Wednesday, April 1, 2009
But it happened...
So...I am seriously contemplating planting a church - for the first time. I do not say this/write this lightly. I believe with ardor that the local church is the most fascinating institution on planet earth and that her mission and her purpose is divine. There is a great fear in my heart as I type these words but I am confident that this fear is not born out of darkness but born out of holiness. I have spent the past nine months walking with two beautiful, local communities, candidating for their open teaching pastor positions only to finish second both times. I have dealt with disappointment, discouragement, despair, and a myriad of other emotions. I have dwelt in my lament and wondered where the Divine was in my journey but now, perhaps because of my new spiritual disciplines, my focused reading, fresh new conversations with amazing souls, and new prayers with my wife, I am finding the light, hope and promises once again. Thus, this conversation regarding my calling: planting a church.
Last Sunday at Mars Hill Bible Church, where my family and I have attended since the fall of 2005, our teaching pastor, Rob Bell, preached a sermon from Lamentations 4 (I would recommend the download: http://www.marshill.org/teaching/index.php - Stunned and Spent). In his sermon, Rob points out that the deep pain and lament from the lead character in the poem, a women who represents Jerusalem after her destruction, reaches the next level in her process. Though she is alone, in pain, abandoned, broken, distraught, confused, spent, angry at God's silence, in disbelief that her great community has been crushed, and lacking clarity, she shifts her posture in chapter 4. She says in Lam. 4:13, "But it happened..." Rob points out that this is the beginning of re-birth - a simple declaration that this is reality and it can't get any worse than this and new life and new dreams can be a new reality. As I sat in the gray, plastic chair, I found myself in this poem but on a whole different level. On my way out of the Shed, our gathering room, I ran into Rob who embraced me and asked what was going on with my journey and calling. I looked him in the eye and simply stated, "It can't get any worse - right?" We shared a laugh and a hug and parted. By that thought stayed with me - it continues to stay with me.
Over the past four years I've engaged the church planting idea but always ended the conversation, "It's not my calling." Even during my seminary training, I passed on the idea but supported others that embraced the call. Since my journey as a candidate with two local communities, it became clear to me that I was called to be a pastor: to teach, lead, comfort, aid, process, engage, and restore. However, as I would converse with these communities, as well as the dozen other churches I've engaged, I would feel a sense of disconnect to their mission or pedagogy but I would feel that the passions, philosophies, gifts, talents, cultural understandings and the like that live within me would be useful to these churches to allow for needed internal growth. Yet, they didn't. After nine months and two disappointments, I felt, in pain, abandoned, broken, distraught, confused, spent, angry at God's silence, in disbelief that my great community had been crushed, and lacking clarity...But it happened..."
So I pray, ponder, sit in solitude, contact contacts, sit with friends and mentors over coffee and pints, ask hard questions, wait for answers, dialogue with my wife and my family, read the scriptures, dream new dreams, and see what becomes of this season of lament. Could it happen?
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Thanks for including me in this conversation, my friend. The last few months have no doubt been highly challenging for you guys, but I am truly excited for what might come out of this latest thought.
ReplyDeleteHow can I help??
The presence of holy fear in your heart as you contemplate the unspeakable privilege of planting a church is a wonderful thing. I love serving with those who are awestruck that God would allow them to touch His work. I know you are weary of war metaphors, but sometimes only a war metaphor will do...I would love to swing swords with you again, so when are you going to visit ABQ? Sure go to Denver, but then come south to survey the Duke City.
ReplyDeleteOne last thing, if this is God's doing and a community is birthed, I request that every new member watch the imfamous Help a Friend Into His Hut video to demonstrate the type of community we are longing to see.