Joining God, Remaking Church, Changing the World: The New Shape of the Church in Our Time

Joining God, Remaking Church, Changing the World: The New Shape of the Church in Our Time

by Alan J. Roxburgh
Joining God, Remaking Church, Changing the World: The New Shape of the Church in Our Time

Joining God, Remaking Church, Changing the World: The New Shape of the Church in Our Time

by Alan J. Roxburgh

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Overview

Church has changed—this book shows how to follow the Spirit out into the community, and reimagine our mission for the 21st century.
 
The decline in mainstream religious denominations is palpable. For years, the question has been: How can we “fix” the church? With thirty years of experience pastoring congregations in small towns, suburbs, and urban neighborhoods in renewal, Alan J. Roxburg knows that the answer is to instead, embrace the church, reinvigorate communities with the Holy Spirit, and re-engage our neighbors with the mission of God. In this timely perspective on the role of the church in today’s environment, he shows how each one of us can become a leader in that mission.
 
Roxburg distills the best missional wisdom for both clergy and laity alike, and offers concrete steps in transforming individual congregations and society. He sheds light on the troubling history that brought us to this point, and how ecumenically and globally we can implement the simple but necessary steps to build from it. An urgent call for Christians to guide any church—large or small—to becoming a vital center for a new spirituality, Joining God is an invitation “to embark on the journey you always wanted to take” (Philip Clayton, scholar, activist and author of Transforming Christian Theology).
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780819232120
Publisher: Church Publishing Inc.
Publication date: 07/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
Sales rank: 696,832
File size: 321 KB

About the Author

Alan J. Roxburgh is the founder of the Missional Network, a partnership of practitioners and academics who are discerning the shape of the church in changing contexts. The author of more than a dozen books, he has served as a full-time seminary professor and as a priest and redeveloper in small towns, the suburbs, and downtown urban settings. He consults on leadership development and systems change for numerous denominations across North America, Europe, Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. Alan J. Roxburgh is a priest, seminary professor, and internationally respected consultant with more than thirty years’ experience leading congregational and system change. He lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Read an Excerpt

Joining God, Remaking Church, and Changing the World

The New Shape of the Church in Our Time


By Alan J. Roxburgh

Church Publishing Incorporated

Copyright © 2015 Alan J. Roxburgh
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8192-3212-0



CHAPTER 1

The Great Unraveling


My wife loves to knit. I'm bemused as I watch her work. She will knit for hours and then, with a great sigh, unravel a week's worth of knitting. It's hard to watch.

In our story, what is coming undone is the long, cherished tradition of the "Euro-tribal churches" across North America. I use this term with great intention, and I'll take a moment to explain. The churches with which I have worked most closely and the ones with which this book deals most directly are those that trace to the great migrations from the United Kingdom and Europe over the past four to five hundred years, the churches that form the primary Christian groups in the United States and Canada. They created denominations shaped largely by ethnic and religious identities coming out of the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century reformations: Lutherans (Germany and Scandinavia), Episcopalians (England), Presbyterians (Scotland), United Church of Canada (Great Britain), Methodists and Baptists (England), Mennonites (the Netherlands and Germany), and so forth.

To a great extent these denominations were formed and expanded in the context of strong national and ethnic identities. For this reason, I characterize them as tribal and use the phrase Euro-tribal churches. It is important to note, but isn't the subject of this book, that these Euro-tribal churches morphed and created a good number of "made in the Americas" denominations, such as Churches of Christ, Pentecostalism, and indigenous spin-offs like National Baptists or the African Methodist Episcopal Church. These are highly nuanced developments, running alongside the Euro-tribal story. Likewise, it is clear that the Roman Catholic Church, in its own migrations to North America, had to redefine itself as one denomination among many others. For multiple reasons — perhaps because its liturgical tradition and hierarchy better transcend national-cultural identities — it has seemed able to weather the unraveling more cohesively than the Protestant denominations.

For the Euro-tribal churches, the story of this unraveling goes back to the middle of the last century. Sociologist Hugh McLeod explains the lead-up to the breakdown this way:

In the 1940s and 1950s it was still possible to think of western Europe and North America as a "Christendom," in the sense that there were close links between religious and secular elites, that most children were socialized into membership in a Christian society, and that the church had a large presence in fields such as education and welfare, and a major influence on law and morality.


The 1940s and 1950s, while influenced by fears of external threats from Communism, were a golden period for these churches. World War II had been won, the Great Depression was over, democracy was prevailing in the midst of a Cold War. The West was ready to celebrate, to leave behind the hardships of the previous half-century. Most Protestant churches flourished in this environment, where it seemed just about everyone and everything was Christian. These churches symbolized the public and social conscience of the age. They were the government, education, economic, and professional leaders of the nation at worship. Young families embraced the new suburbs, churches filled, and denominations experienced their greatest era of new church development.

In this milieu these churches can hardly be blamed for seeing themselves as the center of society and assuming their proclamations and actions would lead to the redemption and betterment of society. They pursued growth with gusto, expanding new church development, filling seminaries, and extending corporate denominational structures offering cradle-to-grave, branded programs that branched across the continent. Donald Luidens paints this picture:

The corporate denomination "metaphor" ... seems to be an apt representation of the organizational formula that saw the establishment and routinization of religious communions throughout the United States. The wide-open "religious marketplace" in the post-World War II era accelerated the development of this corporate model. Like competing businesses occupying a growing market niche, Protestant denominations around the country routinely perfected their production processes and marketing techniques. In these early years the level of competition was minimal and "success" was widespread. However, over time the religious marketplace became a crowded one, competition grew and success became elusive, which accelerated the transformation of the corporate denomination. ...

[R]eflecting the imperialistic optimism of the age, the corporate model ushered in a worldwide vision for Christian ministry (symbolized in the title of the flagship Protestant journal of this era, the Christian Century). ... The corporate model fuelled, and was in turn fuelled by, a Christianity that was outward-looking and expansionist.


Few were aware of, or prepared for, the earthquakes to come. Just as the young church, after Pentecost, focused on reestablishing God's reign within the narrative of Jerusalem and Judaism and could not see the ways the Spirit was about to unravel most of its assumptions, so the denominations failed to see the massive dislocations into which the Spirit would soon deliver them.

The Protestant story couldn't hold the imagination or desires of post-war generations, so the '60s exploded like a socio-cultural-religious Mt. St. Helens. As McLeod observes: "In the religious history of the West these years may come to be seen as marking a rupture as profound as that brought about by the Reformation. ... The 1960s was an international phenomenon."

Throughout North America and Europe, we witnessed the Baby Boom, rising economic possibilities for huge swaths of the public, the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War, the Sexual Revolution, the emergence of the self as the central source of meaning. Along with these came the Human Potential Movement, the Women's Movement, a shrinking world with expanded religious options, the end of National Service in the United Kingdom, the expansion of higher education from elites to the middle classes, the suburbanization of society, and the proliferation of new media.

The changes went on and on, and their impact was massive and unexpected. Like the Babylonian captivity or the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE, these events resulted in massive dislocation. The churches were thrown into a world for which they were unprepared. The natural instinct is to fix what is broken and to get back to the stability and predictability they had known. But that world had been torn up.

By the late 1960s numerical growth for the mainline denominations had come to a screeching halt. Despite warnings from observers of culture such as Peter Berger and Gibson Winter, the churches were largely unprepared. They continued expanding national staff, building national headquarters, and marketing their branded programs.

Protestant churches have only continued to lose their place in the emerging cultural milieu. If anything, the change has picked up pace, unabated, over the proceeding decades. Despite claims that conservative, evangelical churches had found the secret to growth, there is now sufficient evidence that the primary reason conservative churches grew was defections from mainline churches. The conservative Protestant churches have experienced their own unraveling tsunami, just a little later.

This unraveling has manifested most keenly as a progressive loss of connection between the churches and the generations that emerged from the 1960s onward. Here are some illustrations:

• If you were born between 1925 and 1945, there is a 60 percent chance you are in church today.

• If you were born between 1946 and 1964, there is a 40 percent chance you are in church today.

• If you were born between 1965 and 1983, there is a 20 percent chance you are in church today.

• If you were born after 1984, there is less than a 10 percent chance you are in church today.


Good News in Unlikely Places

Ultimately, it is my strong contention that the Spirit has been at work in this long unraveling. The Spirit is inviting these churches to embrace a new imagination, but the other one had to unravel for us to see it for what it was. In this sense the malaise of our churches has been the work of God. Allow me to spell out several implications for this proposal:

FIRST: If the Spirit has been at work in this long unraveling, then God is not done with the Euro-tribal, Protestant churches. In Scripture places of unraveling were preludes to God shaping a new future for God's people. For instance, the persecutions of Acts 8 precipitated a profoundly different church from the one the disciples imagined after Pentecost.

SECOND: We are not in a contemporary or temporary "exile." Such language made sense to a generation that came to leadership in the 1970s, but for the generations that followed, this is not some strange exilic land. Exile language is tinged with the eventuality that there's a way back. In truth, there is no returning, no going back. We are in a new location, a land many people call home, and so the churches must ask very different questions. Exile questions about how to fix and make the church work again won't help us to discern the Spirit.

THIRD: This space of unraveling is a space of hope. We are witnessing the Spirit preparing us for a new chapter in the story of God's mission. Our churches are at the end of a way of being God's people and at the beginning of something significantly different. It involves our awakening to an invitation that is not about fixing the church but a journey of exploration.

FOURTH: In this journey we are experiencing dislocation. More than adjustment, major change is required. The Spirit's invitation requires risk-taking, as we try on practices that will seem strange and awkward at first. It will ask us to change our basic sense of where God is at work. It will change our ideas about the location of God's actions.

FIFTH: We are embarking on a shared journey to discern what the Spirit is up to ahead of us in our neighborhoods and to join God in these places. How do we discern together? How do we join with God? How will this joining require us to be changed as a gathered people?

SIXTH: Like all new journeys we will need new ways of traveling. For Christians these ways are called practices. The final chapters of this book will explore several of them.


For these six reasons and lots more, I think the unraveling is God's good news for us. This is not the first time the Spirit has substantially disrupted the established patterns of the church's practice and place in a culture, and it will not be the last. Old Testament and New Testament examples abound. In addition, think of the disruption that happened when Christianity was formally designated the official religion of the Roman Empire — that dislocation led to the initiation of a rich desert monastic tradition. By the fifth and sixth centuries, Europe was in a period of massive social dislocation, and it sparked the emergence of new movements like the Celtic missionaries of the British Isles.

When I propose to groups that the great unraveling we're experiencing should be treated as an opportunity, and even as the work of the Spirit, the responses take several shapes. First, people reluctantly agree with the assessment. Then they take positions of resistance and critique. Many suggest the shifts in imagination and practice proposed in this book are too dramatic to be done in their churches or denominations. This response is understandable, and I don't dismiss it. What is required is a radical shift in the orientation of Christian life in North America.

I've come to this conviction after many years of wrestling with the question of Christian identity in societies rapidly removing the Christian narrative from the center of their lives. I work with denominational leaders of every stripe who tell me their members don't know how the Christian story forms a coherent narrative about what God is up to in the world or how we form our lives around it. As one bishop shared recently, his gut wrenches after visiting congregations and clergy. They know how to be kind and caring, but they don't know the Christian story. Congregants glue fragments of the story together with other bits from the media or latest trends in spirituality and self-help to blend their own, ever-shifting amalgam of beliefs and practices. There is a cry for discipleship programs or workshops to fix it all, but the problem lies at a much deeper level. The unraveling will not be resolved from within current assumptions about being God's people.

While I am not proposing the end of our churches or our traditions, congregational life and the role of clergy has to dramatically change. Congregations will still be the vital center where God's mission is worked out in our cities, towns, and villages. They are not going away. The unraveling is about a remaking of the church. This remaking is already underway.


The Unraveling Image

Because I have seen the resistance to the image of "unraveling," I want to spend a moment explaining why I think it's so crucial to understanding this stage in churches' lives.


Unraveling is a natural part of life.

Ways of life unravel over time. My wife travels to Ontario from Vancouver several times a year, and the trips increase as her parents age into their late nineties. With each visit Jane sees her mom and dad losing capacities they once took for granted. They once loved traveling, but it's too difficult for them to fly no matter how easy we try to make it. Painful as it is to watch, we know it is natural and appropriate. They are aging, they are changing, and our life with them is unraveling.

When my granddaughter Maddie was born in 2007, someone crocheted a baby blanket for her. Maddie and the blanket became inseparable. Over the years "Blanky" has gone through the washer and dryer more times than anyone can remember. Thanks to all those cycles, Blanky is irrevocably coming apart. My wife and daughter have tried to sew the fraying edges back together, but they won't win this one. Recently, ominous holes have appeared in the middle. Blanky is unraveling.

None of us celebrate this. Blanky has been a vital part of Maddie's growing up, especially when her mom was battling cancer. There is security, history, comfort, warmth, and just plain normalcy about having Blanky around, and we would like to fix the holes. But Maddie will soon have to adapt to life without Blanky by her side.


The new wine needs new wineskins.

It is not that the ways we have been God's people were wrong. They were developed for another time, and now they are fraying, stretched and torn in the midst of massive social change. This was, in part, why Jesus spoke of wineskins and new wine (Matthew 9:16–17). He did not say we need to throw away our traditions. If we know anything about wine, we know the new wine isn't always great. Good wine needs to sit for years before it matures and is ready to be enjoyed. But sometimes wineskins lose their capacity to stretch.

What I have to say is far from a simplistic celebration of the new. It's not a call to embrace the latest and greatest fads in worship or clergy training. But our imaginations as Christians got stuck in particular ways of being God's people. We have poured our energy into trying to repair the old wineskins, while the Spirit was pointing us in a different direction.


Unraveling must inspire more than grief.

Ours is not just any unraveling: it is a great unraveling, for something precious and enormously important to us has come apart and can no longer be woven back together. Those church traditions emanating from the European reformations have nurtured and shaped our imaginations for more than four centuries, and that imagination has in turn shaped a whole way of life, given us our identities, and provided us with ways of reading and navigating worlds. This precious heritage has had a long run near the center of Western societies.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Joining God, Remaking Church, and Changing the World by Alan J. Roxburgh. Copyright © 2015 Alan J. Roxburgh. Excerpted by permission of Church Publishing Incorporated.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction,
Part I,
1. The Great Unraveling,
2. Reactions to the Unraveling (or "What Have We Done?"),
3. Four Misdirecting Narratives (or "Why Have We Done It?"),
4. God at the Center (or "Who Is Really in Control?"),
Part II,
5. Practicing the Journey,
6. Practice 1 — Listening,
7. Practice 2 — Discerning,
8. Practice 3 — Testing and Experimenting,
9. Practice 4 — Reflecting,
10. Practice 5 — Deciding,
11. Bypassing the Roadblocks,
Conclusion,

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Alan Roxburgh offers deep hope and concrete steps forward for churches struggling with life in a post-Christian culture. By entering more deeply into the stories of the Bible, our own stories, and the lives of our neighbors, we join God’s life in the world. This is one of the most helpful books I have read, full of clear analysis and practical wisdom."
—Dwight Zscheile, associate professor of congregational mission and leadership at Luther Seminary and author of People of the Way and The Agile Church


"Joining God invites you to embark on the journey you always wanted to take. In this book you will find: Courage: Alan Roxburgh is unafraid to admit the unraveling of what we’ve been and calls us to move into new places. Faith: The Spirit is going ahead of us into our neighborhoods. Ancient/future: The answer isn’t flashy promotions but deeper discipleship and community. Hope: When we dare to move outside our walls, we’ll find work to do and our calling renewed."
—Philip Clayton, scholar, activist and author of Transforming Christian Theology


"Drawing on his years of experience with missional church theology and practice, Roxburgh outlines our attempts to end church decline and opens up fresh vision: What if the unraveling of the church is God’s way of leading us out of bondage to American culture into God’s new Exodus? What if God is inviting us to shift our focus and to discern and join God’s presence and work in our neighborhoods? This book outlines practical steps congregations can embrace to experiment with this new/old way of living the Gospel locally. Engaging these practices will not be easy. And learning from God and neighbors how to participate in local missional experiments might actually transform both congregations and society. Don’t just read this book … gather a group to experiment with this “way” in practice!"
—Gordon Scruton, Retired Bishop of the Diocese of Western Massachusetts


"Drawing on his work as a consultant, researcher, sociologist and teacher, Roxburgh invites congregations to build bridges between their churches and their neighborhoods. He outlines a way for congregations to reclaim their apostolic roots, a process that is rooted in scripture and grounded in prayer. His is a challenge to be faithful to the Gospel and to reap the benefits of commitment and creativity."
—Mark Beckwith, Bishop of the Diocese of Newark

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