I Was Wrong About Church Buildings

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

If you had asked me eight years ago what I thought about church buildings, I would have said, “Who needs a building? The early church didn’t have buildings, and we don’t need them either!” But I was wrong.

dans-head.jpg

My anti-building phase was a reaction to having seen so much money spent on church facilities, often for non-essential, luxury items. I was also reacting to a philosophy of ministry that treated church buildings like Disneyland; a place consumers gather for entertainment. But these abuses had caused me to unfairly dismiss the potential blessing of buildings as well.

Consider the building occupied by Compassion International in Colorado Springs. It has a well-groomed lawn with sprinkler system, an attractive sign, and an expansive parking lot. It’s a nice facility. But it’s more than just a building—it is the headquarters and training center for a ministry that brings physical and spiritual nourishment to more than one million children in 25 countries. The Compassion building is used for a missional purpose, not simply as a place for Christians to gather and consume religious services.

When we planted our church in 2004, we needed a place to meet. We found a very traditional church building that had a sizable “fellowship hall” originally used only for donuts and coffee on Sundays. Wanting to use the building differently, we converted the fellowship hall into a public coffee lounge featuring music and art from the outside community. The Abbey, as it’s now called, is open seven days a week and offers free internet access.

Continue reading …

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

Ur Video: The Prosperity Gospel

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

Click on the link in this article if you want to truly see some of the issues we face as a Church (the global Church) – this is the stuff we are fighting against, the false teachings that Jesus warns us against. Sometimes we get a little to close for comfort on these things – there almost always a hint of truth, which makes it hard for some good intentioned people to understand the real truth.

Christianity Today International, Out of Ur’s publisher, and The Lausanne Movement, a worldwide movement of evangelical Christian leaders, present The Global Conversation: a year-long series of essays, short films, and photo essays about issues facing the church worldwide. These videos highlight topics to be addressed at the Third Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization being held in Cape Town, South Africa, in October 2010.

In November the Global Conversation focuses on the prosperity gospel—the teaching that true Christian faith results in material wealth and physical well-being. While it has its roots in America, it has found fertile soil on other continents as well. To accompany the lead article in Christianity Today by Ghanaian scholar Kwabena Asamoah-Gyadu, director Nathan Clarke went to Ghana to explore the forms the prosperity gospel takes in that West African nation.

The Prosperity Gospel from The Global Conversation on Vimeo.

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

JESUS: Prince of Peace (4 OF 4)

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

Now this is what I’m talkin’ about.

Click here for the original: http://www.theooze.com/articles/article.cfm?id=2321

My prayer is that Christians in America would rediscover their original DNA as peaceful, loving followers of Jesus and jettison the Nationalized Christianity that enslaves us to the Empire.

Let us place Jesus back on the Throne of our hearts, and crown him again as King of the Church. Let us pledge allegiance to Christ and to His Kingdom, not to any man-made creed or political system.

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

Urgent Prayer Needed: Foursquare Leaders Face Court Conviction for Converting Muslims

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

Prayers needed – Caught this on the Foursquare Missions Blog…

Please pray for our National Leader and his 23 year old son who were arrested and convicted in a Middle East country for converting and baptizing Muslims. Police searched their home and seized a computer and documents that were used as evidence in court. Our National Leader has already been to court and was sentenced to pay a $2,777 fine and ordered to leave the country. He has fled to England with his wife and younger sons, but his 21 year old daughter is still waiting for her passport visa to join them. Tomorrow, September 15 they have a hearing to request asylum for religious persecution. His son is still awaiting sentencing. While being held in jail his son was beaten by the other inmates and a guard after they heard he was converting Muslims. He has now been released home but could be called to face sentencing at any time. The maximum penalty for converting Muslims could be up to 20 years in prison.

Please pray for the following…
Our National Leader and his family would be granted asylum during their hearing tomorrow.
Our National Leader’s son would be released by the court without prison time.
Our National Leader’s daughter would obtain her visa to join her family in England.
For the continuing protection of their family and all our Foursquare leaders and members in this country.
That in the midst of persecution the Holy Spirit will encourage the church and pour out revival throughout the country.

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

There is NO Virtual Church (Part 2)

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

This is the second part to the Out of UR article I shared last week… in the end relationship is key to the functionality of “Church” – relationships with God and People and letting God work through all people (yes even the ones that yell from street corners) – we are one.

(Read part 1)

Calvin’s definition of “church” is where the Word is preached, the sacraments are received, and church discipline practiced. That’s a good summary of the defining characteristics of the New Testament ecclesia and a good summary of the main problems with internet church.

john-calvin.jpg

Is the word preached “at” an internet campus? Absolutely. In fact, the Word preached becomes the centerpiece. Church is boiled down to singing a few songs and hearing a message.

And while internet campuses provide a great sermon delivery vehicle, and even allow you to virtually raise your hand in response, what they don’t do is allow you to be known and missed. You can’t stand at the end of the gathering and ask for help moving. You can’t help tear things down and clean up afterwards. You can’t look after someone’s kids while they pray with someone else. You can’t take a visitor out to lunch. How can our community be a sign and foretaste of the kingdom when our method of gathering keeps us from ever physically serving, loving, or being present to one another? I know how participating in a congregation begins to make me more like Jesus. I’m unsure how that happens with an internet campus.

Continue reading …

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

Scot McKnight: Self in a Castle

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

This of course caught my eye, with the connection to Poland – just a snippet from another great Out of Ur article.

Leszek Kolakowski, a Polish philosopher who weakened Marxism’s grip on Eastern Europe, recently died. Few, I suspect, knew who he was. I consider myself fortunate to have read some of Kolakowski, one book being his scintillating sketch of the history of ideas by probing the central idea of twenty-three thinkers. That book is called Why is there Something Rather than Nothing? My own reading of it impressed me again with the connection of philosophers with their world. From Socrates to Kierkegaard, philosophers are products of their day.

credo.jpg

So are we. Which raises the profound problem of blinders when it comes to perceiving what is influencing us, and which raises the other profound problem of needing to understand our cultural blinders in order to break through them with the light of the gospel. Kolakowski’s chapters are short, and everything short when it comes to the history of ideas risks simplicities that mask nuance. I risk the same in what I am about to suggest: the current generation emerges out of a toxic combination of modernity and postmodernity.

In another context (the summer issue of Leadership Journal) I called the toxicity of the current generation a “self in a castle.” Modernity’s singular contribution to the history of ideas is individualism. David Bentley Hart gets this exactly right in his new rant against the flimsy ideas in new atheism when he writes:

“We live in an age whose chief value has been determined, by overwhelming consensus, to be the inviolable liberty of personal volition, the right to decide for ourselves what we shall believe, want, need, own, or serve” (Atheist Delusions, 21-22).

Continue reading …

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

There Is NO Virtual Church (Part 1)

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

Another fantastic thought provoking article, what exactly is “church” and how does the Church function today?

In the early 1950s when Robert Schuller and others across the nation combined a growing car culture with “Church,” they believed they were reaching a segment of the population traditional church wouldn’t or couldn’t. “Drive-In Church” allowed parishioners to hear a sermon, sing some songs, even receive communion and give—all without the fuss and muss of face-to-face interaction. Except for a through-the-window handshake from the pastor as they rolled away.

driveinchurch.jpg

And while they may have been able to point to a number of folks who “attended” that otherwise might not have, the question of what was being formed in these car congregations through limited interaction, a completely passive experience, and a consumer-oriented “Come as you want/Have it your way” message, meant that (thankfully) after a brief period of vogue, “Drive-In Church” has remained a niche curiosity.

The problem with the drive-in church model isn’t that it isn’t church—it’s that it is just “church” enough to be dangerous. What this almost-church does is park people in a cul-de-sac where they have access to the easiest and most instantly satisfying parts of church while exempting them from the harder and more demanding parts of community.

And while I’m glad such an absurdity has remained on the fringe, as I watch the discussion about “internet campuses” I can’t shake a certain feeling of deja vu.

Continue reading …

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

A Journey from Seattle to Vancouver, B.C. on Public Transit

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

I’m a bit of a transit geek, and caught this – $12 to get to Vancouver, Canada (from Seattle) and a LOT of time!

New Flyer trolleybuses in Vancouver rush hour trafficNew Flyer trolleybuses in Vancouver rush hour traffic

It’s the perfect occasion for a transit adventure to Vancouver, B.C. The brand new Canada Line opens today at 1 pm for free rides until 9 pm. If you’re feeling adventurous and have the time, it is possible to travel from Seattle to Vancouver on public transit by making a series of transfers and some walking or cycling across the border. The journey costs $12 and takes at least 7.5 hours. Back in March, wanting to do a transit field trip up north, I decided to try the schedule on Evan Siroky’s Regional Transit Transfers page. The following (after the jump) is an account of my experience with lots of pictures!.

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items

Out of Context: Kara Powell

This caught my eye while browsing my blog/news subscriptions today and so I thought I’d share it:

Shared by TravisM

Another interesting article from Out of Ur…

From “Is the Era of Age Segregation Over?” an interview with Kara Powell in the current issue of Leadership.

speaker_powell.jpg

“[The church] realized in the 1940s that we were not offering teens enough focused attention. So what did we do? We started offering them too much. All of a sudden churches had adult pastors and youth pastors, adult worship teams and youth worship teams, adult mission trips and youth mission trips. And there’s a place for that. But we’ve ended up segregating–and I use that word intentionally–our kids from the rest of the church. Now we tend to think that we can outsource the care of our kids to designated experts, the youth and children’s workers…. I think the future of youth ministry is intergenerational.”

Kara Powell is the executive director of the Fuller Youth Institute at Fuller Theological Seminary and a former youth pastor. To read the rest of her interview in context, pick up the Summer 09 issue of Leadership journal or subscribe by clicking on the cover in the left column.

Click here for the original and full post

Read all of my Google Reader shared items