HomeArchivesSpeakingAudio / Video The ExchangeLifeWay ResearchLifeWay Research Team
Home
Home
FacebookRSSTwitterVimeoYouTube
Click here to have Ed's RSS feed on your site
Topics
  • Articles
  • Bible
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Church
  • Church Planting
  • Church Revitalization
  • Culture
  • Humor
  • International Missions
  • Interviews
  • Leaders
  • Lifeway
  • Megachurch
  • Ministry
  • Missional
  • Multisite
  • Personal
  • Politics
  • Preaching
  • Presentations
  • Research
  • SBC
  • Seminars
  • Social Media
  • Teaching
  • Theology
  • Video
  • Web
Series
  • Guide to the Blog
  • The Meanings of Missional (5 Parts)
  • Multi-site Churches
  • Young Adult Dropouts
  • Calvinism and the SBC
Leadership Interview
  • Thom and Sam Rainer: Essential Church
  • Brad Waggoner: The Shape Of Faith To Come
  • Jared Wilson: Your Jesus is Too Safe
  • Tullian Tchividjian: Unfashionable
  • Skye Jethani: The Divine Commodity
  • Mark Liederbach & Alvin L. Reid: The Convergent Church
  • Scott McConnell: Multi-Site Churches w/ Scott McConnell
  • Steve Ogne & Tim Roeh: TransforMissional Coaching
  • Alan Hirsch & Michael Frost: ReJesus
  • Kary Oberbrunner: The Fine Line
  • Steve Addison: Movements That Change The World
  • John Avant: If God Were Real
  • Geoff Surratt: Ten Stupid Things That Keep Churches from Growing
Most Popular Posts
  • No Such Thing as "the Gift of Evangelism"
  • Thinking on the Plane
  • Thursday is for Thinkers: Ray Chang on Creating a Culture of Internship in the Church
  • Counting People Who Attend House Churches
  • Calling for Contextualization, Part 3: Knowing and Making Known the Gospel
  • Reflecting on Balance and Rest in the Ministry
  • My Interview with Adrian Warnock: Why We Need Non-Paid Christian Leaders
  • Thursday is for Thinkers: Wendy Horger Alsup on Equipping Women for Gospel-Centered Lives
  • Church Leadership Book Interview: Charles Stone on 5 Ministry Killers and How to Defeat Them
  • Four New Church Planting Books
Alltop - Best of the Best
 

When the Mission Gets Lost in the System

Monday October 20, 2008   ~   8 Comments

Donna and I returned from Europe last night. I will tell a bit more about our time there in the coming days. If you are so inclined, you can find some interesting pictures at Twitter).

When Donna an I talked on the plane coming home (faces 11 inches apart), we were struck by how these church planters live incarnationally. Europe was their home-- and they were seeking to live sent on God's mission.

When we went to the Vatican, we did not find it to be a spiritual experience. It spoke to us, but not about faith. It spoke to us of power. It did not evoke "go and tell." Rather, it was clearly "come and see." (And, that same sentence would be true in many non-Catholic settings as well-- including a few I know all too well.)

We taked some about the contrast of "being sent" and "maintaining structure" in a Bible study with Threads called Sent: Living the Missional Nature of the Church. In Session 3 of the study, I tried to use an illustration of a yo-yo to describe how a church should constantly be pushing outward into its surrounding culture.

The logic goes like this. Most of us have a Constantinian model for church which, very simply, is summed up like this: building + clergy + program = church. We saw it quite clearly in St. Peter's Basicillica. The fallacy comes when we start to see those components as rules rather than tools-- that was clearly found at the Vatican but is often found in my church and denomination as well. When you create a system with God-given tools, then turn them into rules, you end up with a system that needs to be serviced not a mission that needs to be lived.

A better equation is this: body + mission + kingdom = church. We need to be a body on mission for the Kingdom. The session goes onto explain:

The biggest disparity between the two models can be seen in the focus. In the Constantinian model, the force is centripetal, moving inward. In the biblical model, the force is centrifugal, pushing outward...

yoyo.JPGThink of it in terms of a yo-yo. When you swing a yo-yo around, two forces are at work simultaneously. The centrifugal force (technically 'inertia') pushes the yo-yo outward, and at the same time, the centripital force is exercised by the string, pulling the yo-yo inward. In the yo-yo, these forces are in balance at the same time.

The church's challenge is similar. At any given moment, there is a centripetal force pulling us inward, tempting us to care most about ourselves, our comfort, and our development. This strong force is actually part of human nature, and it results in things like the Constantinian model of church. What makes it even more conplicated is that the thicker the string, the greater the force pulling inward. So the more stuff we have-- the more programs, buildings, and clergy we add-- the greater the temptation to focus primarily on ourselves. When that happens, the church becomes little more than a spiritual department store, a kind of Wal-Mart for Jesus, providing religious goods and services to Christian consumers.

Now there is certainly a balance to this argument, but for far too long we have been dominated by the thickness of the string. So we tend to look in rather than looking out.

787233.jpgIt was enlightening to stand with missionary church planters on the steps of the Vatican while we talked about starting New Testament churches in Rome and Marseille. These churches might meet in homes, cafes, or storefronts, but they would seek to make them missional in their contexts. These missionaries are making great sacrifice, being far from their families with little resources so they could reach people far from God and tell them about a relationship, not a religion. They would let them know that Jesus would live in their hearts and not a temple built buy human hands.

Be sure to drop by the other posts to follow along on Europe missions week:

Post 1: Why We Are In Europe.

Post 2: Vision and Video from Europe.

Post 3: Planting in Budapest and Beyond.

Post 4: More Video and Info on Central and Eastern Europe.

Post 5: Teaching English and Telling the Gospel.

And find out more about Sent by going here.

Posted on October 20, 2008 at 8:14 AM   ~   8 Comments

Tagged with: centrifugal, centripetal, church, mission, sent, threads

Subscribe via RSS or Follow us on Twitter
Follow us via RSS Follow us On Twitter

Share This Post
Facebook
del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Digg
TwitThis
Mixx
Technorati
NewsVine
Reddit
Google
LinkedIn
co.mments
YahooMyWeb

8 Comments

By Stan Stepleton on October 20, 2008 10:31 AM

Thank you Ed for the reports, pictures, insights and advocacy. Always reading and praying, Stan

By Michael Stover on October 20, 2008 12:03 PM

Great analysis Ed, as always. Good stuff.

By michael wallenmeyer on October 20, 2008 12:11 PM

keep the blogs and the updates coming...love it.

By Jonathan Jones on October 20, 2008 12:31 PM

Love it; I know this is a point you've made in some of your books on missional church planting, but it can't be said enough.

By Matt Chewning on October 20, 2008 2:10 PM

Hi Ed,

Awesome stuff. Thanks for your ministry and writings. I dont know if you ever read these comments but your book (Planting Missional Churches) has been highly influencial in my journey to plant in Boston. Thanks for your heart for the Kingdom, scripture, and reproducing churches.

Matt
(The kid who you told to "sober up" at Catalyst) haha. I wonder if Driscoll gave you an ear full for that yet. haha.
mwchewning@yahoo.com
www.chewningjourney.blogspot.com

By Doran Wright on October 21, 2008 9:31 AM

Spot-on, Ed. I have thought in my head what you articulated so well, hearing this phrase in my mind "The Holy Roman Catholic Baptist Church" whenever I sense the string on the yo-yo getting thick. Your insights fuel my passion for planting...
Blessings - Doran

By Rich Barrett on October 21, 2008 6:27 PM

Love that new equation, Ed!

body + mission + kingdom = church

Excellent.

Good to see you in person at Catalyst.

By Scott Linklater on October 25, 2008 10:27 AM

It seems that someplace along the way church as become a goal, and we have forgotten that it is a tool.

The irony about it being a goal is that if we only have a few ineffective Christians in the pews we are failing...but if we have a lot of ineffective Christians attending, we are succeeding - we have meet our goal.

When does it become a tool again, for training and equipping for reaching the world that lives outside the walls of the church?

Scott

Comment Policy

Comments are welcome on discussion posts.  Comments are not moderated but do require a keyword to avoid spam.  If this is your first time commenting, please review the comment policy.

Leave a comment

» Subscribe to these comments.
 
Recent Comments
  • Scott Linklater commented on When the Mission Gets Lost in the System.
  • Rich Barrett commented on When the Mission Gets Lost in the System.
  • Doran Wright commented on When the Mission Gets Lost in the System.
  • Matt Chewning commented on When the Mission Gets Lost in the System.
  • Jonathan Jones commented on When the Mission Gets Lost in the System.
  • michael wallenmeyer commented on When the Mission Gets Lost in the System.
Twitter Feed
    My Books
    Compelled by Love Comeback Churches   Breaking the missional Code
    Planting Missional Churches 11 Innocations in the Local Church   Spiritual Warfare and Missions
    Mission Shift Lost and Found   Viral Churches
    Small Group Resources

    Install Flash

    Get Adobe Flash player

    Schools Where I Teach
    Compelled by Love
    Ministry Partnerships
    Christianity Today Outreach magazine
    Catalyst Monthly Facts and Trends
    Christian Post
    imb connecting Baptist Center
    LifeWay: Research - Biblical Solutions for Life
    LifeWay: Biblical Solutions for Life
    Noteworthy Items
    Noteworthy Items
    • A Vision Statement Doesn’t Mean You Have Vision
    • Eugene Peterson on The Blessing of the "Institutional Church"
    • Thabiti for the Gospel
    • Theology and Worship with Mike Cosper
    • What Berger said
    • Ed Stetzer on How Leaders Are Vital to Church Transformation
    • Innovative or Innovation Dysfunctional
    • Star Wars on the Subway