Wednesday, January 17, 2007

The Conversation: Part One

I’ve started a conversation with a new friend on the “Christianity vs. Christian Spirituality” series I posted. I thought some of you might be interested in the dialogue. My new friend has some great insights into the subject and the conversation is thought provoking. Let me know what you think on the subject.

On the post-modern problem:

My Friend: “I also understand your position of starting a place like Tapestry Belltown, because many are repelled all together from the mainstream church. Sometimes the best way is to start over and lead by example…but I also get frustrated at the post-modern views that the western church has it all wrong. I think both sides have something to bring to the table.”


Joshua (Me): Although it may be hard to believe, I mostly agree with you on this issue! I do not advocate separating from the “mainstream church” in every situation, and I’m not a fan of the post-modern movement. In my opinion, the post-modern movement is nothing more than mainstream Christianity with a paint job. They paint the walls neutral tones, offer emo worship, light a few candle, curse a bit more, and use real wine for communion then call themselves post-modern. In addition, I don’t agree with, or appreciate their desire to through out the tradition church. However, I do believe the that the western church has lost sight of Christ’s heart.

I have an uncle who works with, and is part of the “who’s who” Christian world. He circumvents the globe multiple times a year, and consults the church at large. I only say this because he is a trusted voice in my life and in the lives of some very influence people in the Christian community whom I respect. Much of his research sits on the desks of pastors worldwide. I’ve had many conversations with my uncle and many like him about this very issue. The common theme of conversation is this; the western church is completely lost. The international Christian community is now targeting the west for missions. The church is growing at staggering rates worldwide, but is drastically declining in the west. We’re opening a couple thousand churches a year in the U.S., but we’re closing several thousand. The decline is widely attributed to poor leadership, and apathetic believers. Christians in the west are so tied to their institutions; they’ve lost sight of being the church and reaching the world surrounding them. People are blindly following leaders who are leading them to nothing.

I will never separate from the “mainstream” church, but if I have to separate from the institution to accomplish the work of the kingdom, I will. Sadly, after countless conversations with countless pastors, I don’t see much hope for the institution. George Barna recently said that he believes the majority of mainstream church institutions will close their doors in the next 15 to 20 years. I don’t know if this is true or not, but what I do know is that the numbers continue to point in this direction.

To be honest, in my opinion, there is no such thing as the mainstream church. If we were to accurately describe the situation, we would call it the “Institution of the past.” The church is simply the church. Some of the church is wrapped up in the institution, and part of it is not. I love the church, but I don’t believe the institution can be retrofitted to be relevant again. Subsequently, I think the institution will soon be replaced, and many professing Christians will be lost, because they have no home.

If the church that is wrapped up in the institution is to be saved, it will take people who are willing to remain in the institution to be voices of change. The institution will go, but the church can be saved. In fact, much of my vision for Tapestry is rooted in this belief.

Tapestry is not an attempt to start a post-modern church, it’s not about being “emerging,” it’s not about being “progressive,” or anything of the sort. Tapestry is a result of exegeting an urban culture and finding ways to reach that culture for Christ. Seattle is the most unchurched city in the country, has the highest homosexual population pre-capita in the U.S, and is home to more dogs than children or Christians. In addition Seattle is less than 7% “churched, and the Belltown district is even worse. Belltown is Sodom and we have to find new ways to present Christ in one of the only remaining pre-Christian cultures in the country. The church has never taken root in this city and Belltown spits out church planters like a trucker sucking on sunflower seeds. Because of the extreme nature of our little sub-culture we are in a prime position to help educate the church within the institution of what is headed their direction.


Tapestry is designed to be a “Trusted voice of spiritual and cultural instruction…” We are about taking Christ to an extreme culture, and educating the church on how to do the same. What happens in the urban core will ultimately end up in the suburbs and if the institutionalized church is to survive they will have to adapt to meet the needs of a culture that is headed their direction. If they don’t…….their dead.

2 comments:

ChriS & Yvette Ferguson said...

You blog therefore I comment! Let me start by slapping a High Five to what you aspire to do in Belltown. Cause it feels God led.

Now what's wrong with the Western Church ain't, lights, poetry, arts, or relevance! I like all those things but they are simply changing the whitewhash on the seplchures filled with deadmens bones.

The Western Church desires the approval of the Non-Believing culture. We want to wow them with our crowds in the Mega platforms. Or our coolness in the smaller places. What we need to do is contend for a Church that the Jesus and the Apostles would build. Would Jesus say we need more relevance? Christians in the East have suffered for their faith so only the authentic, hungry believers remain. Those for the entertainment/friendship factor only don't stick around when persecution comes.The church today regardless of titles, style,emergent, or other trappings many just want to see how much like the world we can be and still make it in the Kingdom.

What does the 21ST century church need to be like? A people trying to live the Sermon On The Mount. A people who lay our lives down for those outside of the church and for those in the church. We need to reproduce ourselves. But we should always be asking HIM our we following your plans or are we trying to create a gospel and a God in our own image.

So do we bash the Western Church abandon it? No! We pray, proclaim, and speak to those dry bones. God loves His own the Bible is full of His mercy and judgment. His correction is always out of love.

Secondly with fear and trembling as we plant new churches we ask the Holy Spirit to lead us to not follow in the footsteps of our fathers but to build something that He is building after His design.

Keep blogging...its a new plant form for the voice of a "Belltown Prophet". Keeping praying and keeping expanding the Kingdom of God in Seattle!

ChriS & Yvette Ferguson said...

You blog therefore I comment! Let me start by slapping a High Five to what you aspire to do in Belltown. Cause it feels God led.

Now what's wrong with the Western Church ain't, lights, poetry, arts, or relevance! I like all those things but they are simply changing the whitewhash on the seplchures filled with deadmens bones.

The Western Church desires the approval of the Non-Believing culture. We want to wow them with our crowds in the Mega platforms. Or our coolness in the smaller places. What we need to do is contend for a Church that the Jesus and the Apostles would build. Would Jesus say we need more relevance? Christians in the East have suffered for their faith so only the authentic, hungry believers remain. Those for the entertainment/friendship factor only don't stick around when persecution comes.The church today regardless of titles, style,emergent, or other trappings many just want to see how much like the world we can be and still make it in the Kingdom.

What does the 21ST century church need to be like? A people trying to live the Sermon On The Mount. A people who lay our lives down for those outside of the church and for those in the church. We need to reproduce ourselves. But we should always be asking HIM our we following your plans or are we trying to create a gospel and a God in our own image.

So do we bash the Western Church abandon it? No! We pray, proclaim, and speak to those dry bones. God loves His own the Bible is full of His mercy and judgment. His correction is always out of love.

Secondly with fear and trembling as we plant new churches we ask the Holy Spirit to lead us to not follow in the footsteps of our fathers but to build something that He is building after His design.

Keep blogging...its a new plant form for the voice of a "Belltown Prophet". Keeping praying and keeping expanding the Kingdom of God in Seattle!