Showing posts with label the church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the church. Show all posts

Monday, February 27, 2012

Stop Domesticating It!


I've often felt that our faith has been domesticated. But more recently, many of the artists I run around with have shared that one of the major reasons they have "left organized religion" is the fact that the faith they once held dear has been watered down, ripped of its danger, and made vanilla.

Yesterday, CNN ran THIS ARTICLE.

"it seems like Christians are uncomfortable with how earthy the Bible really is. They feel the need to tidy up God...God’s message was not meant to be run through some arbitrary, holier-than-thou politeness filter. He intended the Bible to speak to people where they’re at, caught up in the stark reality of life on a fractured planet."

I couldn't agree more!

We attempt to expose a life-altering faith with our peers, but often times all that's experienced is a temperate, mundane, safe, far-from-revolutionary, nominal, set of beliefs that aren't much more than ideals we don't ever really expect to fully-believe, critically examine, or stand for in the face of any kind of scrutiny.

We've overcome the grit of broken lives with our choir robes and 3 chord praise songs; concealed the pain and doubt of life with freshly produced 1 hour services that tell us what we want to hear, so that we sleep better at night knowing we're right and they're wrong; and push us to dream only as big as we have left overs for.

I'm sorry, but when I open the pages of the scriptures, I just don't find a rationale for this domestication that's become the gold standard of church. I'm beginning to believe my friends that have walked away from faith were onto something, and the Church needs to reclaim what's withered.

Peace,
Ross

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Consuming the Gospel


A few weeks ago, I asked the question if it was possible to turn The Gospel into an idol. You can read that post HERE.

What prompted that post was a negative conversation that occurred by someone saying that they didn't hear "their gospel." This statement has at its root many layers of problems that are facing the church today.

Is the gospel personal? Absolutely.
Is the gospel social? Absolutely.

But when we make it one over the other, we have changed the transformative power of the gospel and made it into a commodity of religion. We are of course a consumer culture. But the gospel is never something to be consumed.

As soon as the gospel has its limits, the transformational power of the resurrection has been co-opted for personal interest, comfort, tradition, power, and consumption.

Consider this very real scenario...what is emerging in Christianity is the church of the global South. Primarily, the global South is made up of developing nations and third world nation states. The church and Christianity is exploding in the global South, whereas it is disappearing in the West. The version of Christianity however, looks very different. Its very tribal in its existence. It appears much more pentecostal in nature, as the spiritual aspect of faith is heightened in these parts of the world. The notion of prosperity is also gaining ground. And even though much of the West does not participate in these "types" of Christianity, does it mean that the global South isn't teaching gospel? Is it possible that the gospel is JUST THAT BIG?

Gospel is defined:
1. The proclamation of the redemption preached by Jesus and the Apostles, which is the central content of Christian revelation.

2. A similar narrative.
3. a doctrine maintained to be of great importance


So lets go back to the initial argument... is the gospel ours to claim, and ours to define when its not heard (as we prefer it heard)?

In the particular case I'm referring to, there was not a liturgical time set aside where the gospel (text from Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John) was read. What did occur was a narrative approach to show how the gospel is interlaced throughout the totality of scripture.

The argument defined what equals gospel, and what does not equal gospel. The argument makes the gospel totally liturgical in its methodology and practice. The argument denies God's ability to speak gospel outside of the liturgical hour and outside of Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John. The argument limits God and is dangerous. The argument was made from the standpoint of something to be consumed during the liturgical hour.

That's my two cents anyway...

Peace,
Ross

Thursday, October 13, 2011

What is Emerging? (Part 2)

Here's part 2 of the video...

Ding Dong the Church is Dead (2/2) from Aideen Johnston on Vimeo.



Peace,
Ross

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

What is Emerging? (Part 1)

This is a video (Part 1) about the church...

The past.
The present.
The hopeful future.

It's more grey than black and white.
It's more than belief.
It's more than doctrine.
It's more than brick and mortar.

It's just more.


VIDEO DISABLED>

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Borders = the Church (sort of)


I loved going into Borders bookstores, perusing books, magazines, and CDs. There was a two year stretch where I toured and performed at a lot of the Borders stores across the Midwest. But those days are over. Borders is closing (or rather, CLOSED).

Why?
And why devote a post to its closing?

Because I see a direct correlation between Borders and the Church...

Borders didn't close because it was selling the wrong books and CDs. It didn't close because the coffee bar wasn't as good as its competitor. Borders closed because it lost the battle of language.

Culture moved in the way(s) it communicated (if only by a small percentage) and Borders didn't speak the language. It lagged in its ability to communicate, and now its closed because of its obsolescence.

Okay, delete Borders and insert Church.

For years now we have been provided data and sobering statistics regarding the future of the Church.

It's dwindling. Church attendance is primarily generational and familial. So what's wrong with that? The generational drop and departure from the Church is nearing 90%. The family is getting exponentially smaller, and a generational approach will not last.

So, am I saying the Church will die?
ABSOLUTELY NOT!

Because the Church is not defined by fancy buildings, stained glass windows, contemporary services, or traditional liturgies. The Church is a movement that cannot be defined by brick and mortar.

HOWEVER, I believe the future will look vastly different than what comes to mind today. It will look vastly different because the language has changed. And just like Borders, the Church has lagged in the language game.

Though Borders closed, people will continue to read books (though the format may change, and change again). Borders was simply the brick and mortar behind literary and artistic distribution.

The Church that emerges (I believe) will be a healthier and more vibrant force that is about living the gospel through relationships, justice, and grace.

Many will say that the Church died. But the Church can't die.
Buildings can. Styles can. Denominations can. But the Church will not.

The Church was birthed by 12, and we must never forget that.

Let's use Borders as a cultural lesson that language, pace, and context is of vast importance. The vibrance of the local church will be defined by its ability to speak the same language of its city.

The future of the Church will be in creating culture, not merely responding to it. And for that, I am hopeful!

Peace,
Ross

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Book Excerpt #17


Here's another quick glimpse at my upcoming book, Outsourcing God. Enjoy!

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To those of us that currently call ourselves leaders…here’s permission to not always having the answer. If you don’t feel permission to leave things a bit unhinged and untidy, I’m sorry. It’s the nature of the beast – plus it feels good when we/I have all of the (right) answers. I quickly gain public persona and become the _________ answer man (you fill in the blank).

I tend to believe however, that Christ came to demonstrate a new type of leadership. His new leadership is completely counter-cultural that it leads people to scoff terms like radical, crazy, otherworldly, revolutionary, and un-realistic. But what we know of Christ is that he rarely did things in the assumed way.

When He should have ridden a stallion, He rides the colt of a donkey. When He can raise a legion of furious militant angels, He turns His cheek and remains silent. When He has the power to assemble the most just and righteous government known to man, He instead compels young fisherman to take up His cause. Jesus does little in the likeness of your standard leadership self-help books and gurus, but Jesus taught a better and holy way.

Jesus, our model leader, was asked a slew of questions throughout his three-year ministry, and from the four gospels, he responded over 50 times with questions – not answers. Jesus spoke often through the use of parables: quick, pithy, succinct questions or stories that strengthened the community by fostering deeper thought and conversation. Perhaps our response should be similar...

...It seems like in a world where people gravitate to either black or white; Jesus poses a question to blend the two. We all know our friends that see the world in total black and white. There’s no middle ground. It escapes nothing. Not politics. Not sports. Not foods. Not entertainment. Not religion. And in this world that is painted in stark contrast, Jesus is leading out of the gray.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Book Excerpt #16


Here's another brief look inside my upcoming book, Outsourcing God. I hope you enjoy it, wrestle it, and chat it up!

-Ross

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What is it about the weekly encounter we label “worship,” that causes such a stirring, such life change, or conversely nothing at all?

I believe that in our consumer-driven, materialistic society, we fall prey to the habitual re-creation of an entertainment encounter. And just because I use the term “entertainment,” doesn’t mean I’m referring to a particular style of encounter; contemporary, progressive, traditional, post-modern, blended, etc. Rather I’m referring to the fact that we try and dish out what gives “our people” what they want.

We spend an amazing amount of time calculating what will drive the numbers up and try and meet those expectations unequivocally. If that’s a rock band or pipe organ, we’ll do what brings in the numbers. After a season of positive encounters, we say that things are going well, budgets are in the right place, staffing is secure, and things are generally healthy. However, when these encounters leave us uneasy, we quickly blame the ministry staff, begin questioning the church’s stewardship, and eventually go down the road of, “oh, remember how things used to be…”

It’s a natural place to go. This line of thinking is very normal. However, the fact that we got there in the first place illuminates the real failure. The fact that we can, (in one week and one worship encounter), determine the encounter’s success by the ministry staff’s hard work, excellence and spiritual maturity, and the next week call it a failure, without any hesitation that just perhaps the encounter has something to do with how we arrive, the preparedness of our hearts, and the willingness of ourselves to be challenged, moved, and disrupted, shows how far the church has gone and how we’ve allowed the gods of culture to infiltrate.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Post-Christian: why i have hope for that future...

I saw this video yesterday that succinctly describes the church in America, its influence on culture, and what the future looks like. I have written in the past on this topic, not as a sad cry to return to how things were in the past, but rather, as a hopeful mend to the consumer church culture of America in a post-Christian era.

Take a couple minutes and watch the video. Feel free to post your thoughts, hopes, fears, etc.



Peace,
Ross

Monday, December 6, 2010

Book Excerpt #15


Here's another short snippet from my upcoming book, Outsourcing God. I hope this starts a conversation or 2. Peace!

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...By now, this attitude of expectancy, commodification, and consumerism has engulfed the church and plays out no different than private companies. Our “church shopping” culture has somehow forced the hands of leaders to play into the power of the executive business models, where we now treat ministry as an assembly line. The more people we can turn on and turn out, the better off we are, the more successful our ministry, the bigger our staff and steeple. It’s a numbers game, and quantity seems to be the driver.

The church, unlike the rest of the world, has often turned the vision and call of being Jesus’ hands and feet to the world, into an executable machine, with certain 10-step programs guaranteed to grow your congregation, grow your collection plate, and if there’s money left over at the end of the month, we’ll even supply the visitors with Jesus mints.

But this isn’t completely a get-rich-quick scheme of the church. Its not an evil plot sought out by seedy church leaders. It’s a deep and interconnected problem that society expects and the church caters to.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Book Excerpt #14


Here's another quick excerpt from my upcoming book, Outsourcing God. In this excerpt we can see the all-to-familiar problem of what outsourcing responsibility and roles within the context of the Church can do the body.

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...It is far too easy for us to parcel out our ministry responsibilities, tasks, and voices to staffed, paid, professionals. We make no distinction between faith and consumerism. And if we’re not careful, we wind up treating our leadership positions as if they were telemarketing firms or IT consultants.

But this doesn’t happen over night. It’s a culmination of culture, movement, laziness, vision, and pace, all working in tandem over time to affect every single aspect of how people see and follow God. Because God is inextricably linked to the way the Church behaves, it ineffectually becomes the same.

This is a conundrum of the Church.



Peace,
Ross

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Book Excerpt #11 (Creating an Orgainic-Rootsy-Network)

Here's another excerpt from my upcoming book, Outsourcing God. Enjoy!


© 2010 Ross Christopher Donaldson.

I’ll be honest; I get tired of hearing leaders explain their gatherings, groups, and organizations, as “organic” and “grassroots.” It’s nauseating actually. Not because the words are overused (which they are), or because they’ve become the cliché leader-words-to-use (which they have), but because most of my experiences have shown nothing organic or grassrootsy at all. Instead, most people use these descriptors any time the facility is less than appealing, old ratty couches are used for seating and considered chic, and the lighting is more than 80% candlelight.

I think these words, in the leadership sense, were intended to describe the ways in which delegation, creation, and implementation were handled. Not the former. I think something truly organic is truly natural. Organic-ness is sans manipulation, sans hype, sans gimmick, and sans fad.

For example, organic foods must be deemed completely natural. A truly organic, free-range, cow eats what grows naturally. It has never seen hormones to beef up the size and speed at which it matures. It roams through natural fields and pastures, and never sets foot in a manipulated feed lot. When finally butchered, the cow is typically smaller and cost more to produce; but the harvest is natural, sustainable, and good. The harvest is organic. (and now I’m hungry for a T-bone)

In the same way, a church, organization, or group that spends less time with gimmicks, manipulation, and hype; in the long run, will be more honest, real, and healthy. The truly organic church, organization, or group will build a network that works, because it will rise and fall together, experience triumph and pain together, and will win and lose together.

The real quest though, is how to create this type of organic-rootsy-network environment. As natural as it is, and should be to create (or re-create), is unfortunately something of a mystery. It’s a mystery because it has become counter cultural. The mainstream culture pushes hype and manipulation all day long. And they do this, because it works – for a while.

I recently read that the average American sees more than 3,000 advertisements each day. That’s 3,000 times each and every day, a company or organization is trying to push their products, goods, and desires (driven by stockholders, payrolls, and agendas) on you and I, the consumer. They have appropriately named this, push-marketing. However, you and I the consumer hate to be marketed to! We may not verbalize it, but deep down inside we want to eat a Krispy Kreme because we like and desire Krispy Kreme’s; not because an advertising firm duped us into consuming a days worth of calories in one mid-morning snack.

Now use that reasoning on your church or your organization or your group. How much money, time, and effort have been put in creating a marketable experience or program? Were there payoffs? Sure there were. Were they maintainable? Are they still sustaining? Some yes. Some no.

Now consider your closest inner-circle of friends and family. How long have you been tight, real, and authentic? How many dollars did you spend to win their affection? What types of programs did you create and morph to sustain these friendships or kinship's? Most likely (and hopefully) none. Rather, you gave your all – your secrets, dirty laundry, honesty, and ear – and the outcome is priceless and irreplaceable.

These are the types of organic-rootsy-networks that are needed. They begin with you. You must become more transparent, more willing to relinquish power and fame, more honest and vulnerable, and give more time. You are now (as an individual) part of the collective. It will not all be up’s, up’s, and more up’s. But it will be honest, real, and sustainable.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Book Excerpt #9 (Leading Out of the Gray)

Here's another quick look inside my upcoming book, Outsourcing God. Enjoy!

©2010 Ross Christopher Donaldson.

To those of us that currently call ourselves leaders…here’s permission to not always having the answer. If you don’t feel permission to leave things a bit unhinged and untidy, I’m sorry. It’s the nature of the beast – plus it feels good when we/I have all of the (right) answers. I quickly gain public persona and become the _________ answer man (you fill in the blank).

I tend to believe however, that Christ came to demonstrate a new type of leadership. His new leadership is completely counter-cultural that it leads people to scoff terms like radical, crazy, otherworldly, revolutionary, and un-realistic. But what we know of Christ is that he rarely did things in the assumed way.

When He should have ridden a stallion, He rides the colt of a donkey. When He can raise a legion of furious militant angels, He turns His cheek and remains silent. When He has the power to assemble the most just and righteous government known to man, He instead compels young fisherman to take up His cause. Jesus does little in the likeness of your standard leadership self-help books and gurus, but Jesus taught a better and holy way.

Jesus, our model leader, was asked a slew of questions throughout his three-year ministry, and from the four gospels, he responded over 50 times with questions – not answers. Jesus spoke often through the use of parables: quick, pithy, succinct questions or stories that strengthened the community by fostering deeper thought and conversation. Perhaps our response should be similar...

...It seems like in a world where people gravitate to either black or white; Jesus poses a question to blend the two. We all know our friends that see the world in total black and white. There’s no middle ground. It escapes nothing. Not politics. Not sports. Not foods. Not entertainment. Not religion. And in this world that is painted in stark contrast, Jesus is leading out of the gray.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Book Excerpt #7 (Leadership)


Here's another quick look inside my book, Outsourcing God. This excerpt focuses on leadership (hints the title of today's blog). Enjoy!

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For far too long, the lines between leadership and servanthood have stood between a cohesive working relationship. Unfortunately, both are necessary to successful leadership – not only in idea, but also in biblical foundation and mandate. We’ll begin with a biblical/historical view and call to leadership. From there we’ll compare styles and methodologies, and will finally move to concrete action points.

Our concepts regarding leadership have been altered from community to community, and culture to culture. And depending on which leadership guru you prescribe, you practice the one and only method of effective leadership. Whereas there may be comfort in such methods, you may be squelching the very essence that makes leadership work.

Because we’ve often made leadership an either/or person-type, we quickly outsource these roles and responsibilities to only a handful of the Kingdom-bearers. We miss opportunity after opportunity because of the way(s) culture have influenced our decisions and the way we gravitate towards certain people with certain qualities, while neglecting others that contribute greatly to the overall body.

We condition our individual roles from birth and before we realize it, our paths have been chosen. But it doesn’t have to remain like that!

© 2010 Ross Christopher Donaldson. Outsourcing God.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


Peace,
Ross