Category Archives: Missional Living

Simple Church, Complex Reasoning Pt. II

Feeling artistic today? Well, I am. Let me paint a picture for you.

Tom goes to church every Sunday morning – he’s faithfully attended for 4 years. Tom is married to his wife, Ruth, and they have two children; Sam, 16, and Shelly, 13.

To the people surrounding Tom and Ruth on Sunday mornings, they look like the typical American family. They have smiles on their faces, they say ‘hello’ when people pass them, they’re attentive during the sermons, and they sing every song. Their kids are well behaved. Sam is on the football team at his local high school, and Shelley is reported to make great grades.

Every Sunday you can count on seeing them in the assembly – Wednesday evenings too. So what’s the problem? They’re there, aren’t they?

Yes, they’re there. But there’s a problem. “There” is all they’ve been, and “there” is all they are.

There’s a massive, profound, nuclear question in life that millions of Americans have been given the wrong answer to: what does it mean to follow Jesus?

 

Clocked In Christianity

Like so many others, Tom and Ruth are living examples of what the wrong answer looks like. The measuring stick for their spiritual health has been their attendance to a couple of meetings per week where they sit with their hands folded and listen to someone speak to them.

No one at that church knows the stress Tom’s job puts him under. No one knows how lonely Ruth has been since the kids were little. No one knows that Sam has been drinking on the weekends and is addicted to pornography, no one knows that Shelly has been sexually active with her boyfriend and is afraid she might be pregnant. No one knows that Tom and Ruth are in dire financial straits, are both very unhappy and unfulfilled, or that their marriage is on the verge of collapse. No one knows.

But how can they know? No one at their church has bothered to spend more than an hour or two a week with them for 4 years, and during that time they weren’t interacting past a polite “hello” and “how are you doing” which are simply normal, surface courtesies people show while they’re clocked in.

No one knows Tom and Ruth’s situation because no one knows them. They’re not part of an authentic, loving, Christ-centered community that’s grounded in everyday living – they’re part of an artificial, manufactured, clocked in community that comes together at set times for set lengths, and has walls erected to separate it from the real world. 

But that doesn’t change this: when the members clock out, real life clocks in, and Satan is having a field day.

 

Today’s Status Quo Standard of Success

Tom and Ruth don’t follow Jesus, and their kids don’t either. The church they’re a part of tries it’s best to meet the standards of status quo, and for the most part it does. That’s the problem.

For church leaders, status quo dictates that success or failure be defined by the number of spectators in attendance. The higher the number, the more successful the church. Billions (with a “b”) of dollars have been spent building new facilities so that churches’ numbers can swell thereby making them “successful.”

For members, status quo says the decision to join a church should be based on whether or not the preaching is good and if the worship style is to their liking or not. Little if any thought is given to how they could exercise their gifts to build the body, or if the world will be a better place by their joining the fellowship and getting involved.

Too often, people like Tom and Ruth are just faces in a crowd, and too often, people like Tom and Ruth are perfectly happy keeping it that way. They haven’t the faintest idea what being part of an authentic Christ-centered community is like, and unless they experience it they’ll never get past the darkness that’s engulfed them.

 

Community is Key

A few months ago I conducted a national study of Church of Christ campus ministries as part of my work for CMU. The process involved making hundreds of phone calls and asking thousands of questions, and I’m pleased to say that the majority of CoC campus ministry leaders were surveyed.

I’ve shared the results of that study with a few people, and also a bit of what I learned  at the last CMU workshop. One of the things the study revealed is the importance community plays in effective spiritual formation.

Christ-centered community is the chief tool in the effective discipling of college students, and guess what: college students are people just like everyone else. The same principle applies – in addition to a vibrant devotional life, community is vital for health spiritual development in most people.

Would you like to see someone develop into a truly Christ-centered individual? Then plug them in to a Christ-centered community.

I believe Christ-centered community is what’s missing from many congregations today, and don’t believe Tom and Ruth would be in the position they’re in if they’d been part of one. I also don’t think it’s too late for them – they simply need to be reached.

Christ-centered community can help people answer that profound question – what does it really mean to follow Jesus?

Clocking in pales in comparison to bearing your cross.

Here’s a question: how should leaders view their role in Christ-centered community development?

Tagged

Monday at The Well

Yesterday marked my last day at North Little Rock’s River City Ministry for a while as we’re relocating to Texas for three months on Monday. My morning started off right. Here are a few pictures of the day’s events:

An early morning Bible study resulted in a homeless friend named Kleo giving his life to Jesus. This is the prayer before his baptism.

Me, Kleo, and Burly

Kleo having his sins washed away

Group Bible study before lunch - Downtown Church of Christ domestic missionary Don Williams preaches the Word.

Line of people waiting for lunch after the Bible study is over

Thousands of plates are served by RCM staff to the poor and impoverished in North Little Rock throughout the year.

 

Anthony Wood, a friend and the RCM staff evangelist, describes River City Ministry as a modern day well.

Most of you reading this are familiar with the story of the Samaritan woman in John 4. The woman comes to the well outside Sychar to draw water as she probably did every day, only this time Jesus is sitting there and she has and encounter with Him. She came to the well for one thing, but she got something else. She had an encounter with Jesus – it changed her life, and it changed the lives of many others in that city as a result.

River City Ministry is a well. The poor, impoverished, and homeless come for the food and services, but they find something else. With the evangelists doing their job they run headlong into an encounter with Jesus, and their whole world changes. Sometimes as ministers all we need to do is find a well, sit by it, and help the people that come for one thing find something else – an encounter with Jesus.

Just like RCM, today’s university campus is a modern day well. Students come for an education (at least that’s what their parents think), but with an evangelistic campus ministry present they find something else – an encounter with the Son of the Living God.

A meeting with Jesus.

Two things I’ve got to keep in mind: 1) my job is the point people to Jesus, and 2) I’m not Him.

I may try to be like Him, but I’m not Him. It’s good to be like Jesus in how you treat others, but proclaiming the reality of His presence must never be absent when attempting to help someone else encounter Him.

Want to help someone encounter Jesus? Open your mouth and tell them about Him! There’s supernatural power in that action!

Tagged ,

Outwardly Focused Leadership = Outwardly Focused Ministry

 

Home of the OFallon, MO, chapter of A Cross Between Campus Ministry
Home to the O’Fallon, MO, chapter of A Cross Between Campus Ministry

Yesterday I arrived on the campus of Lindenwood University, and after parking and walking to the front of the student center here is the sight I see:

(Facebook users need to click here for the video to show up)

There were a whole lot of students – most of them freshmen brand new to Lindenwood – hanging out having a good time with members of ACB (the campus ministry led by my buddy and fellow CMU board member Kerry Cox). The crowd got bigger as the night progressed.

Kerry Cox

Kerry came to Lindenwood three or four years ago and helped to plant ACB alongside a church – The Crossings. When he registered ACB as a student organization and began holding events on campus (like the annual rootbeer kegger, mud wrestling, or 80s skate night just to name a few), he got the university’s attention. Literally hundreds of students would show up to ACB’s events, and they were so successful the university eventually offered Kerry a job as the student activities director.

Kerry accepted the job, and his new position has served to enhance ACB’s already outstanding ministry. I’ve been priviledged to witness how it’s been working for them over the past couple of days.

Two observations:

1) Tons of “unaffiliated” students show up to the events.

By unaffiliated I mean they are guests having no church home or relationship with God.

Why do they show up? Because they have fun at these events. I might add, it’s also good clean fun. Check out these pictures from Friday:

A mechanical bull is always good for some laughs at other peoples expense.

A mechanical bull is always good for a few laughs at other people’s expense.

Notice the inflatable in the background

Bungee Racing - harder than it looks!

Bungee racing – harder than it looks!

They also had a DJ playing non-profanity laden music. This is a random dance off that took place with a white kid having a seizure in the middle.

Here are a couple of pics I snapped tonight at another event Kerry organized – movie night at the football field:

It’s kind of hard to see, but that’s a movie screen down front.

Dozens of Lindenwood movie watchers with ACB members sprinkled throughout.

Dozens of Lindenwood student movie watchers with ACB students sprinkled throughout.

There were over 300 students that showed up for the event Friday night, and I estimate over 150 for the movie night on Saturday. The majority of the people that showed aren’t members of the campus ministry, but a high percentage of them were – it was important for the ministry members to be there. That brings me to observation number 2:

 

2) Ministry members understand they need to be at events like this for the purpose of meeting new people and connecting them with the campus ministry and church.

They’re there because they care about the ministry, and they care about reaching lost people. Most of them were saved by Jesus through the ministry, and were connected with the ministry because someone else reached out to them (often at a campus event). They want to share that gift with others.

Do ministry members also come to events to have a good time themselves? Of course. They’ll have a good time, but their good time is not the main reason they’re there. They’re there to build relationships with new people and to show them love! They might chill with someone at an event then set up time later in the week to grab coffee or catch a movie, invite them to a cross chat (a Thursday night Bible study with an evangelistic slant), or invite them to church on Sunday. I expect to see a lot of the people from Friday and Saturday’s parties in the morning at worship service.

At tonight’s movie tons of ACB members brought fliers with them for this Thursday’s cross chat and were passing them out to the people they were interacting with. I expect they’ll have a good turn out of new students.

Why do the ministry members value bringing these new people in? Because Kerry and the other leaders talk about it a lot, and the ministry members are sold on the purpose. That purpose is to make disciples. The leaders understand that and agree upon it, and they articulate the purpose to their group members regularly. It’s not just talk for them either – they also model that purpose. They’re focused on reaching students themselves, and those they’re mentoring see that and respond accordingly.

Outwardly focused leadership = outwardly focused groups.

Ministry leaders – you’re wasting your breath preaching evangelism to your students if you aren’t reaching people yourself!

Tagged , , , ,