Friday, 22 December 2017

Missions and Apostolic leaders by Reggie McNeal



Six tough questions for the church:

If you build the “perfect” church, they will come.[1]
l   A growing number of people are leaving the institutional church for a new reason: They are not leaving because they have lost faith. They are leaving the church to preserve their faith! They contend that the church no longer contributes to their spiritual development.[2]
l   People are not looking for a great church. They do not wake up everyday wondering what church they can make successful. People outside the church think church is for church people, not for them. The church needs a mission fix.[3]
l   The response is not to try and become better at doing church, but to reboot the mission: a radical obedience to an ancient command, a concern about service and sacrifice rather than concern about style.[4] Being rescue workers instead of refugees.

Growing your church will automatically make a difference in the community.[5]
l   Although there are many things right about the church growth emphasis, including the wakeup call that decline is inevitable, there are also several things wrong with the movement. A lot of “growth” is merely the migration of Christians moving from one church to another. Eg. the closing down of the mom-and-pop operations, the cannibalisation of the smaller membership churches by the emerging megachurches.
l   We need to go where people are already hanging out and be prepared to have conversations with them about the great love of our lives. This will require a shifting of our efforts form growing churches into transforming communities.[6]

The church needs more workers for church work.[7]
l   Ministry is defined largely in church terms and lay people are often defined largely as functionary resources to get church work done.[8]
l   The reluctance to connect with people outside the church is just further evidence of a religious church culture rather than the church being about Jesus or his mission.[9]
l   Church score boards often look at how many members show up, pay up, and participate in club member activities. However, measures of a missionary church include: How many ministry initiatives we are establishing in the streets, how many conversations we are having with pre-Christians, how many volunteers we are releasing that are aimed at community transformation, how many congregations are starting to reach different populations, etc.[10]

Developing better church members will result in greater evangelism.[11]
l   Many churchgoers, when asked to tell people about their spiritual journey, may talk about what positions of leadership they held for the “club”. They have been told that if they conform to church culture expectations, they will experience a wonderful Christian life.[12] This is “church culture idolatry”.[13] 
l   The solution to this is a radical reintroduction of spiritual formation.[14] When someone has just joined a congregation or is becoming a part of church life, instead of dumping a packet of church club member stuff on them, why not interview them about what they would like to see happen in their lives in terms of their spiritual development and personal growth?[15]

Church involvement results in discipleship.[16]
l   Jesus facilitated spiritual formation in his disciples by introducing them to life situations and then helping them debrief their experiences.[17] Helping people grow in the area of spiritual formation involves unpacking life: challenging our emotional responses that are destructive (envy, hatred, bitterness); challenging our biases (racial prejudice, social and economic elitism, intellectual snobbery); challenging our assumptions; challenging our responses; unpacking our frustrations, our hopes, our dreams, and our disappointments; bring life to God rather than teaching about God. Curriculum is still an important place to begin, but it is artificial, whereas life-driven is organic.[18]
l   Team learning environment helps us find out a lot about ourselves when we work with people who have personalities or ideals very different from ourselves.[19]   

Better planning will get you where you want to go.[20]
l   Planning is important, but most of what has ultimate effect on the church happens outside of it and outside of its control.[21] The biblical approach to the future involves prayer and preparation, not prediction and planning. God wants his people to pray and prepare for his intervention.[22]

Past-present leadership motifs: Priest or holy person; shepherd or pastor; educator or wordsmith; managers, program directors or CEOs.[23] 

Apostolic leadership:
A new breed of church leaders that will meet the leadership challenges of what it will take for the church to become more missionally effective.[24]

Revolution in Leadership:

McNeal suggests that the call in the church today is for apostolic leadership.[25]
There are many similarities between the first-century and the twenty-first century in that Palestine in the first century was polycultural: Roman, Jewish and Eastern influences. The Romans developed the transportation infrastructure during the Pax Romana. The coming of the Spirit at Pentecost reflected the strategic timing of God to insure an immediate global impact.[26]
A mission vs. maintenance tension.[27]
Tradition had evolved into a traditionalism that insulated Judaism from the mission field.[28]

The Apostolic leader:
l   Visionary.
l   Missional.
l   Empowering: share the ministry with others outside their immediate leadership circle (Acts 6:1-6).[29]
l   Team oriented and reproducing
l   Entrepreneurial: they know how to connect the gospel with their culture. The apostles cooperated with the Spirit to rapidly expand their market.[30]
l   Kingdom-conscious. 

Key effects of apostolic-quality leadership:
l   A re-emphasis on the spiritual dimensions of leadership.
l   New leadership practices that are more ecclesial, that is, team-orientated in expression, based on giftedness and call.
l   Redefinition of ministry benchmarks, moving from church growth concerns to issues of missional effectiveness.[31]
l   A return of the work of God to the people of God: priesthood of all believers.
l   A church in the world rather than cocooned from it.
l   Urban and regional evangelism strategies that involve alliances among Christian groups and churches of diverse denominational backgrounds.[32]

Inward focus, church as a refuge:
Although it is true that the church community is a place of refuge, the “outreach” of a “refuge” congregation” becomes a matter of trying to keep their children in the faith or just a matter of welcoming the newcomer out of the cold who already has the faith and has moved into the community. Activities are primarily geared to, operated with, and enjoyed by club members.

Outward focus, church as doing mission:
They seek cultural relevance and involvement. They not only risk involvement with the world, they strategize for it. They measure their effectiveness through the number of transformed life that enter into their community of faith from nonchurched or unchurched backgrounds.[33]

Four paradigm shifts:
l   From top-down to flat line: Who is empowered for what? Clergy-driven and clergy-dominated? Missional churches provide venues and strategies for Christians to discover their spiritual gifts and passion.[34]
l   From inside to inside-out: Where is the font line in terms of kingdom expansion? It is where the kingdoms collide: home, school, workplace, gym, neighbourhoods etc.[35]
l   From the outside to outside-in: “We will meet you where you are.” The “club members only” mentality that exists in many congregations will need to be overcome.[36]
l   From the edge to the centre: Standard thinking among Christians sees religion as only one among many life compartments. A mission-driven church provides encouragement and support for Christians who find their calling outside the church, who want to make a difference in the world beyond the church. Christian commitment is not measured by participation in church activities.[37]

The learning community paradigm: “A group of colleagues who come together in a spirit of mutual respect, authenticity, learning and shared responsibility to continually explore and articulate an expanding awareness and base of knowledge. The process… includes inquiring about each other’s assumptions and biases, experimenting, risking, and openly assessing the results.”[38]

Leadership development strategy involving learning clusters:
l   Attempts the development of apostolic leaders through the establishment of learning communities.[39]
l   The process must recognise the lifelong and ongoing nature of leadership development.
l   The process seeks to avoid the Lone Ranger approach to leadership practice.[40]
l   An atmosphere of mutual encouragement.[41]

The standard church leader toolkit often includes a Bible, a homiletics text, commentaries, seminary class notes, a book on some aspect of church growth methodology, etc. To keep up to date with today’s world, there are a few other tools needed.[42]
l   Self-understanding: The leader has to come to grips with himself/herself.
l   Visioning: Leaders lead from the future.[43]
l   Team building: Effective leaders build teams around them.[44]
l   Mentoring: The ability to mentor or disciple other leaders.
l   Communication: The congregation’s ability to communicate its message to its community.
l   Systems thinking: Actions taken in one area of church life have implications for others. Eg. creating new ministry ventures affects the facilities capacity, the fellowship system and caring infrastructure simultaneously.[45]
l   Managing corporate culture: The effective leader understands the culture of the organisation in which he/she works.
l   Leading change and transition: No organisation can survive turbulent times without successfully navigating the white water of change and transition.
l   Conflict management and resolution: By not understanding the stages of conflict, church leaders often respond inappropriately.[46]
l   Networking: Isolated church and congregations not only become stunted in their own growth, they inhibit the growth of the kingdom. The lack of networking among church leaders reflects the independent and individual nature of current models of leadership development.
l   Intuition.
l   Interpersonal skills.[47]

Resource management:
l   Prayer: Home prayer meetings, decision making (Acts 15), direction for new ministry venture (Acts 13), etc.[48]
l   Staff and leadership team[49]
l   Lay ministry partners[50]
l   Time: Old paradigm approaches value time spent “doing” ministry. Effective church leaders will spend more time “developing” ministry.[51]
l   Money: Pay attention to: The motivational bases for why people give and what they give to. Giving patterns. Communication about money.[52]
l   Facilities
l   Technology[53]

Spiritual formation is the most significant issue facing church leaders for the future.[54] Busier Christians are not necessarily more spiritual.[55] A balanced personal growth involves physical, intellectual and emotional wellness.[56]

Seminaries are implementing some form of intentional mentoring. Some link practitioners and seminarians for expanded field education. Others focus on creating campus relationships.[57]

Missional communities:

Discipleship is often the missing link to create a missional church.[58]

Leadership:
l   Low control, high accountability. Ministry does not need to be controlled by those in power. Rather, it needs to be released to people who have the vision for how they can minister to people in the name of Jesus. People should have great freedom to dream about how God would use them in the world. This freedom should be exercised in a framework of high accountability.[59]
l   4Cs: Character, competency, chemistry, capacity.[60]
l   Are they committed to Christ?[61]
l   Are they committed to our church?
l   Do they have a clear mission vision?
l   Are they willing to be accountable?
l   Will others follow them? The following can be small or large but needs to be present in some way.[62]

“We want to make sure our doing comes out of our being.”[63] (Sons and daughters of God vs workers, etc)

Spark Groups (www.campusrenewal.org)
l   Pick a people group: discern what people group God is calling to be your mission field.[64]
l   Partner with other believers: ask other believers to join you in a mission.
l   Pray and plan: Pray every week and ask the Lord to reveal his plans for you.[65]
l   Presence in the community: Spend a significant amount of time each week in your community building relationships with many people. Find out how the target people group spend their time and how we can join them.
l   Prepare the way for the gospel: Demonstrate the gospel to your community by being loving, living a holy life, and revealing the power of God.[66]
l   Proclaim the gospel: Initiate spiritual conversations by asking questions, sharing your story, and sharing the gospel.
l   Producing disciples: Make disciples by meeting weekly to study the Bible, teaching your friends to obey the commands of Jesus.[67]
l   Reproduce Spark Groups: Reproducing leaders and sending them to more unreached people groups.[68]




[1] Reggie McNeal, The Present Future: Six Tough Questions for the Church (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2003), xv.
[2] McNeal, The Present Future, 4.
[3] McNeal, The Present Future, 10.
[4] McNeal, The Present Future, 18.
[5] McNeal, The Present Future, xv.
[6] McNeal, The Present Future, 42.
[7] McNeal, The Present Future, xv.
[8] McNeal, The Present Future, 45.
[9] McNeal, The Present Future, 52.
[10] McNeal, The Present Future, 67.
[11] McNeal, The Present Future, xv.
[12] McNeal, The Present Future, 72.
[13] McNeal, The Present Future, 73.
[14] McNeal, The Present Future, 73.
[15] McNeal, The Present Future, 76.
[16] McNeal, The Present Future, xv.
[17] McNeal, The Present Future, 85.
[18] McNeal, The Present Future, 86.
[19] McNeal, The Present Future, 90.
[20] McNeal, The Present Future, xv.
[21] McNeal, The Present Future, 92.
[22] McNeal, The Present Future, 93.
[23] McNeal, The Present Future, 122-124.
[24] McNeal, The Present Future, 125.
[25] Reggie McNeal, Revolution in Leadership: Training Apostles for Tomorrow’s Church (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1998), 19.
[26] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 22.
[27] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 24.
[28] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 25.
[29] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 28.
[30] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 29.
[31] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 30.
[32] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 31.
[33] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 33.
[34] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 39.
[35] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 40.
[36] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 41.
[37] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 42.
[38] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 50.
[39] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 53.
[40] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 56.
[41] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 57.
[42] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 81.
[43] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 82.
[44] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 83.
[45] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 84.
[46] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 85.
[47] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 86.
[48] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 90.
[49] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 91.
[50] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 92.
[51] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 93.
[52] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 94.
[53] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 95.
[54] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 100.
[55] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 101.
[56] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 102.
[57] McNeal, Revolution in Leadership, 132.
[58] Reggie McNeal, Missional Communities: The Rise of the Post-Congregational Church (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2011), 42.
[59] McNeal, Missional Communities, 56.
[60] McNeal, Missional Communities, 57.
[61] McNeal, Missional Communities, 57.
[62] McNeal, Missional Communities, 58.
[63] McNeal, Missional Communities, 67.
[64] McNeal, Missional Communities, 90.
[65] McNeal, Missional Communities, 91.
[66] McNeal, Missional Communities, 92.
[67] McNeal, Missional Communities, 93.
[68] McNeal, Missional Communities, 94.

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