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Suggestions for Presence

By Jeremy Myers
6 Comments

Suggestions for Presence

suggestion boxAre you looking for some practical suggestions for way to give presence in your community? Here’s five I thought of real quick, some of which I am actively pursuing. I’m not talking about community service events, but places you can hang out just to get to know people.

If you know of others, leave them in the comment area below.

  • Go to your local Chamber of Commerce or city website and get a community calendar, as well as a list of civic organizations and community service events. Then be present at as many of these events and projects as possible. Be the most active, joyful, service-minded citizens your city has ever seen.
  • Join activity-based clubs such as hiking clubs, book clubs, and tourist clubs.
  • Adopt a park and hang out there on a regular basis, cleaning and restoring it.
  • Hang out a local bar or nightclub, getting to know the regulars, and blessing the owner with your business.
  • Participate in the tractor-pulling contest or the art festival. Look around in the newspaper and on community bulletin boards for events that you can join.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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God is Not a Sport

By Jeremy Myers
4 Comments

God is Not a Sport

Have you ever heard pastors say that church services should have the same excitement and thrill of a professional football game? I’ve even preached one. Many years ago, I told my congregation they should get just as excited about God as they do for their favorite sports team.

But recently I’ve realized a flaw in this way of thinking: God is not a sport. I don’t know that we should be “giving a cheer for God” or “giving God a hand” or shout and jump up and down for Him so that He plays better.

While we’re at it, He’s not a rock star either, who shows up on Sunday morning, complete with amped-up speakers, strobe lights, and fog machines. Nor is He a Wheel-of-Fortune game show host, who makes witty comments while we spin the wheel, cross our fingers, and hope for the vacation to Jamaica.

Yet we can find all of these models at work in one way or another in many of our modern churches. To keep people coming, we keep them excited and entertained.

I’m not against excitement or entertainment. I love sports, rock concerts, and game shows as much as anyone. I just don’t think they provide a good picture of God, or of how it looks to worship Him in spirit and truth.

While it’s true that mega churches do a good job of creating excitement and enthusiasm, even they admit they don’t do the best at developing devoted followers of Jesus who are able to spread the Kingdom of God.

Of course, we must not fall into the opposite trap either. God is not a classroom professor who passes out class notes and pop quizzes three times a week to caffeine-guzzling grad students. Worshiping Him is not about filling our notebooks with Bible facts.

If you want to know what God is like, look at Jesus in the Gospels. If you want to know how the church should look, once again, look at Jesus in the Gospels. We are, after all, the body of Christ.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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Dropping your Pants to Enter Church

By Jeremy Myers
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Dropping your Pants to Enter Church

There might be a reason circumcision lost it’s significance as a sign of covenant membership…there’s only one way to tell who is “in.”

Temple Inscription warning Gentiles to keep out of Court of Israelites
A Greek script inscription from Herod's Temple, late 1st century BCE. It warns gentiles to refrain from entering the Temple enclosure, on pain of death.

Herod’s Temple, which was the one Jesus and the disciples would have used, had several different courts, a court of Gentiles, a Court of Women, a Court of Israelites (for men only), and a Court of Priests. One of the duties of the temple priests was to make sure that only the right people got into the right courts. Anyone could be in the Court of Gentiles, and it was easy to figure out who could enter the Court of Women, but how could the priest stationed at the entrance to the Court of Israelite men keep out all those who were not Israelites? There was really only one way to distinguish them from everyone else, and that is through their circumcision. It’s possible that all they did was post a warning sign (like the stone inscription on the left), but it’s also possible that they took other measures to keep out all who were not Gentiles… After all, the Jews were known to do everything necessary to maintain the purity of their temple.

This gives new meaning to the handshake of welcome you receive from the greeter when you enter some churches. Sometimes they even hug you. As forced and as awkward as that is, it could be much, much worse.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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Pastoral Ministry in the Next 20 Years

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Pastoral Ministry in the Next 20 Years

Bob Roberts writes WHAT IT WILL TAKE TO PASTOR IN AMERICA THE NEXT 20 YEARS:

The next 20 years are going to be some of the most exciting, tumultuous, confusing, difficult, historical, adventurous, pioneering, years ever in the history of the church to pastor a church …

It will take the same things it’s always taken to pastor a church: prayer, spiritual disciplines, the knowledge of your community and the people in the church, study, a knowledge of the Word of God and the ability to teach it, the ability to inspire and lead, all of that – but there will be some additional things in a way unlike any other time in history.

#1 The ability to learn from the Global church.  We are not growing, as much as I would like to say there are – I know of no church planting movements in the US – we will have to learn from them.  In addition, they are going to see things from their perspective in the Scriptures that as Westerners we haven’t seen – we must be ready to learn.

#2 The ability to adapt to a global context.  It will become more and more impossible to “do church” in your community.  We’re just too connected.  What happens in one part of the world affects every part of the world.

#3 The ability to work across “party” lines.  No longer will we work in isolation from other tribes, denominations, nations, or even religions for that matter – there will be some things that will be necessary that all of us learn to respect one another and get along.  For believers, Jesus makes it clear that “they will know we are his by our love for each other” and we have been called to Unity – how in God’s name that will happen will be the greatest supernatural miracle since the resurrection.

#4 The ability to bring value to the community beyond Sunday church.  We call it missional – they call it civic or civil society.  The church of necessity will be engaged with domains of society because that is the infra-structure of the world.

#5 The ability to take complex issues theologically and make them simple and applicable for everyday followers of Jesus.  Jesus told stories, Paul wrote theologies, we write sermons with texts and points – I wonder what sermons will come to look like?

#6 The ability to embrace the Holy Spirit – all of us.  Not so much for the supernatural but for everyday guidance for a thousand ethical questions people are going have driven by science and money – as well as recognizing divine moments.
The mass marketing of the Gospel isn’t over, but it’s going to be people driven more than market driven.

#7 The ability to celebrate disciples and the whole church and allow them deeply into ministry instead of a “preacher driven” ministry.

#8 The ability to not just tolerate but enjoy diversity in every form – cultures, peoples, expressions of faith – there will be no one box – only one Lord and Savior.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Theology of the Church

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Put Service Back in the Church Service

By Jeremy Myers
3 Comments

Put Service Back in the Church Service

Put Service back in the Church ServiceIn a previous post about cancelling your church service, one person commented that there were six other days for serving the community, and we should leave the Sunday church service alone.

I understand this concern, but the sad reality is that Christians do not use those six other days to love and serve their community. And another sermon series is not going to change this. Church leaders need to proactively show their members how to serve and who to love in the community, not just preach and teach about it.

Could this be done on Tuesday night instead of Sunday morning? Sure. But as we all know from decades of experience, less than 10% of the church will show up for a Tuesday night community service project. So once again, to get people out of the pews and into the community, the best time to do this may be on Sunday morning. Doing so is not really cancelling the church service; it’s putting service back in the “church service.”

Let’s look at this from the spiritual perspective. I’m fairly convinced that Satan doesn’t care too much if Christians have faithful church attendance. The more services we have, and the longer they are, the more delighted he is. Of course, he is just as happy if Christians don t get together with other believers at all, and just sit at home watching television.

And if that is the way Satan feels, God feels just about the opposite.

Just as God did not call us out of the world so we could sit at home watching television, He also did not call us out of the world so we could sit in a pew at church watching a sermon. The one thing God wants is the one thing Satan doesn’t: followers of Jesus who actually follow Jesus into the world.

So the reason for cancelling church services is not to just give people a break from church. It is to get followers of Jesus off the warm, padded pews in church, and out onto the cold, hard, concrete of the world where the people are.

How? Well, there is no one right way to do this. We have the freedom to be as creative and flexible as we want.

Maybe a good way to begin this is to have a regularly scheduled Sunday service where a service event is planned and announced in advance. Churches are notorious for having special Sunday events to get people to come to church. We have special speakers, choirs, and concerts. We schedule “Friend Day”  and “Back to Church Sunday.”  I recently saw one church in my area inviting people to attend “Orphan Sunday.”

I’m not fond of such special Sundays, but maybe if we can avoid the gimmicks one or two Sundays a month could be planned where the church does not try to get people into the pews, but out of them. You could call it “Back to Work Sunday.”  This might show people that the point of church is not to come to church, but for the church to go to the world.

If Christians are really concerned about orphans, rather than have a Sunday where we talk about orphans, we could have a Sunday where we go play with children in an actual orphanage, go participate in a fundraiser for adoptions, or host a family-fun day in the park for foster parents and their children.

If the leadership of a church was serious about reaching the people who don t come to church on Sunday, maybe a good strategy would be to find the places where these people already are on Sunday morning, and go join them rather than ask them to join us. Yes, you might end up tailgating at the football coliseum, fishing at the bass lake, or hiking mountain trails.

One church I am talking with, Mercer Island Covenant Church, cancelled their church service last March to either run or volunteer in the annual Rotary Club’s Half Marathon Run. They got a lot of positive feedback from the church members and the community, and met several community leaders in the process. They plan on doing the same thing again this year. That’s what I’m talking about!

I believe that if we genuinely participated in some of these things during the hours we were usually in church, more relationship building would take place in one month than often happens in an entire year of church services.

Do you know of any other churches that participate in community service or activities on Sunday morning? I would love to hear about them in the comment section below.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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