You work as a new church starting strategist in San Francisco. Tell us briefly how you came to do that work in that place.
Linda: I've been involved in missional activity since the week I became a follower of Christ, and in church planting since a few months after that. Five years and four churches later, with a seminary degree in hand, my home church invited me to join their staff and help them start churches. Ten years later, the senior pastor left for the Bay Area [and I took] the church planting strategist job in San Francisco. That was fourteen years ago.
What do I see that gives you hope for the church in America?
Linda: I see Dave and Brook Maturo who moved from a 4 bedroom house they owned in Florida to a small rented space in San Francisco, with no guarantee of jobs, to assist our church planting team become more effective. I see a church of poor Mongolian refugees, all new Christians, who sent the school supplies we gave them back to Mongolia where children are glad for even one pencil. I see business entrepreneur Ken McCord intentionally translating kingdom values into the workplace; notifying the utility company that his bill was too low, extending medical benefits to employees at the expense of his own salary, and caring enough to utilize more costly earth friendly processes. I see Marian Engelland planting churches, mentoring other women and running a nonprofit that serves the poor, even with twin baby girls and two other preschoolers. I see Jason Williams helping local churches collaborate with Afghan business owners to raise money to repair windows in a girl's school in Afghnistan. I see really good DNA that's worth reproducing.
You recently published "Church Turned Inside Out." Tell us about the book.
Linda: "Church Turned Inside Out" is a design book for churches. My friend, Allan Karr and I wrote it because we wanted to introduce Christian leaders to the world of design thinking. Over the decades, church became algorithmic. We discovered a formula, and a set of rules that helped us find ways to get from here to there more efficiently and more effectively. But the present algorithm is not as reliable as it once was. New information has come into the equation, and it requires a more experimental posture. Some people experiment in ways that improve the results of the present algorithm (refiners and re-aligners), and others step into the mystery and discover new ways of thinking and being in the world. Awareness of both is needed for a good design process, and both are necessary concepts to carry the church into the future.
Obviously, the word "missional" is spoken of, used by, and claimed by many groups. Instead of giving another definition for the word, can you tell the readers an example of where you and your family are seeking to live missionally?
Linda: Sometimes I tell people that in the suburbs it's easier to be nice, but in cities it's easier to be good. So many things rub against us in a dense city-- crazy driving, difficult parking, close proximity to every kind of noise and smell. It's a different pace of life. Serenity, patience, and "nice people attitudes" seem distant and even extravagant. But in cities, the decision for goodness is ever-present. Will we waste the food from our large portion meal, or cut some off before we eat, and wrap it to give to that hungry person we will surely encounter on the way home? Do we follow the trail of blood that leads down the street and into a park to see who may need help or do we ignore it? Do we acknowledge the beggar on the sidewalk who is asking for money, or do we look away because seeing is too costly? Do we treat the Russian pizza delivery driver with respect and kindness? In Russia, he was a classical musician, but here, his limited English prevents him from being well employed. Every time I treat him more like a delivery driver than a classical musician, I rob him of his identity.
In terms of missionSHIFT and the Missional Manifesto, what would be a great end-game in your mind for this event and process?
Linda: There have been times and places in history that mobilize great movements. For example, I love the story of the Harlem Renaissance. African American poets and preachers, artists and educators showed up in Harlem at the same time in the 1920s and 30s. Together they imagined what it might be like to be black in America some day. Communication was more difficult then, but what happened in Harlem sparked the Civil Rights Movement. Today I imagine a new, decentralized, and wonderfully diverse movement of God's people who respond to the urgent call of a missional manifesto and walk together in a revitalized kingdom direction.
Ed, thanks so much for highlighting Linda's work. I love the line, "Sometimes I tell people that in the suburbs it's easier to be nice, but in cities it's easier to be good."
I remember Linda was the very first person I heard speak about being "missional" before the word/posture became "popular." I also remember one of Linda's recommendation for me was to read "anything written by a guy named Darrell Guder", and that was in 1998.
I hope many have the opportunity to hear Linda's heart and draw from her expertise. Thanks Linda!
This is a fine piece from an inspiring leader. I can tell you from my own experience, there is a fine line between urban flaky oughta be mainline missional and sold out missional for Jesus. I love when I experience the second, like Linda! (I say this as a rural flaky mainliner!)
If nothing else, this has convinced my wife and I to attend Missionshift this summer and join the conversation. Your kingdom work is inspiring Linda. Thank you so much. The story of the Russian pizza delivery man made me tear up.
Brad,
Linda is great and needs to be heard. Her work convicts me. Hopefully we can help get the word out on blogs and other meetings.
Geoffrey, see you at missionShift!
Ed
Glad she will be one of the framers. Super choice!
Some have referred to the Bay Area as the Gay Area because of its high concentration of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people. The church has struggled for years with how to effectively offer pastoral care to GLBT people. The ex-gay ministry option seems to mostly be a failure with the vast majority of people who try to go straight or suppress their orientation ending up coming out (in some cases after years of earnest efforts.) Many of these claim they have been harmed by these treatments--psychologically, emotionally and spiritually.
I wonder what Linda has discovered in her work in the Bay Area, insights that might help others grappling with how to provide pastoral care to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Christians.