- A
Kingdom, A
People
& A
River
- A
New Paradigm For the
Post
Modern
House
Church
Movement
- Parousia
Weekly Update Letter For The Week of
January 26,
2006
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- "When
a prophet is accepted and deified, his message is lost. The prophet is
only useful so long as he is stoned as a public nuisance calling us to
repentance, disturbing our comfortable routines, breaking our respectable
idols, shattering our sacred conventions" (A. G. Gardiner as quoted
by Arthur Wallis, "In The Day of Thy Power").
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- In
This Issue:
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- “Viva
la Revolución!” (Again!)
- A
Time To Dance – This Friday, January 28
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- Dear
Friends,
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- My
thanks to all of you for the many kind notes I received concerning last
week’s letter, which if you missed it is now posted in our e-letter
archives on our website. You were very kind, I and believed it touched a
deep chord with many of you. Well, this week’s letter is different, and
some of you who subscribed last week my be seriously tempted to reconsider
that decision this week as I deal with a recent Charisma
commentary on George Barna’s new
book, Revolution.
I’ll let you be the judge. Notice: I’m sending this E-Letter out early
this week. We’re probably going to be “off line” for a few days
toward the end of the week. We’re moving websites to new servers (from
Yahoo! to Earthlink) which will cause everything to disappear for a few
days as new DNS routing numbers circulate through the internet. That means
you may get some returned e-mails if you try e-mailing us later this week.
Don’t panic (or rejoice!?). We we’re still here, just making some much
needed changes.
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- Blessings,
- Maurice
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- “Viva
la Revolución!” (Again!)
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- A
feline fracas is fomenting and the fur is flying fast and furious (don’t
you just love alliteration). I’m referring of course, to the release of Barna’s
latest and perhaps most controversial book, Revolution.
And the current fracas involves a recent commentary by the editor of Charisma
magazine, J. Lee Grady, in which he pretends to review Barna’s
book. Unfortunately, he didn’t review the book. He simply popped a cork
and vented. And frankly, I thought it was embarrassing. Now, in order to
be fair, if you would like to read the commentary for yourself, you can
click on the following link where we have it posted: www.parousianetwork.com/Charisma_Commentary.htm.
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- O.K.
Now that I’ve been fair, I want to address his points, what few he
actually made. According to Charisma,
Barna is
“advocating the demise of the local church.” Nope,
sorry. Barna’s merely reporting a
demise which was well underway when he published his first book, Frog
In The Kettle, back in 1990 and which has been steadily
accelerating in our Post Modern culture. The difference now is that in Revolution
Barna has drawn a disturbing conclusion,
namely, that the life, nature and expression of “church” as we have
known it is undergoing a radical transformation, led by people whom Barna
labels “Revolutionaries” (hence, the title for the book, Revolution).
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- At
this point I need to discuss a glaring omission in both Barna’s
book and in Charisma’s commentary, specifically, the absence of any
clear definition of what constitutes “local church.”
Barna does distinguish between
“church” with a “little c” (a local gathering of believers) and
“Church” with a “capital C” (the Church consisting of all
believers everywhere), and he does hint that by “local church” he is
referring to the traditional congregational model. But still, no
definition of what actually constitutes a “local church” is ever
clearly given (a point which I originally made in my preview article of
this book in my e-letter of
10/17/05
).
The “assumed” definition appears to be that a “local church”
consists of a traditional, institutional, identifiable congregational
gathering of believers meeting in a facility for programs and preaching,
led by a paid pastor & staff and overseen by a governing board of some
description (denominational ties optional). Both Barna
and Charisma appear to be
basing their arguments on some such definition of “local church.”
There is a further assumption that anything falling outside of this
definition cannot (by definition) and does not constitute a “local
church,” and therein lies the problem (btw, this definition is what has
maintained and fueled the “church vs para-church”
debate for well over 50 years).
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- This
now inevitably confronts us with three questions: First,
is this definition of “local church” accurate? Second,
is this definition of “local church” biblical? And third,
how do we in the “emerging church” movement (of which house church is
a significant part and for which Barna is
becoming a significant advocate) define the concept of “local church”
(by doing so we also define house church)?
As I observed in my letter of 10/17/05 (posted in our E-Letter
archives on our website if you’re interested), “The
emerging church movement, and more specifically the house church movement,
is about to be thrust front and center into a huge national church debate
on the very nature of church paradigms, and in this unfolding debate, ‘He
who defines the terms wins the argument.’“ Wow,
sometimes I hate being right!
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- So,
here are my answers to these three questions. First,
yes this definition of “local church” which underlies both Barna
and Charisma is
“culturally accurate” in that it is an accurate description of how our
culture (both inside and outside of the
Christi
an
community) understands the concept of
“local church.” If you doubt this, check out the 14
criteria which the IRS traditionally uses in determining whether or not
you qualify as a “church” for tax purposes. You’ll find them listed
on pages 27 & 28 of Dan Busby’s
“The
Zondervan
Church
and Nonprofit Tax and Financial Guide: 2006 Edition”
(Isn’t it interesting that the IRS can define “church” –rightly or
wrongly – but we can’t?!). Second,
no, I do not believe that this is a biblically accurate or necessary
definition of “local church” (hey, New Testament churches were ALL
house churches - get over it!). Third,
here’s the rub for the “emerging church” movement. What is our
biblically acceptable working definition of “local church,” one that
does justice to Scripture while embracing everything God is doing in the
way of manifesting His Kingdom presence in gatherings of believers (what
the N.T. calls ekklesia),
including house churches. After
all, if you can’t define it with some degree of biblical authenticity,
how will you ever know whether or not you are doing it!
And I don’t know about you, but I’m not convinced that
“whatever” constitutes a valid working definition of ekklesia.
How can Charisma
claim that Barna is out to destroy the
“local church” if they can’t define what constitutes a “local
church” (biblically speaking). And how can Barna
advocate new forms, paradigms and expressions of “church” if he, too,
can’t define what constitutes “church” (local or otherwise). Just to
stimulate your thinking, here’s a definition I’m chewing on: church
(ekklesia) is any gathering of believers
irrespective of day, time or location, for the purpose of worship,
fellowship, mutual ministry and the equipping of one another for the work
of service, overseen by elders, served by deacons and ministered to by an
identifiable five-fold ministry of apostles, prophets, evangelists,
pastors and teachers. Don’t like that one? Offer a better
one, but remember: if
you can’t define it, how will you ever know whether or not you are doing
it! (P.S. In addition, the
inability to define it makes “rapid multiplication” somewhat
problematic: “We need a movement of
rapidly multiplying whatevers”!).
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- O.K.,
now that I’ve thoroughly beat that poor horse, let’s return to
horse-whipping Charisma
(hey, at least I’m not feigning objectivity!). I remarked earlier that
in his commentary Mr. Grady “simply
popped a cork and vented”. Here’s the statement which led
up to that observation: “But Barna
has crossed the line with his new book . . . . The tempered sociologist
has now become something of a mad scientist. By cooking the numbers,
reinterpreting the data and injecting his own bias into this odd
experiment, he has created a Frankenstein that is now on the loose. We
should all be concerned about this monster.”
Wow, that’s what I would call reasoned, dispassionate
objectivity! But one of the surprising realities of Revolution
(at least I was surprised by it) is that it contains very few statistics
(uh, “numbers-to-be-cooked”). The only real statistics are found in
chapter 4 (specifically, pages 31-35), and even then they are simply a
restatement of statistics which Barna has
previously published and which most of us have quoted at one time or
another (“Only 9 percent of all
born-again adults have a biblical worldview . . .”, that kind
of thing). The only new and potentially disturbing statistic is a
projection which appears on page 49. Here Barna
projects that whereas today 70% of Americans rely upon a local
congregation as their primary spiritual expression, by the
year 2025 (only 19 years away, if you’re counting) this
number will decline to 30-35%. During that same time frame Barna
projects that “alternative” expressions of spirituality (e.g., house
church, market place gatherings, etc.) will rise from the current 5% to
between 30 and 35%.
-
- And
therein, fellow Frankensteins, lies the heresy
which has awakened the local villagers from their slumber and motivated
them to light their torches, grab their pitchforks and head for the
nearest Starbucks in search of heretics sipping over-priced lattes, having
unfettered fellowship and seeking to “be the church” outside the
castle walls (sorry, I just couldn’t resist!). So long as Barna
was content to limit his activities to statistically documenting the
demise of the prevailing “local church” model, leaving church leaders
to accept, reject or “cook” his numbers as they saw fit, they were
willing to tolerate his work, read his books, attend his workshops and
subscribe to his services. But, in Revolution,
Barna has indeed “crossed the line.” He
has gone from collecting and analyzing statistics to drawing specific
conclusions and projecting unfolding future trends. He has, in essence
declared that “the Emperor has no
clothes” to the great embarrassment of the assembled court
and peasantry who suspected as much all along, but were too intimidated to
say so. And such an honest declaration is simply unforgivable, even “Frankensteinian.”
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- Consider
all of this from the perspective of Charisma
and the Pentecostal megachurch pastors with
whom they apparently spend way too much time. Your $12 million church
“campus” has just been completed, but since your “mosaic” and
post-modern congregation really doesn’t give in any
biblically recognizable way you were forced to borrow over half the money.
Your monthly cashflow to cover the mortgage,
staff and operating expenses is now approaching $400,000. And Barna
has just told you that over the next 20 years (less than the life of that
mortgage you took out) your attendance could potentially fall by half. To
your sensitive ears all this talk about the rapid growth of
“emerging church” and “alternative church” is
nothing less than “code speech” for “Torpedo
in the water! Brace for impact!”
Yep, from your perspective this whole Revolution
business is a nightmare in the making, a monster, a Frankenstein.
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- O.K.,
I’m almost done, but I want to make a couple more observations.
According to the Charisma commentary on Barna,
“To follow this defective thesis to
its logical conclusion would require us to fire all pastors, close all
seminaries and Bible colleges, padlock our sanctuaries and send everybody
home to be discipled by somebody on the
internet or at a ‘spontaneous’ worship concert.”
For those who skipped the “Intro To
Logic” class in college, this is known as
reductio ad absurdum - “the
disproof of a proposition by showing its consequences to be impossible or
absurd when it is carried to its logical conclusion.” (Thank
you Websters ). Charisma
is arguing an absurd conclusion that no one, including Barna,
is seriously suggesting. My own daughter recently graduated from a
Presbyterian liberal arts college, is contemplating church staff positions
and a possible future at Fuller Seminary. And I will be her biggest
cheerleader. Why, because I’m not really committed to the emerging
church movement? Of course not, but because I understand what Barna
sees, that the changing nature of church doesn’t mean “extinction”
but transformation, and we will continue to need qualified leaders in the
emerging church regardless of what outward form it takes (so, sweetie, you
can always come back from Fuller and work with dad in the house church
movement - right.)
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- Finally,
Charisma opines that “Barna
is also surprisingly absorbed with American culture and seems out of touch
with global spiritual trends. As a result his book has relatively no
application in developing nations where churches today are growing faster
than ever.” Duh! How can one be “surprisingly absorbed”
with one’s own culture? Barna isn’t
writing for or to third world countries. He is writing a book intended to
address the realities of what it means to “be the church” in our Post
Christi
an,
Post Modern western culture where the impact of the traditional
institutional church model is quickly vanishing (where it hasn’t already
disappeared). To argue that the church in
America
is in good shape because the church in
China
is growing is to illustrate the old adage that for some people “denial
is still a river in
Egypt
.”
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- The
Charisma commentary closes with the admonition that “this
flawed proposal needs to be recalled before it causes some serious
damage.” I agree, and the sooner they publish a retraction
and apology for this unfortunate commentary, the better for the church as
a whole. In closing, let me encourage you to purchase and read Barna’s
book. I did. And therein lies a tale. I had the
book store put a copy on hold for me, because they were back ordered. When
I went to pick it up I mentioned to the young sales clerk (in her early
20s) how difficult it was to find a copy locally. She asked what it was
about and I explained the idea of a movement towards “alternative forms
of church”. Her response
was great, “That’s what I’m
interested in, alternative church!”.
I resisted the urge. You know. The urge to encourage
her to send an e-mail to the editor of Charisma
magazine. I settled for giving her one of my cards along with a
promise to talk to her again . . . about house church.
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- And,
oh yes,
“Viva la Revolución!”
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- A
Time to Dance - Next Meeting – Friday, January 28
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- God’s
Presence was very strong again last Friday evening. Our goal is to
worship,
pray
and press in. This is the pursuit of God in the company of friends who are
learning to dance with God and with each other. Please consider this your
invitation to join us this Friday evening, January 28,
7:00PM
at the home of the Shipley’s (Call if you need directions – 926-7743).
- ©
2006 THE PAROUSIA NETWORK of House and
Cell
Churches
www.parousianetwork.com
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