Category Archives: Blog

Out of the Culture – Missional Realities for Small Groups

If you are a church that is missionally living in the culture then you must be prepared for who you will meet. And they might not like you.  People living in the city of Austin, TX are pretty sure most Christians are hateful, narrow minded, intolerant, judgmental, hypocritical and uninformed people. This is the current and future reality of the American culture the church finds itself in.

I had lunch with a good friend last week.  Kirsten moved with her family to Austin a year ago from L.A.. They moved off Hollywood Blvd. to the South Congress SoCo area. Her and her husband are creatives in the fashion and film industry so they wanted to be with like minded people in Austin. However, as Christ followers who have a high level of acceptance for people in their creative fields they have been somewhat shocked about the level of animosity in their new city to their personal faith choice. The animosity is even higher than where they lived in L.A.!

Kirsten told me about walking with one of her new neighbors to get some exercise one evening. During the conversation Kirsten responded to a perceived difficulty in the woman’s life with the simple statement, “I will pray for you about that.”  Abruptly stopping, the other woman grabbed her arm and said, “if you say the word ‘prayer’ again I don’t think you and I are going to be able to be friends.” For the next 45 minutes the conversation was about her extreme aversion to faith, God and spirituality. It was confrontational. Kirsten has found this same attitude in other neighbors and at the local school her children attend.

Now, maybe you are thinking this is just one incident in Austin, Texas but take time to talk to others on the street where you live and you will find out that antagonism towards the church has permeated much of our post-modern culture.

As a church that is missional towards people living in post-modern environments like Austin we have to accept the realities we live in. I believe Jesus has been and will continue to be relevant in every culture, in every generation, around the world.  So certainly he is relevant in Austin today. But how?

A New Voice

What we are discovering is that the church needs a new voice in the city. It must build bridges of communication and relationship to overcome people’s antagonism about the church. Our communication must be with a voice of grace, hope and acceptance. It must also reasonably address people’s genuine skepticism and doubts. Throw out the old cliches and language traps of the Christian vernacular. Much of it is tired and maligned. Especially when it is in the container of a person that is spiritually arrogant about knowing the truth. People are not opposed to truth but they are opposed to those with spiritual arrogance about truth.

Loving People

To be effective loving people in this generation we must firmly commit ourselves to the practice of letting God change people’s hearts.  It is not ‘our’ job to do that for anyone. We have been asked by Jesus to love people.  His job is to change their hearts. Let God do his job. We must commit to doing ours.  Love people with a genuine affection for them.  They must know we love them if they are going to accept us telling them the truth we believe.

Meet the Needs of Pain

Practically, the church in this generation can gain greater acceptance and approval as we address people’s brokenness. We are the most addicted and depressed generation that has ever lived. The church has a role to play in addressing these real pains. When Jesus gave the Sermon on the Mount he did it in the unconventional environment of a hillside. He didn’t do it in the synagogue. People struggling with life’s wounds, the sinners, weren’t accepted in the synagogue. Our churches must have places where people can hear, in a new environment, that God is for them, not against them. Maybe this is in Small Groups, maybe it is at Happy Hour with co-workers, maybe it is in the Sunday morning environment. It doesn’t matter the form but the experience of these conversations need to be hillside conversations. Jesus taught on the hillside.

Small Group Ethos

Small Groups, or relational gathering places, must be willing to accept people with all of their antagonism, fears about organized religion and skepticism as normal. If you are missionally driven as a church you need to begin answering questions for yourself about how you will interact with Antagonists, Atheists, Agnostics, Addicts and the same sex Attracted. These are the people that Jesus loves and accepts. His encounter with these people in the Scriptures were filled with grace and hope. He also challenged them with the kingdom of God and joining him in it. Jesus was certainly not short on truth with them. The ethos of your Small Group or community spaces must feel accepting, open to different opinions and committed to relationship where authenticity is alive. It is in these environments where God must change people’s thinking, believing and faith. It is His job.

Questions

Are your church and Small Group gatherings places where people ‘Out of the Culture’ can find a relevant conversation amidst their skepticism and antagonism? Are you addressing the pain in people’s lives through your community?

7 Ways to Catalyze Community

Last month I shared some of the principles from Not Like Me at the Organic Outreach Conference.

Here are seven principles for Catalyzing Community whether you are trying to start a small group, ministry, a non-profit organization, or a church:

 

 

Principle #1: Cause creates community
Our cause = moving people to become the person God created them to be.

Principle #2: Meet the needs of those around us
We need to seek to meet the physical, emotional, economic, and spiritual needs of those around us. We should be pursue helping change the environment and change the individual who is looking for change.

Principle #3: Reach out to Xenos
Hospitality means loving strangers. A similar word, “hospice,” means “a safe place.” Our homes, our businesses, and our churches should become safe places for strangers to experience kindness and love.

Principle #4: Develop authentic friendships with those you know
Are we loving, serving, and influencing our family, neighbors, co-workers and friends?

Jesus was willing to ruin His reputation to reach out to others who were far from God.

Principle #5: Allow people to belong before they believe
We should never allow our convictions to become a litmus test for friendship. In fact, we should actively pursue friendships with people – even people with whom we may disagree. Go to www.mosaic.org/faq for more on the staff process at Mosaic.

Come as you are, and you don’t have to stay that way! (see www.gatewaychurch.com/podcast)

Principle #6: Raise up a team of leaders to replace you
MPAC = Ministry through a pastor, assimilator, and catalyst
We need to make decisions based on who is not yet here rather than who has been here the longest.

Principle #7: Start Over

**For the rest of the notes, email me at eric.bryant@gatewaychurch.com with “Catalyzing Community” in the subject or you can listen to the conference call at my site’s audio messages at Catalyzing Community – 2nd audio from the bottom. You will also find interviews with Dan Kimball, Kevin Harney, Erwin McManus, and many others.

What have you seen bring people together?

14 Principles for Missional Living with John Burke

At a training event sponsored by In the City For the City, a group of Austin area pastors and ministry leaders, John Burke, our lead pastor at Gateway Church shared on the topic of “Missional Living: Grow Your Church Out of the Culture.” Here are some of his insights he shared:

The church in the Western world is in decline. The U.S. is becoming more and more post-Christian. We need to see ourselves as missionaries in our culture.

2 overarching questions to consider:

  1. How do we remove barriers between the message of Jesus and those who want and need to hear it?
    “It is my judgment, therefore, that we should not make it difficult for the Gentiles who are turning to God.” – Acts 15:19
    If only 10% of our city shifted to follow Jesus out of those who don’t already, an entire city would be transformed! Just 10% is the tipping point for social transformation.
  2. How do we build bridges? (Acts 14, 17)
    In Acts 2, those hearing the message of Jesus already knew the stories of the Old Testament. When Paul was in Athens, he acknowledged the new context and built a bridge from where they were (quoting one of their poets) to the full message of God expressed in Jesus.

5 Barriers to Faith Created by the Postmodern Experiment:

  1. Trust - more abuse and more divorce than ever before plus a distrust of those in authority. Build a bridge to help others see that God’s ways are for their protection and the result of His love. Recognize where people are at and still welcome them.
  2. Tolerance - the two most common questions from the culture include: what do you think about those who live a different lifestyle & what do you think about other religions? The way we answer will either shut the door completely or keep the door open for more conversation and opportunity. Tolerance is a cheap substitute for grace, an undeserved love. People long to experience grace, but because they haven’t experienced it, they settle for tolerance.
  3. Truth- This isn’t as big of a barrier as you’d think. More than truth, people are repelled by arrogance. Too often Christians give off a vibe that we don’t have anything to learn from others. Being willing to listen changes this misperception.
  4. Aloneness -People long for community even as they struggle to trust others. Community is an incredible apologetic. We should be experts at creating community! People should be allowed to belong before they believe. Jesus did this – He allowed Judas to be in his small group, and He made him the treasurer.
  5. Brokenness – The cost of the postmodern experiment has been brokenness. Here is what our culture looks like:
  • 1/3 of women have had an abortion
  • 1/4 of women have been sexually molested
  • 1/2 of people will have lived together before marriage
  • 1/5 of people will struggle with substance abuse
  • 1/5 of people smoke
  • 1/2 of marriages end in divorce

If our churches don’t look like this then either people are hiding their brokenness or we aren’t connecting with our culture.
We all have areas of brokenness. Even “the rigtheous” weren’t actually healthy (they were the ones responsible for crucifying Jesus) when Jesus said: “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick…. For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.” (Matthew 9:11-13).

4 Ways to Create a Culture of Growth:

Church culture can be your greatest ally or your greatest enemy for the mission of Jesus. God causes the growth (1 Cor. 3:6-9). We have a part to play – creating the environment where people can grow up best.

  1. Leadership mindset – A mature Christ-follower is on mission “to seek and to save what was lost” (Luke 19:10). A person cannot claim to be spiritually mature and not be about what Jesus was about.
    So how do we respond to the Christ-follower who says: “feed me more!” Jesus reminded us that the food for the mature is doing “the will of God” (John 4:32-36). Maturity equals obeying the Scriptures not knowing about the Scriptures.
  2. Training and values – help people understand why you do what you do and what you are called to do. Do our people have friendships with others in the culture?
  3. Visionary storytelling – help people see hope in who they can become and remind those in faith where they came from and why you’re doing what you are doing.
  4. Organization – The church is to be an organism not an institution. Are you organized in such a way that you can follow what God wants you to do?

3 Ways to Create a Culture of Grace-Giving Acceptance:

The world totally gets this: “I really want to do what is right, but I don’t do it.” – Rom.  7:15
The world does not naturally understand this: “There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ.” – Rom. 8:1

  1. Accept the person first. (Romans 15:7)
  2. Have a process view. Look at the masterpiece which is covered by the mud. How long is too long to invest in someone?
  3. Create a culture of dialogue. Allow people to ask their questions and share their doubts.

Talent Isn’t Enough

Recently watched the documentary Pearl Jam 20by Cameron Crowe (I love you Cameron Crowe!), and I thought it had a ton of lessons for church planters. Here’s one…

 

Andrew Wood (singer for Mother Love Bone, which later kind of morphed into Pearl Jam) and Chris Cornel (singer for Soundgarden, and later Audioslave, and who has a voice straight from God) lived together when they were first starting out, and each wrote and recorded a song every single day, which they would then play for each other. Like workaholic singer/songwriter accountability.

The idea exists that some singers just have this innate talent and jump on a stage and get discovered. The reality is that even talented people have to work their butts off if they want to succeed.

Why do some guys start churches that thrive, while others start churches that don’t even survive? There are all kinds of factors, but one of them is hard work. Some people might say I’m smart or gifted, but I don’t know about that. I think what God has used in me is hard work. You can get a lot of ministry done when you put in 65 to 80 hours a week, every week.

And you know what? If you write enough songs you keep getting better at it, and some of the songs end up working. And if you do enough ministry you keep getting better at it, and some of the ministries in your church end up working.

Talent isn’t enough. It takes hard work. Lots of hard work.

So … if you’re a church planter, or thinking about starting a church, how hard are you really willing to work?

3 Habits for Raising Your Cultural IQ

We don’t live in an Acts 2 environment – where you can stand in the public forum and say, “Repent and be baptized” and assume everyone will know what they are repenting from or understand the symbolism of baptism.

 

We live in an Acts 17 environment where effectively communicating the gospel requires building a bridge to what people already know like Paul did when he used an altar “to an unknown God” to introduce his audience to creator of the universe.  If that is our context, where do you find the idols and poets like Paul did?

Here are some suggestions for raising your Cultural IQ to become a better bridge builder and communicator to an Acts 17 audience.

Listen to the Music of your Culture:

  • Find out what the 3 most popular radio stations are in your area and listen to each once a week while driving.
  • Use iTunes or Spotify to listen to the top 20 songs once a month.
  • If you live in a place where live music is more than 8 people at the bowling alley singing karoke, make a commitment to hear local artists 4-6 times a year.
  • You can’t watch ‘em all, so know what the hottest shows are and watch one a week.  Don’t think paying for premium cable is a good use of God’s money, then learn how to use free sources to watch online.
  • You can’t go to ‘em all, so know whats raking in the money at the box office and get out once a month to see it.

Watch the TV and Movies of Your Culture:

(The great part of these activities is you can leverage them to build relationships too.  Don’t watch alone.  Invite your friends, neighbors and co-workers to watch with you – then ask them what they think and feel about what you just experienced together.)

Read the Opinions of Your Culture:

Since you’re reading this, you’re online and you’re a blog reader – why not set up Google Reader to sync your blog subscriptions so you can read on the run when you have a few minutes of down time or waiting.  While your adding this blog to your reader, think about adding these too:

News blogs:

Hit and Run – http://www.reason.com/blog/

Michelle Malkin – http://michellemalkin.com/

America Blog – http://www.americablog.com/

Daily Kos – http://www.dailykos.com/

Pop Culture blogs:

Gawker – http://gawker.com/

Pop Candy - http://content.usatoday.com/communities/popcandy/index

Men’s/Women’s blog:

Divine Caroline – http://www.divinecaroline.com/

Feministing – http://feministing.com/

GQ Blog – http://www.gq.com/blogs/the-q

I can promise if you do all three of these things you will at some point be offended, hopefully heartbroken and ultimately better equipped to build a bridge to the good news about Jesus.