apostolic environment
Just about to switch into the next element of mDNA, apostolic environment. Should be a hoot of a discussion. Lets start it off with these two quites that I hung at the top of the chapter in the book…
Purpose and principle, clearly understood and articulated, and commonly shared, are the genetic code of [...]
church follows mission
By my reading of the Scriptures, even though it is a non-negotiable, ecclesiology is the most fluid of the central doctrines. The church is a dynamic cultural expression of the people of God in any given place. Worship style, social dynamics, liturgical expressions must the result from the process of contextualizing the gospel [...]
living out-carnationally
By living incarnationally we not only model the pattern of humanity set up in the Incarnation but we also create space for mission to take place in organic ways. In this way mission becomes something that ‘fits’ seamlessly into the ordinary rhythms of life, friendships, and community and is thus thoroughly contextualized. Thus these ‘practices’ [...]
incarnation-al: being formed by the story
The Incarnation not only qualifies God’s acts in the world, it must also qualify ours. If God’s central way of reaching his world was to incarnate himself in Jesus, then our way of reaching the world should likewise be incarnational. To act incarnationally therefore will mean in part that in our mission to those [...]
incarnation: the god-dimension of mission
John 1:1-18 forms the central defining Scriptural text narrating to us of the marvelous coming of God into human history. But this text is far from the only one to probe this mystery. All Christians acknowledge that In Jesus Christ God was fully present and that He moved into our neighborhood in an act of [...]
Making babies is fun
Firstly, it is not hard to see that the reproductive capacities of the church are directly linked to the missional-incarnational impulse. It is not coincidental that this looks awfully similar to the way in which all organic systems reproduce and procreate themselves. (It looks like a genealogy doesn’t it?) We will explore this further when [...]
reasons to contextualize
In their book on church planting Ed Stetzer and David Putman (Breaking The Missional Code 90-91) affirm the fact contextualization of the gospel is needed in every culture, but that it is a particularly important need for the church in the West today. They quote British missiologist Stuart Murray-Williams who suggests some pretty pungent reasons [...]
submerging
Ash Barker of Urban Neighbors of Hope, a missional order among the poor in Melbourne and Bangkok articulates multiple levels of incarnationality. His structure is intriguing because it highlights the centrality of the experience of Jesus by the host community and not that of the church community itself. He suggests four stages where [...]
m-i v. e-a
From the digram in the last post we can see the ‘sneeze-like’ nature of the missional impulse in the diagram. But the diagram also enables us to see how exactly it is that we have inhibited this outward flowing movement. The Christendom template tends to bolt down this missional impulse by substituting it with an [...]
a theology with missional implications
Because this goes against the grain of our inherited and ingrained practices, it is important to grasp the theological dynamics of the missional-incarnational impulse and how these two intertwined foundations of essential Christian theology inform our practices and behaviors. Firstly we can discuss the missional one.
The Mission of God
Over the last forty or [...]
going out, going deep
Here is a series of statements that will serve to set the agenda in what will be a series of posts on the mDNA of the missional-incarnational impulse.
The purpose in combining these words in The Forgotten Ways, is to link two practices which in essence form the one and the same action. This is for [...]
an interview at openheaven.com
This is an interview I did with Steve Eastman, editor of the ezine OpenHeaven.com TOP News….
Alan Hirsch is captivated with an idea — the church is empowered with the ability to function as God intends. Somehow much of the “how-to” was forgotten after the first century, but Alan believes it is still in [...]
entering in…
I am just about to embark on posts regarding the next element of mDNA that we need to consider (the missional-incarnational impulse). I thought we couldn’t go wrong in quoting one of my theological heroes, David Bosch from Transforming Mission. This quotes highlights the intrinsically incarnational nature of the church’s mission.
It should not bother [...]
acting our way into a new way of thinking
As should be obvious by now, we need to develop our ways of knowing God to be able to be true disciples. But it goes beyond just adding right actions and feelings to the equation of right knowledge, I believe the place for us to start is by focusing on the action piece [...]
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