Fomenting a Missional Revolution

A college president recently opened a can of worms in speaking of changing music on a “missional level.” I’m not sure what he meant by that, but “missional” is not going away. It is not easily toppled as some critics have imagined. I have read articles and heard sermons on “missional” which left me puzzled and convinced that many opponents have never been involved with a heterogeneous church or engaged in extensive cross-cultural ministry.

Much time is spent in libraries doing research to find something to use against something disliked. This is especially true when one starts from the perspective that “missional” is bad and needs to be exposed and avoided. The critics then cite sources and employ the worst representatives and distortions to prove their point. For some, “missional” sounds too new age or emergent or associated with the compromise of the social gospel. Surely there is something in “missional” for everyone to dislike, and aberrations can easily be found.

What I hope to accomplish in this brief article is a simple reflection on the validity of churches and Christians adopting a missional stance regarding those who are outside the church and who are in desperate need of an encounter with followers of Jesus Christ. Many churches are mission-minded. They love missions. They support missionaries. They even allow missionaries to plant churches that reflect the culture and community in which missionaries live. Yet often they themselves remain locked in a cultural time-warp, fight battles that were won or lost long ago, debate issues that matter little or matter only to them and their regional or relational sub-culture, and ignore the enormous changes in our society and the challenges we face in reaching people for Christ with the gospel. Disagree if you must with missional churches, but do something to get out of the religious ghetto where you have lost contact with the world and get out of your office occasionally to be on mission rather than on management.

I am not surprised that missional movements have become the whipping post for those who are experts on just about everything. I am surprised that after stating their distaste and opposition, they won’t let it go but will beat what for them is a dead horse.

To understand what it means to be missional, we must distinguish among different phases in our collective history. Many still remember the days when Christian churches were dominant in North America, at the center of society so to speak, places of influence, and when the majority of people to whom the church spoke had elements of a Christian worldview. People of other faiths were known mostly at a distance. Other religions were less visible. We often refer to this as Christendom—where people often spoke, rightly or wrongly, of a Christian nation. Times have changed. We now live in another phase, in another place occupied by competing worldviews. Christianity now competes with other faiths for a place in our society. If Christianity was one time at the center of society, it now occupies the fringes and has been marginalized. Immigration has changed our demographics. The people we meet every day are less biblically aware and have had little exposure to what it means to be truly Christian. They have not been raised in a Christian environment, and Christianity is simply one way among many. Although we possess the changeless gospel to confront a changing world, there is little contact with the culture at large, and preaching the gospel comes to mean Sunday morning sermons for the faithful.

Christians themselves must bear at least some of the responsibility for the present situation. Many churches fled the cities over the last few decades to find suburban refuge. In leaving the cities they left places of influence. Many of the decisions and direction of our society take place in cities where we find institutions of higher learning and government which influence culture through ideas and through legislation. As churches fled cities, Christian influence waned as believers retreated from dark places in need of a gospel witness. Churches built large and impressive suburban ministries. These ministries were fed by a steady stream of Christians moving into the suburbs. Many churches grew by adding displaced Christians, and most evangelism was done by bringing in evangelists for special meetings or by impersonal confrontation. Churches started Christian schools to protect their children from the ungodly influences in public schools. The Christian Right became an ally of political parties and many churches all-too-quickly jumped on political bandwagons which further estranged them from the poor, the oppressed, and the downtrodden. Christians who left cities to avoid the ghettos created their own ghettoized form of rabbit-hole Christianity.

Separatism became the hallmark of many churches, which created an enclave mentality, cutting off believers from contact with outsiders. Lists of regulations were established analogous to what we find in Colossians—“Do not handle. Do not taste. Do not touch” (2:21). Churches which were not supposed to be “of the world” were no longer truly “in the world.” Christian sub-cultures were created which in the end removed salt and light from society. Churches became havens of rest for Christians alienated from their communities and relatively untroubled by the turmoil of life outside. The building became the church and the center of activity while the people of God grew comfortable and passive in the institutions that now existed primarily for the benefit of those who were already believers. These churches, to their credit, often gave heavily to foreign missions and were known as mission-minded churches. But “mission became only one of the many programs of the church” (Darrell L. Guder, Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America, Eerdmans, 1998, p. 6). Churches saw themselves as sending churches rather than seeing the church as sent into the world.

The present decline of Christian influence and a fortress mentality cannot be reversed overnight. There is no utopian redemption for our cities. There is no reversal for the moral decay and corruption of our society apart from divine intervention. Yet there is redemption and transformation of lives through the gospel of Jesus Christ. This is what it means to be missional! There is hope for the hopeless, help for the helpless. Believers can be salt and light in government, in institutions of higher learning, in public schools, and in community organizations. God’s answer for the sins and ills of our society is the glorious gospel of grace. Churches know this but without contact with the world, without returning to the dense and diverse populations of our cities, there is little reason to hope for substantive change.

Christians, churches, and para-church organizations can continue to make resolutions which are mostly defensive in nature, often out-of-touch with reality, and filled with Christian jargon or they can commit to a missional engagement as the sent people of God in taking the gospel to those presently outside our reach. They can continue to fear contamination by association with outsiders or begin to build redemptive relationships with outsiders. They can continue to make extra-biblical lists of how faithful Christians should look, act, and dress or they can humbly depend on the Holy Spirit to transform lives and change practices. They can continue to avoid addressing social injustice or they can raise a prophetic voice against evil in its variegated forms and seek to alleviate human suffering as a legitimate implication of transformative gospel ministry. They can continue to fight among themselves for the inconsequential and irresolvable or they can turn their weapons of warfare to pull down enemy strongholds. They can continue to use their resources mostly to sustain their institutions and maintain the status quo or they can invest in planting new churches in cities enveloped in darkness. They can continue to invent new applications of unbiblical separation from brothers in Christ or pursue gospel-centered biblical unity. They can continue to argue over who should speak where or they can graciously disagree and let churches and schools follow the Lord’s leading.

Many churches will not be able to make the transition from being merely mission-minded, that is, caring about missions, to becoming radically missional. Thankfully, in spite of not being able to cross over, God in His good pleasure will deign to use them in His own way for His glory. Sadly, some of these churches will continue their decline as they remain unable or unwilling to engage the new realities of our day; some will continue to receive a stream or trickle of new members who were Christianized elsewhere and added to membership rolls; hopefully some might invest in planting churches, particularly in urban areas, which remain faithful to Scripture and effective in blending cross-cultural ministry and counter-cultural living.

We are living in unusual and challenging times in uncharted territory. Do we remain faithful, few, and fixed in place, or do we faithfully go to Jesus who stands outside the camp (Heb. 13:13)? We may be safe behind the walls we construct but need to peer over the edges and see where Jesus is, with the outsiders, and join Him there. It’s time to look around and see that Jesus has left the room. He is outside many movements and ministries which serve mostly as a fortress against the world. It is time to leave the artificial safety of the fortress and encounter the world with the good news of God’s expansive grace.

Discussion

[Bob T.] The first missional churches were here in California. We have the Mission San Juan Capistrano, Mission San Diego, Mission Santa Barbara, and some others. They were established by the Roman Catholics. It was an effort to change the established culture and win many to the Christianity of Catholicism.

Today the term Missional stands between Feldergarb and Bobilygook. However, it may be a term out of which seminaries can build another D.Min. major with all sorts of courses and research papers.

Meanwhile, the evangelistic churches will keep on with soul winning and establishing new churches.

In case some are not familiar with the meaning of evangelistic, it has to do with that old fashioned gospel. You know, all men are sinners and Christ died for their sins. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved.

Reminds me of a Pastors meeting here in So.CA. at Pine Summit at about 1985. A “missiologist” was talking about the need for churches to culturalize and change music, methods, and vision to reach the younger generation. One Pastor raised his hand and said; “we already have many churches in the area doing that - their called Calvary Chapels. He was right. The great awakening of the West coast brought about a whole new group of churches called Calvary Chapels. Thousands were converted and discipled.

There are many varieties of established evangelistic churches. They range from the IFB churches, Charismatics, and seeker churches. They have different methods for different cultures, sub cultures, and locales. Some have poor theology. Some compromise in many ways. But many are very effective.

MISSIONAL = Soul winning.

Soul winning = Discipleship

Discipleship = Matt. 28:16-20

Matt. 28:16-20 = The great commission

Commission = Missional

We have had that kind of missional for a long time.

The new Missional belongs with the other replacement terms we are now using such as mentoring, Vision Casting, Purpose philosophy, spiritual formation, and others. Anytime we use a word and then have to figure out what it means we should ask if it is even the best word to use. Perhaps we need to be more specific in our wording.
You might be right about the term but I think it will be around for a while. And will have to be defined - like all terms - like “soulwinning” which is often decisionism. Missional is not mostly a call to anything new. It is more a return to the commission as given by Jesus but in a new arena with the church at the margins of society and often inwardly focused. Missional is a greater intentionality in engaging people with the gospel rather than avoiding lost people for fear of contamination. It is less focused on maintaining the status quo with most church programs and resources geared toward toward the gathered rather than going. It is undeniable with some rare exceptions that the majority of churches do maintenance better than mission. Missional is a call back to our NT roots of going into the world with the gospel and not waiting for people to find us or attend a church program. Again it is more intentional in evangelism AND discipleship than what we have seen in the last decades in preparing Christians to get into people’s lives. And it is not afraid to take risks or make mistakes. You go to your average church and ask members how many lost friends they have with whom they have any significant contact, when was the last time they invited a lost person to their home for a meal rather than just inviting them to church, and ask the church what percentage of its resources are for member care and outreach. Then determine if they need a dose of missional.

[Steve Davis]

You might be right about the term but I think it will be around for a while. And will have to be defined - like all terms - like “soulwinning” which is often decisionism. Missional is not mostly a call to anything new. It is more a return to the commission as given by Jesus but in a new arena with the church at the margins of society and often inwardly focused. Missional is a greater intentionality in engaging people with the gospel rather than avoiding lost people for fear of contamination. It is less focused on maintaining the status quo with most church programs and resources geared toward toward the gathered rather than going. It is undeniable with some rare exceptions that the majority of churches do maintenance better than mission. Missional is a call back to our NT roots of going into the world with the gospel and not waiting for people to find us or attend a church program. Again it is more intentional in evangelism AND discipleship than what we have seen in the last decades in preparing Christians to get into people’s lives. And it is not afraid to take risks or make mistakes. You go to your average church and ask members how many lost friends they have with whom they have any significant contact, when was the last time they invited a lost person to their home for a meal rather than just inviting them to church, and ask the church what percentage of its resources are for member care and outreach. Then determine if they need a dose of missional.
See. I knew you could do it. Now I know (basically) what you mean by missional.

My Blog: http://dearreaderblog.com

Cor meum tibi offero Domine prompte et sincere. ~ John Calvin

Missional is not mostly a call to anything new. It is more a return to the commission as given by Jesus but in a new arena with the church at the margins of society and often inwardly focused. Missional is a greater intentionality in engaging people with the gospel rather than avoiding lost people for fear of contamination. It is less focused on maintaining the status quo with most church programs and resources geared toward toward the gathered rather than going.
This helps alot. The “mostly” part indicates there is some new stuff in there, and some of that may be a problem, but the kernel of “Hey, let’s get more serious about outreach” is a point I can’t—and don’t want to—argue with.

I think I’ll just call it “Getting more serious about outreach,” though. Less potential confusion.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

[Charlie] See. I knew you could do it. Now I know (basically) what you mean by missional.
Again I would refer you and others to Larry Rogier’s article “What is ‘Missional’ ”? http://sharperiron.org/article/what-missional

I gave a few simple off the top of my head thoughts. Larry goes deeper. DBTS did a whole conference on it/against it.

Tim Keller’s article on “The Missional Church” is a must read. I have a hard time taking serious any detractors who are not familiar with this. http://www.redeemer2.com/resources/papers/missional.pdf

Since everyone else has taken their shot at describing/defining “missional,” I’ll take mine. We don’t really use the term much at Downtown Pres, but we are definitely a missional church in the Tim Keller vein. We promote a Christian lifestyle where Christians integrate themselves into the pulse of a community to work for its good and provide a context for evangelism.

So, this could be different than “getting serious about outreach.” A church might try to get serious about outreach by ramping up its door-to-door evangelism program. However, that’s not necessarily missional, because that method of outreach doesn’t presume any long-term involvement of the church in the life of that neighborhood. In college, a church about 45 minutes away from Greenville recruited about 30 college students to do door-to-door outreach on Sunday afternoons. They talked to people and witnessed, but they weren’t missional. Their involvement in those neighborhoods began and ended with a 15-passenger van.

At Downtown Pres, members are encouraged to live, work, shop, and recreate in the downtown area. We patronize downtown artists. We follow downtown community issues. We volunteer in downtown non-profits. Many of our children attend downtown schools. We attend downtown events. We ask ourselves how we can make the downtown area a better place. We have geographically-oriented community groups scattered around the downtown and surrounding area. We are invested in our community.

As far as I know, we have no formal evangelistic programs (though I would support that), but we have lots of visitors every week, many of whom are not practicing Christians. Even though our church isn’t huge (maybe 400) and we’re in a warehouse building on a side street, I hardly go anywhere in the downtown area without meeting someone who knows about us. We have presence because we are present.

My Blog: http://dearreaderblog.com

Cor meum tibi offero Domine prompte et sincere. ~ John Calvin

[Steve Davis]

You might be right about the term but I think it will be around for a while. And will have to be defined - like all terms - like “soulwinning” which is often decisionism. Missional is not mostly a call to anything new. It is more a return to the commission as given by Jesus but in a new arena with the church at the margins of society and often inwardly focused. Missional is a greater intentionality in engaging people with the gospel rather than avoiding lost people for fear of contamination. It is less focused on maintaining the status quo with most church programs and resources geared toward toward the gathered rather than going. It is undeniable with some rare exceptions that the majority of churches do maintenance better than mission. Missional is a call back to our NT roots of going into the world with the gospel and not waiting for people to find us or attend a church program. Again it is more intentional in evangelism AND discipleship than what we have seen in the last decades in preparing Christians to get into people’s lives. And it is not afraid to take risks or make mistakes. You go to your average church and ask members how many lost friends they have with whom they have any significant contact, when was the last time they invited a lost person to their home for a meal rather than just inviting them to church, and ask the church what percentage of its resources are for member care and outreach. Then determine if they need a dose of missional.
Thanks for this paragraph. This is what sets missional apart from “soul winning” or “evangelistic”. Soul winning has to do more with sales pitch evangelism and door to door outreach programs that are run two nights a week in the average fundy church. The rest of the week, the “soul winner” is off the clock.

“Evangelistic” smacks of revivalism and crusade evangelism. It’s really easy for Christians to invite someone to hear someone else present the gospel, but it’s not so easy to do it yourself in everyday life wherever you meet sinners.

Aaron posted a link to a Shepherd’s conference lesson in 2009 called “Missional Madness”. I listened to his lesson and it was a good lecture on what “Missional” is being pawned off as by those with a “Kingdom now” and post-mil theology that drives them to think that they are doing kingdom work without preaching the gospel and simply living the gospel much like the old “lifestyle evangelism” cop-out. He also points out that having a metro haircut and listening to U2 isn’t going to remove the offense of the gospel either, so if that’s what it means to be “Misisonal” then they are just as misled as the seeker sensitive purpose driven bunch.

This seems to be a fairly healthy dialogue regarding the use of the term “Missional.” Many of my thoughts have been summarized about. Let me chime in by saying that I would describe myself as a missional church planter for the most part (I say for the most part because I don’t have any deep-seated antipathy for using attractional methodology occasionally.) It seems that I am using the term in much the same way as Steve does in this essay.

However, I must emphasize the point that some have brought up, namely that the term is far having a consistent, unambiguous meaning. I have found in many conversations with other evangelicals in the church-planting world that some have a dramatically different shade of meaning to the term. With respect to @Joel Shaffer ‘s comment the fact is that missional often does accompany doctrinal errors.

So while Steve said:
There is no utopian redemption for our cities. There is no reversal for the moral decay and corruption of our society apart from divine intervention. Yet there is redemption and transformation of lives through the gospel of Jesus Christ. This is what it means to be missional!
the fact is that I don’t assume that to be what it means to be missional in most conversations. It may mean that to some, but to many of my evangelical friends it does precisely mean that there IS a utopian redemption for our city and that the reversal of the moral decay is tantamount to gospelizing. Simply put, some people use it as a surrogate word for a kingdom now view, even in some cases that which approximates a social gospel.

I know, I know “words have meaning.” Certainly they do. But a word is only as valuable as the parties using it agree on its precise meaning or at least its semantic range. I appreciate your understanding of missional, but don’t think I would generalize it to all who use the term.

Jeremy Van Delinder Church Planter, Pastor North Hills Baptist Church Round Rock (Austin), TX

the fact is that I don’t assume that to be what it means to be missional in most conversations. It may mean that to some, but to many of my evangelical friends it does precisely mean that there IS a utopian redemption for our city and that the reversal of the moral decay is tantamount to gospelizing. Simply put, some people use it as a surrogate word for a kingdom now view, even in some cases that which approximates a social gospel.
I would tend to agree that there is this segment. Nevertheless, those who have a more utopian redemption/reversal of moral decay that are advocating a 21st century version of the social gospel lack a robust theology and/or embrace a error-filled theology of one or more doctrines such as sin, man, atonement, angels/demons, future things, and etc…..

The evangelicals that would use the word missional that I know that lean towards the social gospel are usually quite naive in regards to the sin nature within every human being, but are quite ready to call out sin when it affects structures of society. Also, a liberal theologian that is beginning to have alot of influence on certain social justice type evangelicals such as Brian McLaren, Tony Campolo and Shane Claiborne when it comes to structures of powers and sins is Walter Wink. Wink does not believe in Angels/Demons, the Devil, and etc… But rather sees these terms as symbolic for the powers and evil that are created in the systems and structures of society. For instance, the structures and systems of Wall Street with its greed and evil accompany it need to be unmasked, named, and engaged by Christians. Here is a link to his books. http://www.walterwink.com/books.html

Compound this with either a moral or Christus Victor view of the atonement, and you have a “missional” church that embraces the social gospel.