Archives for category: community

At our last college ministry small group gathering, we talked about how isolation and loneliness are increasing despite the widespread popularity of various social networks. I shared with them how, during my first year in college, we received brochures on what this “electronic mail” thing was all about and how to use it.

After learning to navigate the worlds of elm and irc in college, I felt like some medieval clod during seminary as my students tried to explain instant messaging and the like to me. Right around that time (to me, it seems about seven or eight years ago), it seemed like shortcut acronyms were really popular: you know, LOL, BRB, etc.

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I confess, many days I feel stuck on that Saturday in between Good Friday and Easter Sunday — a kind of waiting and longing, wondering about how my journey brought me to this point, secretly hoping for new life. So, while I might not experience the unparalleled joy of Jesus’ resurrection constantly, today I remember — and stake my life upon — our risen King, the Resurrected One, the true life giver and dream awakener, the One who restores my heart, stirs my hope and says through His risen life that His kingdom has come, is here and is coming.

As a new chapter of life and ministry begins to unfold in the next couple of weeks, I am thankful for the wisdom of people like Eugene Peterson. In Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places, Peterson writes about the kind of community I dream of and would love to be a part of and serve:

The gospel, while honoring our experience, doesn’t begin with our experience. We don’t begin a holy life by wanting a holy life, desiring to be good, fulfilled, complete, or wanting to be included in the grand scheme of things. We have been anticipated, and the way we have been anticipated is by resurrection, Jesus’ resurrection. Living a holy life, the Christian equivalent of revolution, begins with Jesus’ resurrection.

The resurrection of Jesus establishes the entire Christian life in the action of God by the Holy Spirit. The Christian life begins as a community that is gathered at the place of impossibility, the tomb.

Just as Jesus’ birth launches us into the creation and Jesus’ death launches us into history, Jesus’ resurrection launches us into living in community, the holy community — the community of the resurrection.

Today was the fourth, and final, day of NPC 2008. Because of the fairly rigorous theological engagement throughout this week, my sense that there is a point of being a pastor has been renewed. The last thing I want to do is become a program director or events manager and this week at NPC has been good for my soul.

During this morning’s seminar with Richard TwissTonto and the Lone Ranger Revisited: Avoiding the “Ethnocentric Impulse” in Creating Diverse, Mutually Embracing Communities of Believers (quite a mouthful, but an even better seminar) — I remarked at the end how much I appreciated that my greatest take-away from his sessions was his emphasis on theology. We seek diversity in community not because it is the thing to do or as an evangelistic, church-growth tool, but out of our understanding of God Himself.

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I have experienced a refreshing lack of takeaways and best practices over the last couple of days here at NPC. Refreshing, because I would have to filter any of those take-homes through another lens or two anyways, and I find myself moving further and further away from an industrialized notion of church as structures, programs or practices. We are the Church, and I have experienced a strong narrative thread throughout NPC to redefine, refocus and reimagine who we are as the called out people of God.

In the morning session, John Ortberg drew heavily from the wisdom of Dallas Willard to share several principles, or “treasures,” that we all need to thrive in ministry. Ortberg quoted Willard as a sort of refrain throughout the session:

God’s aim in history is an inclusive community of loving persons with God as the primary sustainer and most glorious inhabitant.

As we think of moving forward in the journey ahead of us, we long to see God at the center. As Richard Twiss said during the afternoon panel session (with Tony Jones, Danielle Shroyer and Dan Kimball) on the missional church, it is the Missio Dei (the “mission of God”) that forms the basis for our understanding of community and mission as a church. God, Himself a perfect community of mutually submissive love in the Trinity, reveals what it means to be the people of God in community and what it means to be sent out as the people of God. Tall Skinny Kiwi has some more insight into the Missio Dei here.

Richard Twiss is a native American theologian, pastor and author. My wife and I went to speak with him briefly after the session — his vast life experience and gracious wisdom spoke deeply to us. His words about the inherent postmodernity of the Native American experience — in particular, the circular versus linear way of thinking — has a particular resonance with us as Asian Americans. We shared with him about the lack of people further along the Way in our Korean American communities and how his story gave us insight and guidance. He told us about a gathering at which he spoke in Toronto, hosted by a Korean Canadian congregation for First Nation believers, that it was the Korean people who were weeping at his words about discovering identity in Christ. Jesus doesn’t wipe out our ethnicity, but shows us a new way to be human — in Christ, I can become truly Korean American, truly human. It is difficult for me to express the freedom I found in today’s brief encounter, and I believe this has such powerful implications for the future of our little congregation and the greater Asian American church.

In the evening, NT Wright brought to the convention a massive Gospel that joins together a beautiful vision of heaven and earth. It will probably take me weeks to wrap my head around everything he shared, but I experienced a serendipitous convergence of ideas once again through his words — the idea of participating in the mission of God in the world He so loves. He reminded us that, as the people of God, we must re-embody the great story of God in the world, not retreat back into Enlightenment subjugation or be crushed under postmodern nihilism. We must live in a world where new things are possible.

Wright’s exposition of Ephesians was marvelous — we are God’s workmanship and we are His poem (as we read the Greek in this passage). Sometimes it is art that brings the message home more clearly — and we are called to do “good works” that will amaze the world and reveal to the world the coming together of heaven and earth, that show the principalities and powers of the world that Jesus is Lord and they are not.

I’ve been tagged by J. Evans for this 1-2-3 Meme. Here’s how it works: “The game is to grab the book nearest to you and turn to page 123. Find the 5th sentence and share the next 3 sentences with everyone. Then you tag five people.” So, from my desk to your screen…

Preaching Re-Imagined, by Doug Pagitt

“Is it possible that this kind of phrase (ball hog) could also apply to pastors who do all the studying, all the talking, and even have the gall to think they can apply the messages they create to the lives of other people? In this setting there is little for the hearers to do besides decide if they agree or not. Is it possible that we have, through the practice of speaching, created a culture in churches where agreeability is the necessary posture of our people?”

As a preacher-type, this hits really close to home. I’ve struggled for awhile with tying together the notion of the priesthood of all believers with the role of preaching. Certainly, a vocational pastor will have time to devote to exegesis, study and meditation on Scripture that others do not. Hopefully, prayerfully, this hard work will translate God’s voice to, in and for a particular community. However, I would love to see a more active, participatory engagement of Scripture from our entire community. I don’t know if we’d approach this in quite the way Solomon’s Porch does, but Doug’s thoughts here are a great jumping off point.

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I haven’t really participated in a meme before, but I am really interested in discovering what is on the bookshelf of Sam, Rich, David, Wayne and Dan.