Alan Adams - Return to Simple Church

WHAT ABOUT CHURCH 3.0?

August 30, 2011
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What follows is part of the Introduction to Neil Cole’s fantastic book CHURCH 3.0 –

There have been two major upgrades in church formation,
since Acts, that have changed the entire system. The fi rst occurred
dramatically during the rule of the Emperor Constantine. The
church shifted from an underground, grassroots, organic movement
to a more institutionalized organization. I believe the second
is occurring now.

church 1.0

The fi rst-century church was Church 1.0, with its minor differences.
The Jerusalem church would have been the original
Church 1.0. Antioch would be Church 1.1. The Galatian
churches, started in the fi rst journey of Paul and Barnabas, wouldrepresent Church 1.2. Corinth would represent a change to 1.3,
as Paul added some patches to how he approached church. The
Ephesian church would be Church 1.4. And so the changes
went on, through two centuries of church life, kept simple and
organic by oppression and persecution from ten Roman emperors.
Heresies emerged and were purged. There was the establishment
of regional bishops and institutionalization of some of the
forms of Christianity during this period, but overall the church
remained a grassroots, marginalized movement under the heat
of intense persecution.

All that changed in 313 a.d., when Constantine declared that
the empire would not only tolerate Christianity but restore to the
church all lost property. He was the fi rst “ Christian ” emperor;
Christianity went instantly from the margins to the mainstream,
and everything changed. Christianity became the state
religion, and the church did not change much from that point
on. This was the shift to Church 2.0 and all its eventual variants.

church 2.0

Over the centuries, after Constantine, the Western church
evolved in many ways, but none has been a signifi cant systemic
change. There was establishment of both the Roman Catholic
Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church, and for hundreds
of years there were very few changes. The Reformation split
the Western church into the Roman Church and the volatile
Protestant church, or Church 2.1. In spite of the differences,
the institutional system remained mostly unchanged.

The Reformation set loose (and persecuted) the Anabaptists,
but this was just a change from Church 2.1 to 2.2. Whether
the church adapts to reach coal miners in eighteenth – century
England or postmodern pilgrims in the twenty – fi rst century, most
of the changes have been patches and plug – ins to the Church
2.0 system. Whether you are talking about high church or low,
Pentecostal or Reformed, the church has remained in the 2.0
range of upgrades. From Baptist to Brethren, from Mennonite
to Methodist, the changes in the system are relatively untouched
over the centuries. Music or no music? Pipe organ or electric guitar?
Whether seeing tall ceilings with stained – glass windows, or
meeting in a box building without windows, the actual system of
church has gone relatively unchanged.

You have the priests or pastors, the Sunday service with singing
and a sermon, the weekly offering, the pulpit with pews, and
the church building. These have been constants since the fourth
century. Even if you move the whole show into a house instead
of a church building, if the system hasn ’ t changed you have only
shrunk the church, not transformed it. Changing the style of
music does not upgrade the system. Turning down the lights and
turning up the volume is a simple patch to the same old system.
Choirs and hymns or praise bands and fog machines, kneeling,
or standing are miniscule changes to the system. Sermonizing
with topical messages or expositional ones is not changing the
system; it ’ s making minor adjustments. Sunday schools or small
groups as secondary learning environments are not a systemic
change at all, just a variation on the same old operational system.

Although most of the advances to Church 2.0 over the centuries
have been plug – ins and patches to the same old system, there
have been anomalies along the way. Usually, these anomalies
are the result of rampant persecution driving the church back to the
old default system. One could say that these are examples of
going back to the Church 1.0 system, because their 2.0 system
crashed in the face of extreme heat. The radical Anabaptist
churches are an example. The Chinese house church phenomenon
is also a departure from the expression of the Church 2.0
system. These experiments are really not the norm and have not,
to date, infl uenced the church as a whole in any permanent fashion,
except perhaps to say that they are part of the learning that
has led to this new operating system — Church 3.0.

church 3.0

I believe that the second major shift is occurring now, in our lifetime.
Many people want to go back to the beginning again. As
much as I am enamored of what I learned about the church of
the fi rst century, we simply cannot go back; we can only go forward.

Granted, if we went back it would be a vast improvement
on where we have been more recently. I have to ask, though:
Could we do even better than Church 1.0? Some may find evensuch a question as this heretical. It is only a question, but it bears
consideration.

Could we actually improve on the fi rst – century church? A
careful study of Acts reveals that even in the fi rst decades of the
church there was profound improvement as people learned from
experience. Why not seek more improvements today, building on
the foundation of two thousand years of mistakes? I believe it is
possible. I think we can see the awesome impact and rapid spread
that the fi rst century saw, but we also can benefi t from two thousand
years of learning and use today ’ s technological advances.
Imagine if the apostle Paul could buy an airline ticket and be
across the world in twelve hours instead of twelve years. Imagine
what he would do with the Internet and the ability to see events
unfold globally and instantaneously. Our ability to understand
culture and translate languages today is built on two thousand
years of mistakes along with the successes they produced. Perhaps
more than any other benefi t we have is looking in hindsight
at how easily institutionalization took over the church. It was no
longer people in relationship to one another, but an organized
system. Armed with that knowledge, we can now move forward.
The early church fl ew blindly into a trap of a religious hier archical
system that kept her in the dark ages for hundreds of years.

History can train us for the future, if we listen to it. No, Church 3.0
is not a shift downward in church life or quality. It is an upgrade
in every sense of the word, perhaps even rising above the early
church. Why would we suspect that God is content with our going
backwards? Why wouldn ’ t He want us to grow and develop in
better ways?

The best upgrades do a few things. First they allow greater
power in what you want to accomplish, and Church 3.0 is a huge
boost in raw spiritual power. Every part of the body of Christ can
function at a much higher level. A second thing you may look
for in an upgrade is to move to a simpler and more intuitive
way of using the system. This upgrade to Church 3.0 is certainly
that, in many ways. It is built on simplicity and potency bound
together to increase speed and power in the infl uence that the
church can and should have. Third, upgrades take advantage of
the latest discoveries in technology and help you interact better
with all the other electronics you may use. Church 3.0 is far and
away better at being fl uid, mixing with multiple expressions of
church structure, and overcoming the world ’ s obstacles. Fourth,
an upgrade should have greater capacity to accommodate much
more information, functionality, and storage. Finally, some cool
new features in an upgrade should signifi cantly improve the system
’ s performance and make it much more fun to use. Church
3.0 is so enjoyable that it is quite common for those who have
made the switch to comment that they could never go back to
the old system.

Do not be deceived into thinking that this is just another
patch to the same old system; it is a radical change from the core
of the church. Church 3.0 has rebuilt the function of the church
in every sense, from the smallest to the largest capacity.


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FUTURE OF CHURCH IN CANADA

August 24, 2011
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Friday, May 20, 2011, prior to our denominational triennial general conference in Toronto, I was invited to answer the question: “What is the Future of the Church in Canada?” What follows was my attempt to answer that question.
——————–

Mr. Chairman, brothers and sisters, friends…I have a dream.

I recently turned 71 years of age. For sixty-one of those years I’ve been a believer in Jesus. There is a variety of ministries listed on my resumé, the most recent and the happiest being 20 years as a Free Methodist pastor. Today finds me within a stone’s throw of a second retirement, but….I have a dream. I’m facing the future clutching this exciting dream for the Canadian church in my heart. So with apologies to Martin Luther King Jr. and John R. W. Stott, I would like to share my dream with you.

I HAVE A DREAM of a Canadian church that is LOCAL – local, rather than institutional. Christians often travel for hours, if necessary, driving past numerous Christian church facilities, in order to find a fellowship that’ll tickle our fancy, satisfy our religious biases, cross its t’s and dot its i’s the way we do. But if renowned Canadian economist Jeff Rubin is right, in his award winning book, Why Your World Is To Get A Whole Lot Smaller, the cost of travel will soon force us to work and shop, worship and get our recreation nearer home. Christians in communities all across Canada will be obliged to gather humbly with their fellow believers right in their own neighbourhoods, worshiping and praying together, honouring Jesus and caring for one another locally. Doesn’t that sound a little like the New Testament – the church in Corinth, the church in Philippi, the church in Medicine Hat, the church in Etobicoke? Friends, I dream of a Local Church.

I HAVE A DREAM of a Canadian church that is ECUMENICAL – biblical, yes! evangelical, totally; Christ-centred, for sure – but genuinely ecumenical. I mean a church where people of all backgrounds, experiences, races, style of dress, and socio-economic levels feel welcomed and valued by the grace of God. Look, we are all well aware that people who believe the Bible, who love the Gospel and are committed in faith and obedience to Jesus Christ, will always have among them varying interpretations and expectations, a multiplicity of different practices and taboos. But just as the spokes of a wheel are closer to each other the closer they are to the hub, so the church I dream about will experience beautiful, sweet unity by coming together around the Hub, Jesus Christ, our true centre, allowing ample lack of unanimity and lots of differences out around the rim or circumference. I dream of an Ecumenical church.

I HAVE ADREAM of a Canadian church that is decidedly EUCHARISTICAL, a church in which the Commemorative Meal, the Lord’s Supper, instituted by the Lord Jesus Himself and enjoyed by the early disciples, is the physical focal point of that church’s major weekly gatherings. The Eucharist is not only a celebration of remembrance, but is experienced as a “means of grace” (to quote the venerable John Wesley). In my dream I see Holy Communion being evangelistic, fully inclusive, conciliatory. The type of bread used, the contents and size of the cup, the formality or informality of the Communion ritual, won’t matter nearly as much as the evident, mystical presence of Jesus by His Spirit in the congregation. Yes, yes! I foresee grace – God’s amazing grace – flowing freely around the outer edges of Canadian society as Christians break bread together, and invite others to the banqueting table. I dream of an Eucharistical church.

I HAVE A DREAM of a Canadian church that is really ECONOMICAL, free of expensive sanctuaries and their corresponding mortgages and overhead. I know from experience in Latin America that the preciousness of Christ’s presence, the gracious fellowship of His people and the earnest, relevant teaching of Holy Scripture do not require sacred facilities. With the tightening of the economy and the potential loss of tax relief privileges for Canadian religious institutions, Christians will be content to meet in any convenient facility: in a restaurant, in a rented hall, in a community social centre, in a private home, even in one of the many abandoned or under-used church facilities. Like Major Ian Thomas said in another context, “Any old bush will do!” so long as our God is there. Another economic improvement will come with the decline of the clergy/laity distinction. The Canadian church I see in my dream does not need a costly, hired, professional, preacher class. Christians will have discovered that the Holy Spirit has endowed their local fellowships with all they need to flourish. They will take seriously 1 Corinthians 14:29-31, “Two or three prophets should speak, and the others should weigh carefully what is said. And if a revelation comes to someone who is sitting down, the first speaker should stop. For you can all prophesy in turn so that everyone may be instructed and encouraged.” Also Hebrews 10:25, “Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching.” I dream of a church that is Economical.

I HAVE A DREAM of a Canadian church that is authentically SPIRITUAL – in the sense that the people of God, in the majority, live in dependence on the indwelling, equipping, empowering, overseeing Holy Spirit. They manifest the fruit of the Spirit of Christ – love, joy, peace, etc., and they exercise the gifts of the Spirit of Christ, not to show off but to nourish and strengthen their fellow Christians and to draw others into the faith. The church of which I dream will not only welcome the ministries of gifted guests or transfers from other communities, but will also be willing to release some of their own spiritual leaders to use their gifts wherever God takes them at home or abroad (remember Acts 13). Oh, I dream of a Spiritual church.

Let me conclude by saying I HAVE A DREAM of a Canadian church that is MISSIONAL – that is, every believer is a missionary, engaged in some practical, Spirit-directed, community-based activity, according to their giftedness and skills. Becoming a Jesus-follower will mean no longer being a consumer, but a practitioner. The church in Canada will depend on every woman, man, teenager and child, being active, bold, adventuresome, with modesty. Christ, and only Christ, must have the pre-eminence. Risk-taking for Christ and His kingdom will be lauded as heroic and prudent, and the lowliest or meanest task done in love to Christ will be prized just as much as the high profile activities.
As missions bear fruit and new local fellowships come together throughout the land, they will NOT be considered competitive, but rather, they will be recognized as additional outposts of Christ’s Kingdom, viable expressions of the Canadian church. I have a dream of a Missional church.

Friends, as you may have concluded, I enthusiastically envision the future of the church in Canada, subject to the grace of God, as bright and full of exciting possibilities. As I am anticipating the next 15 to 20 years of ministry, I’m asking God to lead me to some other Christians whom I may join in the grand adventure – in view of Canada’s future – of working toward a church that is Local and Ecumenical, Eucharistical and Economical, Spiritual and Missional.

God keep our land glorious and free!

Thank you very much!


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Marks of a True Church?

August 15, 2011
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According to Michael Frost in his book JESUS THE FOOL (Hendrickson, 2010), P. 150, the renowned German theologian Jurgen Moltman says, “The church can be a way of living together that affirms that no one is alone with their problems: that no one has to conceal their disabilities; that there are not some who have all the say and others who have nothing to say; that neither the elderly nor the very young are isolated; that no one can dismiss another even when there is unpleasant disagreement.”

Frost adds, “In such a place, every member would be rich indeed.”

I read this today, and felt I had struck gold. What is your reaction?


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