blogger

11 Nov 2006

"I still hold out hope that one day the wind will change back."
adapted from an article written by Ron McGatlin 

"I still hold out hope that one day the wind will change back."

what is church ministry?
  • Grow in numbers?
  • Improve its activities and services?
  • Perform benevolent acts?
  • Have greater prosperity?
  • Do more and better evangelism?
  • To heal people physically, emotionally, and spiritually?
These are a few examples of the results of the ecclesia (church), but they are not the goal. The goal is Christ dwelling among his people, who as a result mature with his character and nature, in the world, producing God’s kingdom and righteousness.
  • This is the work of his Spirit and not a work of our efforts (Romans 8:11; Galatians 5:22)
  • The love of Christ flowing from a pure heart is the most powerful world changing force.  Fear, pride, lust, greed, envy, and every evil work can be overpowered by love from a pure hearted people touching and changing our household and those who abide within then spilling out to the world (1 Timothy 1:5).
embracing the original goals
The love and gifts flowing through relationship are becoming the primary structure replacing institutional structure (e.g. intimacy with God, Father's love, "Christ in you", transformation, reformation, church without walls, etc).

We are learning that we do not "go to church" nor "join a church", but we are "added to the church". We are the church. In a way christians are taught about the church being a 'priesthood of the believer'.  However, we have not fully acted upon this understanding. The gap between the officials (pastor, priest, elders, bishop, etc) and the ordinary person continues to prevent us from fully enabling the priesthood of all believers.
 
systems, not the church will end
In the confusion of transition some think anarchy and rebellion are coming against the church and attempting to throw off leadership (e.g pastors and elders). If there are, they are wrong. The new paradigm will bring forth many times more gifted men and women who have in the passing systems been relegated to pew sitting, or limited jobs.

leadership and headship differences
There is one human head of the ecclesia (church). No one man stands as head over the church, local, regionally, or universally. No priest, pastor, or pope.  Nor does anyone represent the head to the mature believers.  The head is Christ Jesus.

Leadership simply means those further down the road on which we all are walking. The mature lead the immature until they are matured, then they lead other immature people, in turn.  How? By helping people to clearly hear God and live as he asks.

The term the bible uses is elder.  An elder has nothing to do with an office or official role. Elders lead by example, training and assisting the immature.  Elders:
  • shepherd and oversee
  • allow people to observe them and their lives, then
  • release the maturing disciples to do the work while they watch, then
  • leave them to do the work, themself now considered mature, an elder
don't to be mislead
  • by reactions of people who fear losing the systems that have served them for so long, or
  • by those who attempt to repackage the passing system practices with new labels
  • by worring about where people gather, for our man-made traditions work whatever the venue (e.g. traditional church, a house, at work).
The move is about Christ truly becoming the head in a practical real way and not just in word only.

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