree. Matthew 22:37-40 NIV tells us that loving God and loving others as we love ourselves are the two greatest commandments. Verse 40 specifically states that the Law and the Prophets hang on these two things. Therefore we have to keep in mind that Jesus didn’t say love is above the law (God’s commandments), instead he says that if we keep love of God and love of others first and second in our hearts, then we are upholding the two greatest laws of God. Verse 40 confirms this by stating that through keeping these two commandments we will be able to honor all of the commandments.

Did you know that there are over 600 commandments of God in the Bible? Isn’t it amazing that by just upholding two of them, that we cannot fail in keeping the rest? Think about it and if you find a contradiction please reply and let me know.

Love *is* the law and it is God’s love for us that allows us to love others above ourselves.

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Written by daveingland on August 2nd, 2008

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