We all know that the back door of many churches is much bigger than the front door. People are leaving traditional churches in unprecedented numbers. Many more people don’t really care one bit where the front or back doors are, and they certainly don’t want to get anywhere near a church on Sunday. Some would say that an unfriendly atmosphere is the reason people are leaving in droves, or not even coming to church in the first place. However, it is only one of myriad reasons why the mainline churches are dying.
The "2000 pound elephant in the room" is the churchianity subculture that exists in most churches today. That subculture has caused the church to have minimal impact on an increasingly hostile landscape due to a serious lack of relevance within the broader cultural and postmodern context. It is imperative we drop all our pretentious Christianese language and unfruitful traditions, and begin to see how others outside of the church view our conversations and behaviors. Just our conversation alone can drive people away because it seems like a foreign language to them. We MUST begin to see and hear ourselves through the eyes and ears of the un-churched and make radical adjustments to our churchianity culture. In other words, WE MUST GET REAL!
The other thing that is killing off churches faster than rat poison in a room full of rats is our "model" of church. Are we being missional/incarnational or are we still trying to be attractional in our form of church? 90% of churches today are still operating an attractional model of church. THAT IS NOT WORKING ANYMORE! We must stop trying to be consumer oriented and programmatic. Just hoping and praying that the products and programs we offer will cause people to come to the church on Sunday is failing, THEY ARE NOT COMING! We must begin to look at the context around us as a mission field and go into that context incarnationally. And while the orthodoxy of our message of Christ and Him crucified never changes, it has become necessary that we contextualize our methods of getting that message to those who are outside of the Church. This means we need to be creative and get our hands dirty. It also means we need to develop loving, compassionate, and authentic relationships with those God providentially brings across our path; and according to Luke, chapter 14, those He sends across our path will look more like the lame, blind, sick, maimed, and poor.
We have a mandate from our Lord Jesus Christ to GO into all the world… the world DOES NOT have a mandate to come to us! I believe the word "GO" is an acronym for "God Ordained". When we GO into all the world God ordains us to bear fruit for His Kingdom, and the churches will stop dying when we start going! North America is now the largest English speaking mission field on the planet! The Church has abdicated its responsibility to send its people as lights into the darkness. Today, most churches are nothing but a bunch of dim bulbs trying to outshine one another! As we go, we cannot drag our churchianity with us, we must leave it behind and learn how to become all things to all people just as the apostle Paul did when he went to the Areopagus on Mars Hill, and it is written that many there believed. He didn't win them by cursing their gods; he won them over by showing them the one true God.
Like Paul, our community of Christ followers have won many to God by GOing into the marketplace. We are learning to stop speaking in our shallow and irrelevant Christianese language. Instead, we just ask questions; then shut-up, wait for an answer and listen. People want to know someone genuinely cares and is listening to them. We are learning daily what it means to walk in compassion and love as we endeavor to walk in radical servanthood. This is what it means to be missional and incarnational.
The only way we will ever keep the church from dying, is when we as Christ followers start living! And that means we must live intentionally and incarnationally by demonstrating the love and power of Christ to those around us who are in darkness and without hope. Again, we are going to have to be creative and often times take huge risks in order to look more like Christ in an ever-changing cultural, political, and religious environment. But who ever said following Jesus was safe?
©2011 Richard Lewis Jones
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
The Postmodern Areopagus
In Acts 17, Paul the apostle was taken to the Areopagus atop Mars' hill to explain to the great philosophers of Athens about a new doctrine, a strange doctrine, the doctrine of Christ. The Athenians were always gathering to tell, or to hear some new thing. But Paul told them about the "Unknown God", the living God who created all things and of Jesus who was resurrected from the dead.Today, many still gather to tell or to hear some new thing. Great philosophers, poets, artists and various intellectuals come together at the cafes and coffee houses, the Areopagus' of today, to discuss the issues of our time. The conversations range from the political, to the spiritual, to the intellectual, and everything in between. As followers and desciples of Jesus we are called to enter into the marketplace of ideas and share the gospel of the Kingdom of God, to tell the people about Jesus and His resurrection just as Paul did in the Areopagus on top of Mars' hill.
This blog stands apart from the Uprising blog in that this is a journal of my experiences in the postmodern Areopagus. The Lord spoke to me specifically and told me to take my laptop, bible, cell phone, etc. and set up my office at a table in an edgy local coffee house here in Tulsa. (Until now my office was a spare bedroom in my home.) He told me to write a journal as He brings to my table the ebb and flow of life. I will be writing about the conversations that spring forth out of that ebb and flow and my reflections on those people that the Lord allows me to share the good news of His Kingdom with.
I pray that those who read this journal gain a greater understanding of a post-churched generation, how they think and how they can be greatly touched by our loving Father as he sends us out into their world, into the Areopagus' of the post-modern generation. For it truly is of His Kingdom that there shall be no end.
©2011 Richard Lewis Jones
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