Monday, February 23, 2009

And all who believed were together and...sat?

Too often, the church is viewed as only a building. The question “Are you going to church?” has become a phrase likened to, “Spencer we’re having meatloaf for dinner tonight.” [Insert unappealing food in place of meatloaf]

That is to say, it makes my stomach turn over.

We see the church made into this thing a place you just go to, not a body of people, eating, sleeping, talking, and living Christ.

Acts 2:42-47

42 And they devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. 43 And awe came upon every soul, and many wonders and signs were being done through the apostles. 44 And all who believed were together and had all things in common. 45 And they were selling their possessions and belongings and distributing the proceeds to all, as any had need. 46 And day by day, attending the temple together and breaking bread in their homes, they received their food with glad and generous hearts, 47 praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being saved.

This passage is often the model that many pastors and church planters will refer back to whenever discussing what the church should look like, and it isn’t hard to see why.

Nowhere in this passage, or the Bible, does it say that the people went into the ‘church’ and sat, left inspired, and,

continued sinning.

Tragically, this is often the church model that we see in the “buckle of the Bible belt” as my good friend and brother put so well.

A church should not look like 14,000 people sitting on a Sunday morning, glossing over the Bible for some kind of fortune cookie inspiration to get them going for a few hours, or a chocolate Jesus that makes them feel better momentarily but keeps them on their behinds for the rest of the week.

Let’s say we keep the number at 14,000, but instead of the disastrous results that we see in many of these bloated churches, this body of 14,000 is moving in their community, selling their possessions, giving of themselves to people who desperately need the Gospel of Jesus Christ, opening their homes and church doors to people who so need rest.

But in order for 14,000 people to look like Christ, it has to start with one. It has to start with you and me in community, like the Acts church. It’s contagious, as a good friend and mentor put it to me.

A word to church-

Your building, it’s size, how many football fields it has or how much money it can spend on absolutely insane places to take the youth for a camp, does not matter.

Your Jesus, your Gospel, your doctrine, and your community do.

Spencer Jacobson

Thursday, February 12, 2009

New Doors


Refreshment
This past Sunday as I was walking into our church building, I paused and stood outside for a moment. I noticed that something was different but I couldn't quite put my finger on it. I realized that the church building had received two new exterior doors, replacing the old and weathered ones. It was somewhat of a pleasant surprise which caught my attention and made me laugh.

Coming from a 14,000 member mega-church in the buckle of the Bible Belt, I found this to be somewhat of a shock, seeing that the church building I'm in now only holds about 200 people. I've never seen a small town church purchase a simple need like new exterior doors. My soul was refreshed at the sight.

But it's not really about the doors.

Depth Over Width
If it's not really about the doors then what is it?

I have been learning that spiritual depth is more important than numerical width. What I mean is that too often is church growth measured by numerical increase. Spiritual growth is not dependent on how many pews can be filled each Sunday. The more people present does not indicate a level of spiritual maturity or Christ likeness. In this postmodern culture, souls are not crying out for a place to be lost in a sea of fake faces. At the heart of humanity is a need for Truth (Ecclesiastes 3:11). Truth is being searched for whether the postmodernists will admit it or not, as scripture testifies. What evangelicalism has given birth to is a church model of width over depth. Some evangelicals (if they are) today think: "Get as many people in the building and they will become spiritual. And if the building gets to small, just build a bigger one. Oh, and have you been to our Starbucks down the hall?"


Tent Multiplication
I'm learning now that by planting new churches is how God expects His followers to follow the great commission. According to research compiled by Dave Earley of Liberty University, "in the average year, half of all existing churches will not add one new member through conversion growth" thus these existing churches are growing through membership growth. It may sound elementary but membership growth is not conversion growth. These churches are adding new members not because the gospel has penetrated their hearts and they are adopted into the church, the bride of Christ, but because these churches are too concerned with "enlarging the place of their tent".

Ed Stetzer explains and supports this need for church planting as a fulfillment of the Great Commission saying that the, "New Testament Christians acted out these commands as any spiritually healthy, obedient believers would; they planted more New Testament churches."

Missional Methods
C. Peter Wagner has said in his book Church Planting for a Greater Harvest, that, "the single most effective evangelistic methodology under heaven is starting new churches." I myself, and those who have been called to communal, gospel-centered ministry, are not just looking for another method to collect dust on a book shelf, but rather the messy missional living that gets done on the life-on-life level. As I dwell deeper in experience with God my hope is to see a church of souls in community radically transformed by the gospel of Christ, by the power of His Spirit all to the praise of His glorious grace. I don't know exactly what that looks like yet, but I believe church can "be done" this way. More on that later.

Spiritual Rape & Dead Doors
A professor told me of his daughter's first experience with an alter call/sinner's prayer. He knew she did not fully understand the weight of her decision and described the gut wrenching feeling he got as if she had been, as he said, "spiritually raped". If what we are mainly focused on is getting as many people in our tents then all we are doing is attracting them into a building entering through doors leading to death.


New Doors
Although the doors on my church were updated and perhaps more attractive, once inside, the same powerful gospel is preached. In this postmodern world we may have to "become all things to all people" and update the "doors" through which people enter our family, but the one true gospel must not change. Updated, contextualized exterior, same life transforming gospel interior. And all of this because of the cross of Christ.


Zach Barton