The Next-Wave Ezine: Issue #129

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Rabbits on My Mind
 
 
© Halient | Dreamstime.com I have had rabbits on my mind for the past week or so. This past winter we have had a large influx of rabbits all around our home. It would not be unusual to leave the house at 7 a.m. and find 1 or 2 dozen rabbits grazing on our lawns. For this reason, and because of dry weather this past year, the lawn is so dead and so gone I have been thinking about getting rid of it. The entire property is also well fertilized! But this isn't the reason I have been thinking about rabbits.

I am a refugee from "normal" church. Since I closed the church I pastored in Moreno Valley in 1998, I have found it impossible to stick with attendance at a "regular" church. Now, don't misunderstand me. I am still a follower of Jesus, even if I am not a "member" of a church. It seems as though for the past decade I have been on a journey of trying to figure out what it means to follow Jesus outside of the boundaries of a "traditional" church.

It turns out, I am not alone. Research indicates that there are millions of people in the U.S. just like me, who for whatever reason, have left the confines of the "regular" church and have been wandering in the wilderness. An old saying goes, "When the student is ready, the teacher will appear." As a student of church growth for the past twenty years, and a practitioner of traditional church life on a significant level for at least ten years of that, I was ready for Tony and Felity Dale and George Barna's recent book, The Rabbit and the Elephant: Why Small is the New Big for Today's Church. The Rabbit and the Elephant

The Dales', with the able assistance of George Barna, have created a handbook for church life that may appeal to the millions of church dropouts like myself. With the emphasis on the non-hierarchial, non-institutional and Spirit-led community of believers, I know I found myself hungry for this kind of church life.

It is possible that I am projecting my hopes and dreams of recapturing the kind of community I experienced several years ago as a small band of people ministered to skateboarders simply because this is what God "told us to do." I have often said that this ministry experience was the best of my life, no politics, no division, just a focus on what the Spirit was saying and asking us to do. We were experiencing "simple" church and we didn't even know it.

With The Rabbit and the Elephant I now have a theology and a practical guide that has helped me fit all the pieces of the puzzle together. Now I am left with something to do, start a simple church. That should keep me busy while I am waiting for my lawn to grow back and the rabbits to reappear.





Charlie Wear is the publisher of Next-Wave. He and his wife Loretta and son Benjamin live in Moreno Valley, CA.

 


RECENT COMMENTS


I knpw I don't have to remind you of how very important it is to associate with a group of "ugly" people that you can confide in who will help you walk through the daily challenges of life. This why the small group is the best "small" church there is. Unfortunately, small groups are difficult to find, start or join without the larger corporate body of traditional church.


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Next-Wave Ezine - Issue #129
Editorial
 
Issue Credits
 
 
Cover Story

What On Earth Is God Up To?
 
 
Featured Article: At the Top
The Role of Women in the Kingdom of God
 
 
Featured Article: Spotlight
There Is NO Virtual Ecclesia
 
 
From the Publisher
Rabbits on My Mind
 
 
Following Jesus
Avoiding Evidence of Hypocrisy
 
 
Missional
Doubling Down on Jesus
 
 
Culture
Why Public Schools Matter to God (and Should Matter to You Too)
 
 
Theology
Briefly Dispelling the Racist Claims of Luke's Gospel
 
 
ORIGINS
A Planning Meeting Update
 
 
Kingdom Living
Discovering the Secret of A Life that Works
 
 
From the Archives
Third Millenium Church Movements