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Next Church is coming
Written by Jack Haberer, Outlook editor   
Wednesday, 29 February 2012 16:05

DALLAS, Feb. 27 -- “The problem with the PC(USA) is this: Our ‘Everything Decently and in Order’ sign is choking off the ‘Reformed and Always Reforming’ sign,” Stacy Johnson told 600 participants gathered here at the second annual NEXT conference.

          Johnson, a lawyer turned theologian – presently professor of theology at Princeton Theological Seminary – delivered the opening address at a leadership conference organized by a group that sees itself in “a reformation moment for the church.”

          Conference leaders, most of whom are in their 30s and 40s, acknowledge in the event guide that they are “honoring and celebrating the past,” but that “the Spirit is calling a new church into being.” The church of the future, they say, “will be more relational, move diverse, more collaborative, more hopeful, and more agile.”

          The conference opened with worship including preaching by Reggie Weaver, pastor of First Church of Chicago – of the three churches that claim to be the oldest in Chicago, he joked. Expounding on the encounter of the apostles with the resurrected Jesus on the road to Emmaus, he suggested that “dead zones” become “hot spots” (places of genuine encounter with God) whenever people truly lay hold of the promise and power of the resurrection.

          Johnson followed with an exposition on the resurrection, too, but only after first taking participants on an encounter with the cross. He began by quoting I Cor. 1:18: “For the message about the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.”

Two ways to live

Johnson said there are two ways to live: one following the logic of survival – which recognizes that we are perishing and, therefore, will do whatever it takes to survive – and one following the way of Jesus by taking up the cross. The church seems to be caught up in the hopeless effort to save itself, fighting to survive. Understandably so, because “one thing we know,” he said, is that the church has been taken captive to a “cultural and generational tsunami” that requires adaptive change. And the primary adaptation needed is the one people and organizations instinctively resist: the way of the cross.

Indeed, the need for adaptive change in the church comes not merely quoting statistics of shrinkage – although Johnson did rehearse some of those numbers. Adaptive change is required by a more faithful reading of the gospel itself.

“The real adaptive challenge is to go behind the doctrinal structure of Christendom to a deeper understanding of the gospel itself. We need to envision and re-envision the gospel and how we embody it,” he said. “It’s not just that we need a better delivery system for the gospel. It’s that we need to understand the gospel to live it more clearly.”

          Further, he added, “We always stand somewhere between reform and revolution. The Kingdom of God is about revolution. The revolution is God’s revolution. We’re not about bringing revolution. But our reform needs to be in service of God’s revolution.”

          So how shall the church live into such revolution and reform?

          Johnson offered three keys: poetry, prayer and prophetic witness.

Poetry

No, he wasn’t advocating speaking in meter and rhyme. Rather, given that the Greek word, poesis, actually means “to make or create,” Johnson said that believers need to rediscover the biblical texts that teach us about God not by forming sweeping theological categories but by painting metaphors and weaving stories. “A poetic theology is a creative theology, a constructive theology. It’s about taking the gospel and making it sing again,” he affirmed.

 

Prayer

          A people in prayer, not as arm-wrestling God to match our interests but to echo Jesus’ words, “not my will but yours be done,” invites us to think, he said, like Gerald May, who taught us, “It is when our beliefs about God crumble that we finally may stop worshiping our beliefs … and begin to worship God.”

 

Prophetic witness

          Finally, at the heart of the Christian religion are the passion for justice and righteousness that stand so central to Israel’s prophetic tradition, he said. “And Jesus stands right in the heart of that tradition.”   Johnson declared that his great hope for the church is that so many young people today “don’t care about liberal religion or about conservative religion but about prophetic religion.”

          And, true to the prophetic message of Jesus’ ministry, the prophetic message assures that the world is the arena of God’s acting, and that God has a future focus. Resurrection faith says, “There’s more to come.” Or quoting Tony Campolo’s oft-quoted line, “It’s Friday, but Sunday’s coming.”

 

 

 

 

Comments  

 
#3 Bob Crandall 2012-03-03 00:11
The whole thing sounds a bit pollyanna. The denomination is dying, and the people calling for reform are preaching messages that only institutional loyalists would listen to.
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#2 Dieter Heinzl 2012-02-29 11:11
I was at the conference and Stacy Johnson clearly did add "according to God's Word," or "in relationship to and with God's Word." He is too carefula theologian to leave this out.
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#1 Rev. Robert McClelland 2012-02-29 09:52
I appreciate this report on the NEXT Church conference. Being someone who has attended both the FOP/ECO Conferences and the NEXT Conference, I am amazed at all the things that are similar. I appreciate the hope that you share in this article, and the way you bring about the positive attributes of what Stacy Johnson had to share. But, a few big things which came out of Johnson's keynote address were left out of this report.

We, as a denomination, are caught in a culture of survival. Johnson said, "We recognize we are perishing, and our DNA says 'survive!'" We need to move past this desire to survive and focus on Christ to really live. That, said Johnson, was why it sounds like foolishness to those who are perishing.

But, what is missing in this report, and what struck me most was hearing the big difference between the two groups in our denomination (FOP and NEXT). Both mentioned the buzz phrase, we are "Reformed and always Reforming," but at the FOP, the phrase was completed, "According to the Word of God." That seems like a little thing, but it becomes a big thing when coupled with the section of Johnson's keynote on the cultural and generational Tsunami of Change facing the church today. Johnson pointed out (after sharing that he felt for his conservative brothers and sisters) that a "growing number of believers don't see scripture as inerrant" and "a growing number of believers are pluralist." He also pointed out that in 2010, the number of "nones" or those with no religion was up from 2% to 17% of our society. If we see culture and the church changing in their belief about what Scripture says about Jesus, and are OK with that, there is a problem. If the church welcomes pluralism as acceptable belief, then Johnson's pointing out of 1 Corinthians 1 becomes null. For Paul says earlier in 1 Corinthians 1 that we are called to "teach/say the same thing" 1:10) as Paul concerning grace and fellowship found in Jesus Christ. Paul points out that in doing so, divisions will cease. If we are not proclaiming the saving grace of God through Jesus Christ and finding unity in that, we are more divided than anyone wants to admit.

My hope for this denomination is that we will bring our focus back to obedience to Jesus, under the authority of scripture, guided by the confessions. For it is in that fourth ordination question we seem to be divided. We are reformed and always being reformed, but if we continue to forget that it is according to the word of God and allow ourselves to always be reformed by the winds of the Tsunami of change in our culture, we will cease to be the Bride of Christ and find no unity together in Christ. And, the "fellowship" in what's "next" will be so broken, the world will not see anything but the foolishness of the cross.
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