Monday, October 25, 2010

What's the Latest in Online Worship?

An article from Outreach Magazine about applications for online worship...

Fishing season was just two weeks away when the April 20 explosion rocked BP’s Deepwater Horizon offshore rig, and oil began rising from the floor of the Gulf. As the weeks dragged on and millions of gallons fouled the waters, the fishing industry was stranded, and coastal communities suffered.

Terri Goulette lives in one of those hard-hit areas—Houma, La.—where many families lost their livelihood in the wake of the spill. Moved by the need, she started looking for a way to help and to bring encouragement to the community. That’s when she thought of a backpack and school-supply drive. And she thought perhaps she could mobilize her “local church”—700 miles away in Central Florida.

Goulette is one of an estimated 2,000 people who join the services of Northland, A Church Distributed through webstream each week

John Piper on Balancing Evangelism and Social Justice

"Christians should care about ALL suffering, especially eternal suffering in hell."

Click here to see video of John Piper speaking on evangelism and social justice at the recent Lausanne Conference on Evangelism.

D.A. Carson on Balancing Justice and Evangelism

TGC turned to four leaders and asked:

How do Christians work for justice in the world and not undermine the centrality of evangelism?

(1) By doing evangelism. I know numerous groups that claim to be engaging in “holistic” ministry because they are helping the poor in Chicago or because they are digging wells in the Sahel, even though few if any of the workers have taken the time to explain to anyone who Jesus is and what he has done to reconcile us to God. Their ministry isn’t holistic; it’s halfistic, or quarteristic.

(2) By being careful not to malign believers of an earlier generation.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

More Missional Ideas from Outreach Magazine

A list of ideas from the March/April 2010 issue...
  1. Reaching 20-somethings
    1. Do the church's leaders exhibit the fruit of the Spirit?
    2. Is there a concern for justice and compassion in your community and world?
    3. Are you involving emerging generations in key, influential leadership roles in the church?
    4. Do people in the church see themselves as "missionaries" in their daily lives focusing on relationships rather than on events?
      1. Small groups focus on how they can help care for and produce more healthy disciples who are on mission
      2. Adult education focuses on how its classes can help equip and train disciples to be on mission in their world, etc
    5. Do our leaders teach doctrines and truth - with humility?
    6. Does our church's decision-making process revolve around mission and evangelism?
  2. Health clinic - free or affordable health care to uninsured or underinsured
    1. "when people see what we're doing they want to get involved with their time and money"
    2. free physicals for local athletes, sliding-scale fee schedule for uninsured patients
    3. Driving patients to and from appointments
    4. Administration
    5. Dental care
    6. Vision care
  3. Small groups committed to long term service
  4. Work mentally challenged individuals in assisted-living home
  5. Raking leaves for elderly
  6. Cleaning up neighborhoods
  7. Faith in Action Sunday - cancel services and perform community service projects
  8. Home repairs and yard work for seniors
  9. Build Habitat for Humanity homes
  10. Help with group home for kids
  11. Collect donated items for crisis pregnancy or hurricane victims
  12. Learn about global poverty thru QuestforCompassion.org
  13. Aid for the native American community
    1. Supplies - donate blankets, meat, firewood, candles
    2. Services - pedicures, haircuts, doctor house calls
    3. Employment - opened soup kitchen to provide employment
  14. Survey local leaders - mayor, police chief, community leaders re needs of community
  15. Affordable, enriching children's programs - after school art program
  16. Providing gaming systems such as Wii, Playstation 3, etc for youth
  17. Disaster relief for those who can't go:
    1. Organize a hands-on relief project people can do togehter and send donations the area in need
    2. Find people in your area with ties to those in the affected area and ask what they need
    3. Distribute seed money in increments of $5, $10 or more and challenge people to use the seed money to raise money for disaster relief
  18. continue on pg 105
See more ideas at OutreachMagazine.com

Missional Ideas from Outreach Magazine

A list of ideas from the July/August 2010 Issue: Small Church America...
  1. Survey the community to discover what people are struggling with
  2. CommunityVision of America
  3. ArlingtonAnswers.com
  4. Home foreclosure alternatives
  5. Homework help for youth
  6. Shut down Sunday worship to go out and help in the community
  7. Neighborhood beautification
  8. Caring for the sick
  9. Home makeovers for poor families
  10. Car repair for single mothers and the elderly
  11. Fast from fast food and donate the money saved to a local food bank
  12. Group for persons with mood disorders (depression, bipolar), open to public
  13. Connect with people within 10 miles of the church using Twitter
  14. Firewood for the needy in winter
  15. Kids drama/musical productions with casting open to public
  16. Kids carnival
  17. Archery and devotions through national Centershot Ministries
  18. Sports through national ministry Upward Sports
  19. Build wheelchair ramps for elderly - may be grants available thru AARP, states, etc
  20. Food pantry for elderly - may be grants available
  21. Clothing closet for elderly
  22. Digging wells, clean drinking water overseas thru Living Water International
  23. TYPES OF SMALL CHURCHES
    1. Traditional small churches - resilient, nimble, sustainable, little or no debts, strong member loyalty, deep roots in community
    2. Marketplace churches ("third place") - churches that operate coffee shops, consignment stores, art galleries, pubs, etc during business hours, and gather for worship on the weekends
    3. Lifestyle churches - focus on a subculture in society such as bikers, surfers, cowboys, race drivers and pit crews, skateboarders, hip-hop lovers, etc.
    4. Ethnic churches - focus on first generation U.S. immigrants
    5. Multiethnic churches - focus on American-born ethnic groups of various kinds in order to bring them together
    6. New church starts - new church start has no old guard saying, "We've never done it that way before," easy to replicate because began recently and small
    7. Intentionally small churches - also called house, simple or organic churches, highly flexible, led by lay people, committed to fellowship, can meet anywhere
  24. continue on pg 73
See more ideas at OutreachMagazine.com

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Churches Reaching Men

In reading some articles in a recent Outreach magazine (May/June 2010), I found a few interesting quotes and ideas about reaching men in today's culture.

Kenny Luck says, "In the mind of the average man, the church is where you go to learn how to be nice...but nice won't cut it." "There's a reason a young boy puts on a Spiderman or Batman costume. He wants to grow up to be good - and dangerous." "I look at every man like a box of dynamite. It's not a question of whether a guy has power or not; it's a question of what kind of influence he will leave." "The most fundamental dream of a man's life - to be someone great doing great things..."

Ministry to men must 1) attract, 2) transform and 3) unleash a man with a powerful mission in the world.

Attraction can take many forms, but they must resemble masculine culture. Some examples of attraction events include: sporting events such as hunting, fishing, rock climbing, kayaking, martial arts, shooting clay pigeons, blowing things up, iron man and other competetive events, worship services that resemble the masculine rituals of a football game, etc.

Transformation can take place through teaching that communicates to men includes images like the "Lion of Judah engaged in the great spiritual battle of the cosmos"... "sermons based on men in the Bible who were risk takers, giant killers, ark builders, and roof breakers," the "work of Christ who channeled the power of the universe through the cross of sacrifice for the redemption of others." It can also take place through graduated small groups with deepening levels of intimacy and transparency.

Finally, men must be unleashed in ministries that make a real difference in the world.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Notes on Secrets to Success from the United Methodist Church

Rev. Dr. Ken Priddy shared the results of a recent United Methodist study at Presbytery. Read more from Ken Priddy at http://kenpriddy.blogspot.com/.

Common factors in successful churches among United Methodists:

1. Small groups and programs for youth, children and adults
2. Active lay leaders
3. Inspirational pastors with lengthy pastorates
4. Mix of traditional and contemporary services

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Hipster Christianity

Rev. Dr. Ken Priddy brought a new trend (or heresy?) to our attention at a recent Presbytery meeting. Check it out at http://www.hipsterchristianity.com/. Ken suggested that perhaps "cool" is the new idol. Read a complete chapter from a book analyzing this trend entitled Hipster Christianity: When Church and Cool Collide by clicking here http://www.hipsterchristianity.com/freeChapter/freeChapter.pdf.

Read more from Ken Priddy at http://kenpriddy.blogspot.com/

Notes from Mike Ashcraft on Church Planting

Notes from a recent meeting with Mike Ashcraft, pastor of Port City Community Church in Wilmington, NC. Not direct quotes, but a summary of our conversation about church planting.

1. The vision for founding of PC3: a church for people who are not sure about God

2. Must have a clear VISION
  • everything flows from that
  • say only things that are true
  • be clear on your mission
  • ask yourself, "what do you want to happen to those people?"
  • ask, "who's mission is it? is it everyone's or just the pastor's?"
  • know who you are
  • when you reach a barrier: ask, "what's really happening here?"

3. A great church is known by the IMPACT it has on the community
  • is it mobilizing people into ministry?
  • staff should not be doing something a volunteer could be doing
  • move from maintenance to mission
  • not just volunteering but owning the ministry
  • ask how you can leverage your influence for greater impact

Notes from Michael Frost on Mission as the Organizing Principle of the Church

Notes from YouTube video of Michael Frost at a recent Presbytery meeting.

Theme: "MISSION" should be the organizing priniciple of the church
  • mission means "to be sent" - a movement outwards
  • not something added on
  • all other things should fall under mission - including worship, fellowship, discipleship, etc

1. We must see GOD differently as missio dei, the missioning God
  • not, "come up to Zion," that is, expecting people to come to him on their own
  • rather, an incarnational God who moves into people's lives, a missionary God
  • God is going after people - in search of man
  • God is in Babylon too
  • the Father sends the Son and they send the Holy Spirit, the three send us (Jn 17), missio dei = the missioning God
  • filled with the Spirit = sent into the world
  • temple of God is our bodies
  • Jesus shattered traditional views of Sabbath, etc; we must shatter traditional views of "church"

2. We must see CHURCH differently as participatio Christi, participating with what Jesus is doing in the world

Notes from "Missional Renaissance" by Reggie McNeal

Notes from Rev. Ken Priddy's summary of Reggie McNeal's presentation from his book Missional Renaissance at the summer General Assembly.

  1. the church typically measures how many, how often, how much
  2. three recent missional shifts
    • from internal focus to external focus
    • from program development to people development
    • from church based leadership to kingdom leadership
  3. should MEASURE COMMUNITY IMPACT - allocate resources to missional agenda
  4. move from effective evangelism strategy to effective blessing strategy (through Abraham God would bless all the nations)
  5. we should be asking ourselves, "HOW CAN WE BLESS OUR COMMUNITY?"  (Acts 2 - they enjoyed the favor of the people)
Read more from Ken Priddy at http://kenpriddy.blogspot.com/

Notes from Richard Pratt on Missional Applications of Being Created in God's Image

Notes from Rev. Ken Priddy's summary (fall Presbytery) of Dr. Richard Pratt's (RTS Orlando, Thirdmill.org) addresses at General Assembly this past summer.

1. Main theme - your value is in your creation in image of God
  • we have value bc we are made in image of God
  • don't have to compete with each other
  • we are God's "self-portrait" (Eph 2:10)
  • God expressed himself by creating people
2. Missional application
  • people have great value bc of image of God
  • why isn't the call getting out?
  • bc we don't value people "out there"
  • bc we aren't going/sent (Rom 10) to them, to let them hear
  • we want the lost to come to us, but we must go to them
Read more from Ken Priddy at http://kenpriddy.blogspot.com/

Notes from "Confessions of a Short-Sighted Presbyter" by Nate Atwood

Address by Rev. Nate Atwood, Kempsville EPC, Virginia Beach, VA, at a recent EPC General Assembly and reiterated at a recent Presbytery.

Learning from one another - recent lessons learned from others at Presbytery meetings and conclusions drawn
  • lesson 1- we gotta take risks
  • lesson 2 - if we only fix what's inside the church we'll never reach the world
  • lesson 3 - tongues is a sign for unbelievers, worship communication includes intentionally speaking to non-believers as well as believers
  • conclusions - to learn from one another we must be together; we must keep multiplying churches to more easily be together; peer learning is the best learning

Missionary God Sends His Son, His Spirit and His People

It has been said that God is a missionary God. He has a mission  (missio dei) in the world. He sent his Son into the world, the Father and the Son sent the Spirit into the world, and the same Trinitarian God sends his people into the world to announce the coming of the kingdom.  Following are a few references in short (more to be added later). "Abram, go to the land that I will show you.." (Gen 12:1). Moses...sent out twelve men... (Num 13:3,17). Jesus sent out the twelve apostles... (Mat 10:5). The Lord chose seventy-two other disciples and sent them... (Luk 10:1). "As the Father has sent me, so I am sending you." (Joh 20:21). Jesus...told his disciples... "Go and make disciples..." (Mat 28:19).

Missional Shift for Redeemer Presbyterian in Manhattan from "Come and Hear" to "Go and Share"

I found this article on the Redeemer.com website re their recent shift to a more missional focus. Click the title above to see more articles from Pastor Tim Keller and Redeemer.

From “Come and See” To “Go and Share”

September 2010

by Tim Keller

Redeemer has had twenty great years in which the flow of our ministry could be characterized by the phrase “Come and See.” Come and listen to the teaching and music. Come and be in all the great programs, led by talented staff.

Now, however, we are entering a new season, that, God-willing, will last much longer than 20 years. Our ministry will now be “Go and Share.” Redeemer is going to try to systematically impart what theological and ministry wisdom we have to our people and empower them so that, instead of only inviting people in to hear teaching, they will in the power of the Spirit go out into their neighborhoods to love and winsomely share the Biblical gospel themselves.