The Next-Wave Ezine: Issue #81

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How Not to Pick a Fight
 
 
Recently I was invited to speak to a group of church workers gathered to discuss the future of the church. My assigned topic was ‘Incarnational v Attractional Mission’, a subject I normally tread fairly carefully around as I believe truth is rarely found in extreme positions.

I was allowed only 500 words for my paper – pretty tricky to do the topic justice in that space. So, although I don’t like to offend, I figured I would just launch a few ‘philosophical hand grenades’ and then stand back and let the biffo begin. Here’s what I wrote:

Incarnational versus Attractional Mission

Over the last 7 or 8 years I have become increasingly convinced that the incarnation is the primary biblical lens through which we are to view the missionary activity of Jesus and in turn the church. When ‘the word became flesh and moved into the neighbourhood’ he had many options as to how he would live his life as the ‘son of God’. Yet, somewhat paradoxically it would seem, he spent most of that journey quite intentionally as the ‘son of man’, living a simple life in a small town for his first 30 years, prior to any recognised ‘ministry’. So much so that when he returned to preach the people laughed and mocked him saying ‘He’s just a carpenter… Mary’s boy… Who does he think he is?’ It begs the question, was Jesus a lousy missionary or was there something quite intentional and radically subversive about the way he approached his life and mission that we need to learn from and emulate? If Jesus were alive today and his mission was still to ‘seek out and save the lost’ what might he do?…

Would he hire a building, set up a sound system, develop a music team, drama team, and then do local letterbox drops advising people that they could come and be part of his church on Sunday? Frankly I don’t believe this approach to mission would rate a blip on his strategic radar. The so called ‘attractional’ mode of mission centres its focus on the church service and is dedicated to producing an event that pagans will want to come to. The theory goes that the more professional the service is, the funkier the music, the better the coffee, and so on… the more likely the punters will come, hence the term ‘attractional’. As such the success of mission in this mode is almost always measured by the number who attend on Sunday. While a small minority of larger churches do experience some success with this approach, the overwhelming majority of smaller churches attempting to be Hillsong clones continue to haemorrhage members every week because they cannot offer the same quality of music, preaching or other services that their mega-mall comrades down the road are able to provide.

I would argue that this ‘attractional mission’, while effective for a few, is actually a case of putting the cart before the horse. Deciding on a form of church and then trying to make it so that people want to come is mission in reverse. There is a growing awareness that pagan Aussies do not want to come to church and simply making the Sunday event more attractive is not the answer to this problem. Perhaps the question we ought to ask ourselves is ‘why do we think they would want to come to church?’ Was it ever Jesus’ intention that non-Christians should seek us and desire to attend our worship events? Or didn’t he say quite clearly that it was his calling, and now ours to ‘seek out and save the lost’ to ‘go’ to their world and enculturate the gospel there. Little Bo Peep evangelism (leave em alone and they’ll come home) is fast running out of steam as the Christian story ceases to be the dominant framework for Australian people to interpret their spirituality.

By contrast the incarnational approach to mission is refreshingly simple. It requires us to live amongst the people in our communities, love them, share the good news of the kingdom both in action and in speech and then as people become followers of Christ to form up indigenous communities of faith that reflect the specific context. This requires no great resources or buildings, no slick marketing plans and no highly talented people. In incarnational mission the gatherings exist to support the believers as they move out in mission rather than being seen as the place to bring people to. While attractional churches will continue to dominate the landscape of the Christian world, I strongly believe that hope for the future lies increasingly with an incarnational approach to mission that takes both gospel and context seriously and sends Christians out as missionaries rather than calling pagans to come and attend church.

--------------

Funnily enough the conversation after I had presented this paper was amiable and even a tad subdued. There was little conflict and little engagement with the issues associated.

What’s it say?

Did everybody buy what I was saying?

Nope. But, what I can tell you is this; if you want to start an open debate it may be better to do it by questioning and subversion than by full frontal assaults. Most people don’t like conflict and most people will shy from more aggressive words. Very few people will feel confident enough to take on a presenter in a public forum, but skilfully presented ideas might open up some engaging debate.

Live and learn.


Andrew Hamilton
writes from Western Australia where he and a group of friends dream of creating a gutsy missional community that will connect with Australian people and share the story of Jesus in ways that are engaging and compelling.

 

 


RECENT COMMENTS


thank for the great work your doing,i would like to host you here in Ugandamplease for more visit my page,www.newcreation.homestead.com


thanks for all you are doing please. am a senior pastor and a founder of world possessors ministry Kampala uganda and a missionary to nations like Kenya Tanzania Rwanda Malawi please i love to make a relationship with you in ministry here in Uganda. we love and pray for your ministry please. stay blessed henry


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Next-Wave Ezine - Issue #81
Editorial
 
Issue Credits
 
 
Cover Story

Becoming Convergent
 
 
Featured Article: At the Top
Flood Raises Dead, responding to Katrina
 
 
Church Planting
Chronicles of Church Planting: 80% failure rate
 
 
Emerging Church
The Naked Preacher
 
The Cowardly Preacher?
 
Brian McLaren is the real thing...
 
How Not to Pick a Fight
 
Reality Church
 
Postmodern Black Church (or a church where a Negro can feel at home): A thought experiment on being a Missional Negro Christian
 
 
Culture
Creativity, the blessed curse
 
Thank You, Pat Robertson
 
 
Spirituality
Oxymoronic Faith
 
Prayer-worthy
 
On hope
 
When I really hate religion
 
 
Reviews
Through Painted Deserts by Donald Miller
 
 
Kingdom Living
From Tithing to Timething (part 1)
 
risk
 
From Tithing to Timething (part 2)
 
 
From the Archives
The Consumer Church
 
 
Events
Generous Orthodoxy