• Four Missional Movements for the Suburban Church

    Summary: Four movements of the missional church in suburban America.

    At The Well, we’ve been studying the book of Acts. Its been a very, very formative and challenging book for us to work through. For me, there have been four ways that my life, and I think our life, has been challenged so far.

    Here are four movements that I’ve seen:

    From Individual to Communal
    As individuals we are important, very, very important. But we need to continually celebrate the individual but we must do it within the context of community. Our world is so individualized that we’ve lost a sense that there is something greater than ourselves. In our culture, this is a challenge because we are so good at isolating ourselves and disconnecting ourselves from the rest of the world. Our priorities can easily become very selfish and insulated.

    From Consumptive to Cooperative
    When you live in a world that holds individualism as a god you naturally going to find that consuming is a higher priority than cooperative. If the most important thing is me, than I am going to do my best to take care of me. But, if the most important thing is me, in the context of community than we can start thinking about cooperation together for a common goal.

    Event to Family
    We need to rethink our definition of “church.” When we come to “church” as an individual who is primarily a consumer we begin to view church as an “event” where we can consume spirituality or religion to meet our own personal needs. The alternative here is to move from church as event to church as family. When we approach “church” as individuals in a community where we are cooperating together for a common goal its almost impossible to think of church as an event. Instead a better metaphor for church, as we have talked about at The Well a lot recently, is “family.” A family cooperating together to care together for the individual needs, all for a common goal.

    From Sucking in to Sending out
    The idea of a common goal then leads us to the final movement. The challenge of the family metaphor in the church setting is to not become all cliquish and even worse cultish. But, when you take a group of individuals, who are here to consume and think of the “church” as a event, you end up with a “church” that is sucking in rather than sending out. We’re all drawn into a Sunday event and leave behind our primary mission field. But, when we view the “church” as a community that is dependent on each other and cooperates together, it is not naturally seen as something that sucks in but instead sends out.

    Refread Acts 1:8, “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” This is the mission that drives the early church (and should drive our churches as well!).

    This cannot be done if the church is an random collection of individuals who are coming to an event to consume christianity. But, this mission can be accomplished if “church is defined as a family that cooperates together for a greater purpose.

  • Recent Comments

    • Pat said...

      1

      Excellent post; I’ll be pointing folks to it.

      05/7/08 7:22 AM | Comment Link

    • brad brisco said...

      2

      Todd, I really like this post, especially the last point. I wonder with the second point, if “collaboration” might work better than “cooperation?” Just a thought

      05/14/08 10:40 AM | Comment Link

    • Todd said...

      3

      brad, thanks. yeah, i think collaborative might be a better word there… i’m not sure how the definitions differ but it does feel more relational sounding..

      05/14/08 10:42 AM | Comment Link

    • brad brisco said...

      4

      Well I think it was in Myers’ “Organic Community” where he speaks of how sometimes the church “asks” members to “cooperate” in what the church is doing. In other words, “you join in what we want to do” rather than it being a true collaborative effort. But either way, certianly better than consumptive!

      05/14/08 10:51 AM | Comment Link

    • Todd Hiestand » Resources on Suburbia » Missional Living in Suburban America said...

      5

      [...] Four Movements of the Suburban Missional Church [...]

      10/10/08 8:13 AM | Comment Link

    Leave A Comment

    Mail (will not be published) (required)