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These
sentences actually appeared in church bulletins or were
announced in church services:
- The sermon this morning: "Jesus Walks on the
Water." The sermon tonight: "Searching for
Jesus."
- Ladies, don't forget the rummage sale. It's a chance
to get rid of those things not worth keeping around the
house. Don't forget your husbands.
- The peacemaking meeting scheduled for today has been
cancelled due to a conflict.
- Miss Charlene Mason sang "I will not pass this
way again," giving obvious pleasure to the
congregation.
- For those of you who have children and don't know it,
we have a nursery downstairs.
- Barbara remains in the hospital and needs blood donors
for more transfusions. She is also having trouble
sleeping and requests tapes of Pastor Jack's sermons.
- Irving Benson and Jessie Carter were married on
October 24 in the church. So ends a friendship that
began in their school days.
- At the evening service tonight, the sermon topic will
be "What Is Hell?" Come early and listen to
our choir practice.
- Eight new choir robes are currently needed due to the
addition of several new members and to the deterioration
of some older ones.
- Please place your donation in the envelope along with
the deceased person you want remembered.
- Potluck supper Sunday at 5:00 PM - prayer and
medication to follow.
- The ladies of the Church have cast off clothing of
every kind. They may be seen in the basement on Friday
afternoon.
- The pastor would appreciate it if the ladies of the
congregation would lend him their electric girdles for
the pancake breakfast next Sunday.
- Low Self Esteem Support Group will meet Thursday at 7
PM. Please use the back door.
- The eighth-graders will be presenting Shakespeare's
Hamlet in the Church basement Friday at 7 PM. The
congregation is invited to attend this tragedy.
- Weight Watchers will meet at 7 PM at the First
Presbyterian Church. Please use large double doors at
the side entrance.
In more serious ways,
we Christians tend to garble our messaging about our core
values and primary commission from God. On one extreme, when
people talk about the expanding work of growing God's
kingdom, we make it sound like empire building. We compare
numbers, favorably or unfavorably, and feel a related pride
or shame. In our humanity, we're taught to play silly games;
either to aspire to expansion according to motives usurped
by pride or shame, or we declare, "we're not into
numbers," and we refuse to celebrate new lives in
Christ (as the book of Acts often does even with numbers)
and we even develop a sad and sorry notion of church, human
constructs, that completely ignore the Great Commission of
Jesus to the church.
Jesus' parting words
sent his earliest disciples into a life-altering agenda.
Expanding God's kingdom by sharing the gospel and nurturing
an ever-increasing, faith-filled people who are transformed
by the Holy Spirit, committed to Jesus Christ and actively
loving the people of the world in the name of God. There's a
thousand and one ways to say it, but that's what we're
called to - making disciples of all nations. Baptizing and
teaching. Being witness to those who are near and to those
who are far off. Building a kingdom that honors Christ as
Lord and that believes that we are salt, light, ambassadors,
servants, and agents of healing and justice and mercy and
redemption for this ailing world during our short spans of
life.
We are into
numbers, because every number is a person. No, we're not
only into numbers, and in reaching more people we still want
to reach them well. But people matter to God, and if they
don't matter to us, I'm not sure why we're here - except
that in being here God should change our hearts on this and
other vital matters.
With that in mind,
let me say with no garbling at all - we are a Great
Commission church, or we are no church at all.
All of this leads us
into a most compelling agenda. To go and make disciples.
That is the mission that drives us…always. (Not merely
converts…church goers).
The demands of this
particular season are also compelling. We have some people
charged at the opportunity to expand our ministry to more
than one site. We also have a very full 8, mostly full 9 and
very full 10:30 service. Our parking lot is over-taxed, even
with the parking additions that are forthcoming. The
neighborhood is taxed, even though we enjoy an almost
entirely friendly relationship with our neighbors. And we're
turning people away, both actually and passively, whenever
we don't invite a friend and potential Christian because our
fullness has a freezing affect on our better impulses toward
sharing and inviting.
All that being said,
a group commissioned by the elders met for almost a year,
praying, talking, studying, and looking at other churches
and their expanding ministries. This Expansion Team
presented to the elders and pastors a vision for what could
be. The elders and pastors affirmed this and now we present
it to you. (This is not new…).
First, the things we
don't feel called to do.
- We don't feel called to increase our meeting times to
multiple services throughout the week. While we could
have five, six, seven worship services, instead of three
or four, we believe that this would cause our community
here to feel disjointed and more obviously, tax the
neighborhood.
- We do not feel called to tear down and rebuild a
bigger barn. While we do hope to add some seating and
parking and office space over the years, it won't be
enough, or soon enough to stave off the growing need.
Even more, none of people in leadership aspire to being
a mega church in a mega-building, which often breeds
more spectator-Christians than mutually supportive
disciples.
- We don't feel called to relocate the church. We
believe that God has uniquely called and blessed us HERE
as a community church, even though our impact is also
regional. This is a good location for SFC.
- We don't feel called to buy property in some strategic
place (Coyote Valley?) and wait. That's costly, somewhat
speculative and altogether too slow.
- Finally, we don't feel called to do nothing. Our
theology, our hearts for people, our passion for the
gospel, require us not to do nothing.
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So we're going to do
something. What, you ask, are we going to do?
There are three
potentials developing. We don't know God's timing or
ordering, but we believe that God will bring all three
opportunities like waves hitting the shore. I present them
in a different order each time I speak of them, since I
don't want to presume God's diving order until the right
opportunities show themselves.
The first that I'll
mention is strategic partnerships. What if another ministry
somewhere in our area needed 20, 40, 60 people in order to
reach a certain goal or answer a certain calling? What if we
sent a go-team of people who commit to six months, or one
year, or two years, of working, worshiping, and
fellowshipping in that other ministry? What if we and that
church enjoyed such a sweet partnership that we would gladly
give some of our best people and apply some of our most
fervent prayers to that ministry? (The Highway…1st
Presbyterian San Jose, e.g.).
These opportunities
do arise. We're asking the congregation to live and pray in
a spirit of readiness so that if that call comes again, we
might say "yes, here we come" for every good
reason. By the way, this is not new to SFC. This is how SFC
became SFC - strategic partnership.
Second, house
churches are on the rise again. Not really again - still.
Early church…China, Viet Nam, now Europe…soon America.
We met with Russ Rohdo, currently a missionary to Spain, but
soon coming to the West Coast. He and others believe that
this will be the next big wave in US Christianity, and that
home churches have special appeal to the youth culture,
counter culture and anti-institutional types who might never
darken the doorway of a traditional church building.
Built mostly around
the table (food and communion, with prayer, some singing and
teaching), the house church is like a small group that wants
to go further, and become a part of an organic movement of
growth and reproduction, growth and reproduction, until a
house church becomes a network of house churches. Not
cloistered community, but dynamic, organic smaller
communities of faith, connected by certain things, but not a
common building. Again, this is not new to SFC. Some of our
small groups might already view themselves in these terms,
with the larger church as only a supplement to an already
developed smaller faith community. Instead of viewing these
groups as rogues or independents, why not bless and send
them into an ever-expanding future? Some of them, by the
way, might one day rent a larger space or hire a pastor, or
build a building. Others might simply grow from house to
house. Altogether, we would invite a networking connection
that's as tight as the house churches want or need it to be.
Third, and most
obviously, we could open up shop in a rented auditorium or
gymnasium and send some people there. We could offer a
contextualized, relevant, probably contemporary church
experience for people who, again, are far more likely to go
to a rockin' gymnasium than to an aged and cultured
sanctuary. You might imagine that some of these satellite
ministries outgrow the mother churches in short order. Some,
like the Highway, even plant still more churches in just a
matter of years. We already have leaders who could do a
ministry in this way, and we probably have members who'd
rather be there (in a more modernized form of church) than
here.
In the last meeting
of the Expansion Team, we went around the room and asked,
"Where do you see yourself connecting if God were to
lead you into one of these waves?" The answers were
well-distributed over all three options.
My answer? I want to
be at dear old SFC. God's call on my life has always been to
ignite and support the health and growth of historic,
longstanding churches. My assumption is that I'll stay here
(God willing) as pastor to "the little church behind
the fire station," as we continually send, shrink and
then grow; send, shrink, and then grow.
So where does this
leave us today? We are asking the congregation to wait on
the waves of God's spirit and to pray for opportunities.
Then we need to search our hearts. Which opportunities are
from God, and which ones of us will be called to go? All the
while, we need to count the cost. No vision is free and very
few things worth doing are done without a cost. But as we
count and consider and plan well, we also need to encourage
each other. (en-courage!).
Then, as God opens
doors and calls some of us as missionaries and ambassadors,
we send and celebrate. Our advisors all say the same thing -
if we treat those partings as funerals, we suffer. If we
treat them as weddings (I'm not losing a son…I'm gaining a
daughter!) there is no end to the celebration.
And all the while,
most practically, we're clearing seats and parking spots for
the next wave of people that God will send to SFC. |