Simple Church Journal

  • Chapter 2: Defining “Church” (Webster Has It Wrong)

    From "The Simple/House Church Revolution" Book.  The entire book can still be downloaded here.

    Church according to Miriam-Webster’s online dictionary:

    1: a building for public and especially Christian worship
    2: the clergy or officialdom of a religious body
    3: a body or organization of religious believers: as a: the whole body of Christians b: denomination <the Presbyterian church> c: congregation
     4: a public divine worship <goes to church every Sunday>

    Webster defines church according to the way this word is used today. I was taught this same definition as a little boy when I would put my hands together and recite the rhyme: “Here is the church, and here is the steeple; open the door and here are all the people.”

    Jesus, however, introduced the term “church” with a very different meaning in mind. He used a word “ekklesia” that simply described a group or assembly of people. This is the original definition of the word. He described “church” as those people who were following Him—people walking in allegiance to him. People. His followers. Nothing more than that.

    Jesus did not spend much time describing how to organize his people together or how to do meetings. Rather, his focus was on a lifestyle of loving others and obeying Him: “Go into all the world…” “Let your light shine…” “Do what you see the Father doing…” “Love one another…” Church, as defined by Jesus, was simply his followers living life for and with him.

    Over the years, however, the word “church” began to include the many structures and forms that we added to the original meaning:

    • Public meeting places (buildings or storefronts)
    • Organizations of believers who get together to be led by a worship team and preached to by a pastor
    • Denominations that we join

    But, as John Eldredge reminds us:

    Church is not a building. Church is not an event that takes place on Sundays. I know, it's how we've come to think of it. ‘I go to First Baptist.’ ‘We are members of St. Luke's.’ ‘Is it time to go to church?’ Much to our surprise, that is not how the Bible uses the term. Not at all.

    No. Not at all. Church is God’s people—those who are choosing to live life with Jesus… 24/7. That is it. Nothing more.

    But don’t God’s people gather together? Yes. We do see gatherings take place in Scripture. Many gatherings. Most often informal and simple. Normally in homes (Romans 16:5). Everyone participated (1 Corinthians 14:26). They functioned as spiritual families that cared deeply for one another (Romans 12:10). Yet the focus of the church (God’s people) was a lifestyle of Jesus-following, rather than organizing events, attending programs, or joining organizations.

    Perhaps the best way to describe the church of the New Testament is as small, vibrant, caring families of believers who are loving others and reproducing themselves into every corner of the world.

    The Things I Learned About Church From Bible College

    I attended a Bible College as a brand new Christian hungry to live a life useful to God. I loved reading the stories of the disciples following Jesus, traveling with him, ministering with him, doing miracles alongside of Jesus as he poured out his life for others. I thought it was fantastic. I enjoyed studying the book of Acts and seeing God’s people going throughout the world, filled by the Spirit, walking in God’s purposes and power. But, as a subtext, I was also taught to “do church” in Bible college. It was not a specific class. There was no text book. I simply learned to follow “how it was done” by those around me.  Frankly, the way I learned to “do church” did not look much at all like the lives of the early disciples that I was studying and wanting to be like.

    Nevertheless, by the time I felt called to pastor a church, I no longer questioned how church was done. We started with a building and a core group of Christians. We invited, and planned, and organized, and put together Sunday events. We built more buildings and started more services to invite people to. We developed programs for young and old, men and women, married and divorced. We hired staff and we organized ministry teams.

    Without realizing it, we were following human traditions for church life that were developed over the centuries: cathedrals, pulpit-led services, pews, order-of-service, etc. All of these things may be useful in their place (God can use anything), but they have no place in the basic definition of “church.”

    Sadly, as the church has adopted more and more traditions and become more and more institutionalized, it has become largely ineffective in its impact on earth. In the western world, where we have created the best organizational church systems that exist, Christianity is declining. In contrast, in parts of India and China where the expression of church is largely organic, simple, and fluid, the church is flourishing.

    Our longing is to see the church restored to its essence of life and vitality so that she becomes the full expression of Christ’s power and love on earth. This is the great hope of God’s kingdom coming to influence, save, and redeem a lost planet. Priscilla Shirer made this comment:

    In the first century in Palestine Christianity was a community of believers. Then Christianity moved to Greece and became a philosophy. Then it moved to Rome and became an institution. Then it moved to Europe and became a culture. And then it moved to America and became a business. We need to get back to being a healthy, vibrant community of true followers of Jesus.

    Being Church

    My Filipino friend, Molong Nacua, wrote an excellent article entitled “Being Church” that reminds us of the true meaning of “church:”

    Church is where Christ lives, not the place where we meet. It is Christ-empowered people, a kingdom of priests for the purpose of winning against the works of the devil and establishing God's Kingdom (1 Cor. 3:17; Matt. 18:19; Ex. 19:6)… Christianity is not about doing church, but being the church.  Church is not some place to go to participate in, but it is about being who you are in Christ and thus experiencing His real life in you. Your Christianity was never defined by attending a particular church. It is defined by Christ in you. In other words, you are a Christian 24/7, not because you participate in a two-hour worship service, but because Christ lives in you every minute of every day.

  • Chapter 3: Unleashing the “Going” Church

    From "The Simple/House Church Revolution" Book.  The entire book can still be downloaded here.  I previously posted much of this chapter, so if it sounds familiar, that's why.

    The church is meant to be the expression of Christ’s life and power on earth. This can only take place as:

    • We move out of “comfy Christianity” into the daring adventure of following Jesus.
    • We replace our “come-structures” with “go-structures”
    • We recapture the “going” lifestyle

    Comfy Christianity

    Shane Claiborne writes: “Being a Christian is about choosing Jesus and deciding to do something incredibly daring with your life.”

    In my former life as a pastor, I was a dispenser of comfortable Christianity. I took on the job of creating a “conducive environment” for worship. What this really meant was making a worship event cushy enough that people would want to come and then come back: comfortable seats, coffee, pleasing worship music, and a sermon that holds attention. Unfortunately, regularly attending a comfortable worship event has become the primary marker of what it means to be a Christian today.

    In fact, we often replace the miraculous adventure of following Jesus with religious activity. Did I go to church this week? Check it off the list. Did I read my Bible? Check it. Did I pray? Check it. Done! I have completed my Christian activities and am, therefore, a “good Christian.” Religion itself becomes an easy replacement for a daring life lived in partnership with Jesus.

    Ironically, Jesus drew a startling line in the sand in response to someone who wanted to follow him: "Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head (Matthew 18:20).” Jesus was not a dispenser of comfortable Christianity. Quite the opposite. He taught that followers would live a lifestyle of stepping outside of comfort zones in order to join him in the adventure of extending the life of the kingdom.

    Replacing “Come-Structures” with “Go-Structures”

    Part of our comfy Christianity has been to focus most of our Christian activities within the four-walls where our friends and other Christians hang out. The result is that we reach out to others by inviting them to come join us where we are.

    My fellow-blogger, Hamo, comments on this:

    If Jesus were alive today and his mission was still to seek out and save the lost what might he do?
    Would he hire a building, set up a sound system, develop a music team, drama team, and then do local letterbox drops advising people that they could come and be part of his church on Sunday?
    Was it ever Jesus’ intention that non Christians should seek us and desire to attend our worship events? Or didn’t he say quite clearly that it was his calling, and now ours to seek out and save the lost; to go to their world and enculturate the gospel there. Little Bo Peep evangelism (leave ‘em alone and they’ll come home) is fast running out of steam…

    Recapturing the “Going” Church

    The church’s true nature is best seen by the life that Jesus modeled: he took the life of the kingdom everywhere that he went—out into the world that he was ministering to. In the process of going, he healed, loved, delivered, and shared good news.

    God’s heart is missional at the core as he seeks to recover his children who are lost to him. Jesus came to “seek and to save the lost.” This is not a sidebar. God, because of his love, is a caring, reaching God.

    The church is becoming unleashed as Christians are re-discover the daring adventure of “going” and taking the presence (love, life, and power) of God everywhere that they are going. Jesus called us to a lifestyle that would take us out of our comfort zone and into the adventure of miraculous living as we extend ourselves to extend his kingdom.

    As Jim Rutz wrote, “The bleachers are beginning to empty as 707 million action-oriented Christians start to pour out onto the playing field and discover the joy and challenge of every-member ministry.”

    But What About the Gathering?

    In conferences and conversations all over the world about simple/house church, it seems that people usually want to learn first about “how to gather.” This is natural since we have thought about “church” as being mostly about events and gatherings. The problem is that though we can replace larger events and gatherings with smaller ones, our motivation may still be to hang out with our Christian friends and, again, seek to reach others by inviting them to join us.

    By focusing first on the gathering we miss the point that Jesus’ focus was first on the going way of life. If gatherings develop that support a dynamic, outward, supernatural lifestyle, then the gatherings will be powerful and relevant. However, if gatherings become a replacement for the true adventure of Jesus-following (which can easily happen), then we will again regress into a comfortable Christianity with little life in it.

    Stepping Out Makes Life Worth Living

    Most of the truly defining moments of our lives take place because we are willing to step out and trust that God has more for us. Rarely do we find new life by holding back or retreating into our familiar, comfort zones. If this entire book accomplishes nothing else, I hope it will inspire someone to listen and follow a very adventurous God into some new horizons.

    Pete Greig wrote:

    Christ is not a passive Savior sitting in some cosmic comfy chair. Our God is dynamic; He is a creative force, the ultimate visionary, always on the move, and if we want to know Him and be with Him, we will have to follow Him wherever he is going next.

    Let’s look at some principles that can guide us forward.

  • Chapter 4: A Process of Five Principle

    From "The Simple/House Church Revolution" Book.  The entire book can still be downloaded here.

    “Jesus didn’t leave us with a system he left us with his Spirit. He gave us his Spirit as a guide instead of a map.” Wayne Jacobsen

    The risk of writing any book on “church” or “Jesus’ way of life” is that we end up looking for formulas and methods rather than allowing God to divinely lead us.

    Therefore, I want to stress that the next five chapters are only meant to provide some broad principles—not guidelines, not structures, not formulas, and not methods. The principles can provide some general illumination on the lifestyle Jesus calls us to, but must not be a replacement for listening and following him.

    That said, the simple/house church way of life that we see in scripture involves the following five principles:

    1. Reach. Reaching out. Loving others with no strings attached. An “outbreak of love.”
    2. Disciple. Disciple-making that everyone can do. Influencing others relationally and contagiously.
    3. Gather. Experiencing dynamic, participatory body-life with others.
    4. Empower. Empowering others. A truly upside down understanding of leading (facilitating) decentralized systems.
    5. Multiply. Reproducing yourself. Becoming seed that brings forth a multiplied harvest.

    De-Programming These Terms

    The most important part of the next five chapters is not just the principles themselves but the need to unlearn our institutional mindset around these principles and re-connecting with their true, life-giving meaning.

    Most of us have learned a programmed approach to reaching, discipling, gathering, leading, and reproducing. The result is that we often end up in a “duty” mode: we are serving God for the wrong reasons, reaching out to others with the wrong motivations, and turning people into projects with the wrong results.

    Institutions create programs that lead to projects and feel-good piety but are often not integrated into the fabric of who we are and our God-created abilities to love and bless other people. The result is that others often feel manipulated, and we become uncomfortable with ourselves and the programs we have been taught to implement.

    In contrast, as we look at these principles, we want to explore their real meaning in the context of the adventure of following Jesus and truly loving others with no strings attached. We do want to see others influenced, but we trust that this can take place naturally, contagiously, and relationally.

  • “Simple/House Church Revolution Book,” Still Free

    Ist2_6051151_blue_earth_with_3d_arrow It has been gratifying to see the overwhelming response for downloads of the "Simple/House Church Revolution" book just from posting it on this blog.

    As promised, I will continue to publish it, chpater by chapter, on this blog and it is still available in its entirety here.

    You can also visit this same website if you wish a print copy of the book.

    Introduction (previously posted) can be found here.

    Chapter One follows.

    Chapter 1: The Case for Simple/House Church

    Perhaps today, more than ever, it is vital that we grasp the significance of the simple/house church paradigm. Let’s look at why this is so important.

    1. Simple / House Churches are Removing Hindrances

    I love the way Eugene Peterson (translating Ephesians 1) expresses the essence of what the church really is: “The church is Christ’s body in which he speaks and acts, by which he fills everything with his presence.” Yet, as my wife and I travel throughout the world we see the church so often hindered by organizational forms and structures that are not necessary. By reducing or eliminating these human-made restraints, the church can be unleashed. My wife, Brooks, wrote these words after returning from Africa:

    The Revolution is happening – it’s happening all over the world. We are in a Reformation. Acknowledge it or not. Be a part of it or not. Jesus longs for his church to come alive, to become a living, breathing, organism. He longs for us to be in a real, live, intimate relationship with Him, regardless of others – and then in real, live relationship with our families – earthly and spiritual. And, He’s begging us to come alive, be who we are as individuals, alive and free in Him, telling the world who and what He has done for us…

    What I saw in Kenya, I see in America and I see in other parts of the Christianized world. The enemy accepts that Christianity is in the world… but if he can just contain us, keep us from contaminating others, there’s little to worry about. If he can contain us in buildings, then the world will not know the truth and few will be set free. But what I saw in Kenya, I also see in America and other parts of the world. The virus is leaking. The Reformation of the 21st Century, led by the Holy Spirit, is taking Christianity out of containers into the open spaces of the neighborhoods and nations of the world.

    2. Simple / House Churches are Biblical

    The New Testament does not seem to make a big deal about the forms and structures of church. The focus is much more on Christians going and living the lifestyle of Jesus. Yet, it is easily noted that most church gatherings were simple and natural, meeting mostly in homes:

    Please give my greetings to the church that meets in their home (Romans 16:5).

    The churches in the province of Asia send you greetings. Aquila and Priscilla greet you warmly in the Lord, and so does the church that meets at their house (1 Corinthians 16:19).

    Please give my greetings to our brothers and sisters at Laodicea, and to Nympha and the church that meets in her house (Colossians 4:15).

    By meeting in homes, the early church gathered families, households, and other normal social connections together. The Gospel spread quickly through these lines of family and friends and everyday relationships. This methodology was biblical as well as effective for the spread of God’s message.

    3. Simple / House Churches Empower All Believers

    House churches make room for the spiritual gifts of all believers to operate on a regular basis.

    What then shall we say, brothers? When you come together, everyone has a hymn, or a word of instruction, a revelation, a tongue or an interpretation. All of these must be done for the strengthening of the church (1 Corinthians 14:26).

    By simplifying church and gathering simply and naturally in home-sized groups, everyone becomes a participant and every person’s gift is needed. This trains and equips the whole Body of Christ to become fully alive and fully functioning.

    4. Simple / House Churches Foster Authentic Community Life

    The desire for authentic relationships where we can open our lives, share our lives, and be vulnerable safely seems to be a universal hunger. Someone suggested that they had closer relationships at the neighborhood bar before becoming a Christian than they experienced in their neighborhood church after becoming a Christian.

    The shared life that takes place in simple/house churches allows people to find a place of community that is real and honest, where practical living can be discussed and the real struggles of life addressed. As relationships develop it becomes possible to genuinely “encourage one another” and “bear one another’s burdens.”

    John Eldredge says, “when Scripture talks about church, it means community. The little fellowships of the heart that are outposts of the kingdom. A shared life. They worship together, eat together, pray for one another, go on quests together. They hang out together, in each other's homes.”

    5. Simple / House Churches Free Up Finances

    Isaac Cheduke, a church planter in Africa, shared with us his deep grief in closing down a church that had nearly 100 members because they could not afford the rent on the building where they met. As he found the freedom to meet in homes and to network house churches, he is no longer constrained by buildings and finances. He has now developed a network of dozens of house churches that are multiplying and has money available to meet needs of people rather than cover the cost of buildings.

    This is not just a problem in under-developed countries. It is estimated that it takes over two hundred thousand dollars to launch a church in America. Imagine the money that can be freed up for missions and poverty by simplifying our church structures.

    6. Simple / House Churches Can Be Easily Reproduced

    Perhaps the most significant case for house churches is that they can be easily started and multiplied. God’s clear desire is for the earth to be filled with the “knowledge of the glory of the LORD, as the waters cover the sea (Habakkuk 2:14).” Rather than build buildings and organizations that require tremendous time, finances, and energy to reproduce, the kingdom of God multiplies organically: one seed produces fruit that produces more seed that produces more fruit. The power of multiplication is far more powerful than we realize. Take a look at any forest and realize how much is accomplished through natural reproductive processes without any human aid at all.

    One of the most exciting developments around the world is rapid church planting movements. These take place where disciples are reproduced quickly and simple/house churches are reproduced rapidly. When this happens, entire cities and regions are being impacted with the Good News of Jesus Christ. There are several components that must be present for Church Planting Movements to take place, but one of them is a model of church that is easily reproduced—a simple/house church model.

    7. Simple / House Churches Can Ignite Our Generation

    Many people, today, are catching the vision of what the church is meant to be as she throws off the hindrances and becomes the Spirit-filled movement of Believers she is destined for.
    We are catching the vision for living life, 24/7, with and for God without one moment or place being more holy than another. It is a vision of every believer contributing to one another through the spiritual gifts that reside in each one. It is a vision of every believer, using his/her gifts, to take God’s love and power into the world we live in. It is a vision of no longer thinking of the church as an event or place to go, but realizing that we, his people, really are the church everywhere and every place that we go.

    Wolfgang Simson describes his vision of what the church, unhindered, is becoming:

    [I dream of a] church, which does not need huge amounts of money, or rhetoric, control and manipulation, which can do without powerful and charismatic heroes, which is non-religious at heart, which can thrill people to the core, make them lose their tongues out of sheer joy and astonishment, and simply teach us The Way to live. A church which not only has a message, but is the message. Something which spreads like an unstoppable virus, infects whatever it touches, and ultimately covers the earth with the glory and knowledge of God.

  • Turn Al-Qaeda Into a Traditional Church Structure

    Alqaedapicthing Here is a great tongue-in-cheek piece on how to neutralize Al-Qaeda from Brant at Letters From Kamp Krusty:

    Al-Qaeda is almost impossible to stop.  This is, in large part, due to the way its message works, and the way the work gets carried out…

    So, in the service of national defense, I propose the following, in order to effectively neutralize the movement.  Let's get Al-Qaeda to…

    1)  Complexify the message

    Right now, it's so simple, it can pass from one to the next, and be easily grasped by the uneducated, the young — everyone.  This is dangerous, because it's highly contagious, and people on the street feel capable of enlisting others in the cause. 

    2)  Construct a less "flat", more hierarchical structure

    Currently, small, underground groups can move nimbly and autonomously, complicating efforts to thwart them.  A more regimented, stratified approach, where some members are left thinking, "I can't know enough to do anything" would bring the movement to a halt.

    The rest of his great article is here.

  • “Simple/House Church Revolution” Book Available For Free

    PDF_Cover I will be publishing, on this blog, each chapter of the “Simple/House Church Revolution” book over the next several weeks.

    In addition, the book can be downloaded in its entirety here: http://www.simplechurchrevolution.com/index.html.

    Print copies are also available, at the above-mentioned website for a small donation.  This is a not-for-profit venture, so please respect the request I make regarding distribution.

    Comments are more than welcome as I will be revising this first version soon.

    Roger

  • “Simple/House Church Revolution:” Introduction

    Book_Cover (This is the introduction to the book "Simple/House Church Revolution."  See www.simplechurchrevolution.com for more information.

    Introduction: My Story

    “Roger, you can’t go on. You must unplug from ministry and church for an extended period of time. You have no choice!”

    I had never been so shocked or devastated as when I heard these words from Dale, a trusted friend who counsels pastors in the throes of clinical burnout. I was completely unprepared to accept his professional opinion even though, deep in my heart, I knew I was experiencing an emotional emptiness unlike anything I had previously known.

    “How long do you mean?” I asked.

    “At the minimum, six months,” he told me matter-of-factly. “But most probably, you need twelve to eighteen months to get back on your feet.”

    I can’t begin to express the level of unbelief and anguish I experienced as he said this.

    I was the founding pastor of a ten-year-old church that had been blessed with traditional success markers: consistent growth in numbers, new buildings, a well-developed and funded staff, and a vision for an even bigger future. We were on our way! Except for one thing: Something had happened to the lead pastor. I was literally unable to continue doing what I had been doing for years—leading and guiding our church forward toward that traditional definition of “success.”

    As I walked through the agony of telling my Board what was happening to me, they were as surprised as I was. They already knew that I was undone in some way, but they were unfamiliar with the level of depression and burnout I was experiencing. After all, I had always been the epitome of strength, even during difficult times, vulnerable yet durable. They offered me a generous, long-term sabbatical. They cried for me and with me. They were as supportive as any group of people could be. Yet I could barely rally myself to get up in the morning, let alone continue to guide this church family.

    Perhaps even more difficult was the deep sense I felt that I would never return to ministry the way I had known it. Perhaps I would never even return to this church that I loved so dearly. As it turned out, I was correct on both counts. But rather than cast me aside, God was about to use this dark time in my life as an awakening of sorts, a paradigm shift that would completely re-define my understanding of both “church” and “ministry.”

    What Went Wrong?

    I began to reflect on how ministry had turned out so differently from my expectations of years ago. I remembered reading the accounts of Jesus’ followers in the Gospels and in the Book of Acts when I was a new Christian at the age of 19. It was exciting to see Jesus calling His disciples to walk with Him while He ministered, healed, delivered, and poured love into the lives of countless people. It stirred me to read of the Holy Spirit poured out on new believers and how they were mobilized throughout the world, with God’s power, to bless and touch the lives of others.

    Yet, after ten years as a senior pastor, my life and ministry seemed so distant from those New Testament stories:
    • I was managing a growing business organization in order to manage the buildings, programs, and staff for what we call a “church” today.
    • My weekly pulpit “performance” had become a key to the success of the church, thus the responsibility seemed enormous.
    • I was carrying a large amount of responsibility, along with other leaders, for a very large number of relatively passive believers.
    • I was tired and burned out on religious activities.

    I remembered thinking about all of the sermons I preached over the years encouraging church-goers that they are all members of Christ’s Body with spiritual gifts that God intends to use. Yet, while they sat and listened to my sermon on Sunday morning, there were only two people’s gifts highlighted during that hour and a half: mine and that of the worship leader!

    I Was Not Alone

    As I began recovering, I soon learned that many others were struggling with or questioning church as we know it today. I discovered that:
    • pastors are burning out and leaving the ministry in large numbers.
    • church leaders are becoming hurt or frustrated by their church roles.
    • church-goers are becoming disenchanted with church-as-usual.
    • our communities, even those which contain mega-churches, are not being transformed for Christ.

    Reggie McNeal, church consultant and author, says this about people who are no longer attending church: “A growing number of people are leaving the institutional church for a new reason. They are not leaving because they have lost faith. They are leaving the church to preserve their faith.”

    Simple/House/Organic Churches

    This book is about what I have learned on the journey out of traditional church forms into the freedom of organic, simple, house churches.

    In Chapter One, we will look at the case for simple/house churches and the vision many are seeing of God’s glory filling the earth through reproducible gatherings of excited Christians.

    In Chapter Two, the definition of “church” will be examined, and we will envision what can happen when the limitations of programmed, institutional Christianity are removed.

    In Chapter Three, we will look at how the church can be unleashed by focusing on a going-loving-24/7 way of life rather than on the attendance of meetings or events.

    In Chapters Four through Nine, we will look at the actual principles and practices that lead us into impactful Christ-centered living and simple, powerful gatherings.

    In Chapter Ten, we discuss the heart of following Jesus: intimacy with God.

    Finally, in Chapter Eleven, we will consider several common questions including: “What about money?” and, “What about children?”

    Don’t Just Read About It

    One final comment. This book outlines a way to do life that may be fundamentally different than the way we have learned to walk out our Christian life in the past. This is not something that can be read and then “thought through.” The only way to grasp what God is doing today is to jump in, at whatever level He is leading you to, and swim with today’s currents of the Spirit. My encouragement, above all, is to simply DO whatever He is leading you to do. Go for it! Walking on water only comes to those who get out of the boat.

  • Comfy Christianity

    (I have been rather neglectful of this blog recently because of time spent writing a book.  It's not that I think another book is necessarily needed on simple/house churches.  Rather, we have found that when we travel overseas we often want to leave material behind.  By writing our own material we can print and distribute it inexpensively since there is no cut for the publisher.  The following article comes from one of the chapters of this book).

    Comfy Christianity

    Shane Claiborne writes: “Being a Christian is about choosing Jesus and deciding to do something incredibly daring with your life.”

    In my former life as a pastor, I was a dispenser of comfortable Christianity. I took on the job of creating a “conducive environment” for worship. What this really meant was making a worship event cushy enough that people would want to come and then come back: comfortable seats, coffee, pleasing worship music, and a sermon that holds attention. Unfortunately, regularly attending a comfortable worship event has become the primary marker of what it means to be a Christian today.

    In fact, we often replace the miraculous adventure of following Jesus with religious activity. Did I go to church this week? Check it off the list. Did I read my Bible? Check it. Did I pray? Check it. Done! I have completed my Christian activities and am, therefore, a “good Christian.” Religion itself becomes an easy replacement for a daring life lived in partnership with Jesus.

    Ironically, Jesus drew a startling line in the sand in response to someone who wanted to follow him: "Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head (Matthew 18:20).” Jesus was not a dispenser of comfortable Christianity. Quite the opposite. He taught that followers would live a lifestyle of stepping outside of comfort zones in order to join him in the adventure of extending the life of the kingdom.

    Replacing “Come-Structures” with “Go-Structures”

    Part of our comfy Christianity has been to focus most of our Christian activities within the four-walls where our friends and other Christians hang out. The result is that we reach out to others by inviting them to come join us where we are.

    My fellow-blogger, Hamo, comments on this:

    If Jesus were alive today and his mission was still to seek out and save the lost what might he do?
    Would he hire a building, set up a sound system, develop a music team, drama team, and then do local letterbox drops advising people that they could come and be part of his church on Sunday?
    Was it ever Jesus’ intention that non Christians should seek us and desire to attend our worship events? Or didn’t he say quite clearly that it was his calling, and now ours to seek out and save the lost; to go to their world and enculturate the gospel there. Little Bo Peep evangelism (leave ‘em alone and they’ll come home) is fast running out of steam…

    Recapturing the “Going” Church

    The church’s true nature is best seen by the life that Jesus modeled: he took the life of the kingdom everywhere that he went—out into the world that he was ministering to. In the process of going, he healed, loved, delivered, and shared good news.

    God’s heart is missional at the core as he seeks to recover his children who are lost to him. Jesus came to “seek and to save the lost.” This is not a sidebar. God, because of his love, is a caring, reaching God.

    The church is becoming unleashed as Christians are re-discover the daring adventure of “going” and taking the presence (love, life, and power) of God everywhere that they are going. Jesus called us to a lifestyle that would take us out of our comfort zone and into the adventure of miraculous living as we extend ourselves to extend his kingdom.

    As Jim Rutz wrote, “The bleachers are beginning to empty as 707 million action-oriented Christians start to pour out onto the playing field and discover the joy and challenge of every-member ministry.”

    But What About the Gathering?

    In conferences and conversations all over the world about simple/house church, it seems that people usually want to learn first about “how to gather.” This is natural since we have thought about “church” as being mostly about events and gatherings. The problem is that though we can replace larger events and gatherings with smaller ones, our motivation may still be to hang out with our Christian friends and, again, seek to reach others by inviting them to join us.

    By focusing first on the gathering we miss the point that Jesus’ focus was first on the going way of life. If gatherings develop that support a dynamic, outward, supernatural lifestyle, then the gatherings will be powerful and relevant. However, if gatherings become a replacement for the true adventure of Jesus-following (which can easily happen), then we will again regress into a comfortable Christianity with little life in it.

    Stepping Out Makes Life Worth Living

    Most of the truly defining moments of our lives take place because we are willing to step out and trust that God has more for us. Rarely do we find new life by holding back or retreating into our familiar, comfort zones. If this entire book accomplishes nothing else, I hope it will inspire someone to listen and follow a very adventurous God into some new horizons.

    Pete Greig wrote:

    Christ is not a passive Savior sitting in some cosmic comfy chair. Our God is dynamic; He is a creative force, the ultimate visionary, always on the move, and if we want to know Him and be with Him, we will have to follow Him wherever he is going next.

  • Beer and Baptism

    BaptismJohn When we baptize new believers we have taken Neil Cole’s advice which is, “baptize people as soon as possible and as publicly as possible.”  In short, we throw a party.  Not for the already-churched, but for the families and friends of the person being baptized.  In fact, when we have baptized people recently we have many more guests present than people that we already know.

    Our last baptism was a prime example, with a twist.  John is a twenty-something who has come out of a background of gangs, prison, and drugs.  He wanted to be baptized.  We told him our standard line: “Great!  Let’s throw a party and invite all of your friends and family to come.  You can share what God has done in your life and we will have a bbq, baptize you, and enjoy the company.”

    “Okay,” he said accepting that this must be the way it’s done.  “There is only one problem though.”

    “What’s that?”

    “If there is no beer, then I am not sure any of my family and friends will come.”

    “No problem,” we told him, “bring the beer.”

    So he did.  And his family and friends came.  Perhaps 20 or 30 of them.  Nobody got drunk or out of control.  It was a “baptism” after all.  Everyone had a great time.  John shared his story of how God had worked in his life and many new relationships were built with those who came.

    While this may unsettle some who read this, if you think it through you may just realize that baptism was, indeed, meant to be a public affair and not something that Christians do behind closed doors.  Furthermore, if the public is invited to participate, then the public can be expected to do… well… whatever the public does.

    For me, personally, it was by far one of the best baptisms I have ever attended!

    (By the way, his mother-in-law and father-in-law baptized him who are also, currently, his spiritual parents).

  • H2H National Conference

    My wife and I have not missed a House2House conference since the first one we attended five years ago.  We have always found the camaraderie, sharing of stories, and encouragement to be invaluable.

    I, honestly, do not know how we would have weathered our transition from traditional-type church to a more organic one without the connections and input we have received from H2H and these conferences.

    This year it is in Dallas over Labor Day Weekend.

    You can get all of the information here.

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