Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-03-03

  • Rick Santorum and the Missional Church: http://t.co/nbeVUM6K #
  • http://t.co/Cski6Wby the trap of looking for "successful" ministry by jared wilson. #
  • Church Methadone=Decreased amount of church programming that creates time for people to be involved in community and on mission. #
  • Missional Community: Proximity over Affinity: http://t.co/5cZg3Izl #
Posted in General | Leave a comment

Deprogramming Cultural Christians

The Only Solution

For the love of Christ controls us, because we have concluded this: that one has died for all, therefore all have died; and he died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised. -2 Cor 5:14-15

What will it take to deprogram cultural Christians who believe that the church is designed to meet their needs into radical followers of Jesus Christ who are living life for the good of others? How are they going to relearn what it means to be the church? As leaders we must ask ourselves if are we putting together a performance every week to meet the needs of our people and their preferences or are we training and equipping them to live in God’s redemptive Story Monday through Saturday? For those in leadership answering questions like these are critical when it comes to how we do discipleship.

Here is what I have come up; the gospel.

The solution has to be to keep pointing everyone back to Jesus. Look at his love. Marvel at his grace. Meditate on his death and resurrection. When we look at the cross of Christ we are reminded that we love others when we lay down our life (busyness, agenda, personal dreams) for them. I have said it before but it is worth repeating. Much of this has to be experienced while sharing life in community because the church IS the body of Jesus Christ (Romans 12:5). We can not attain maturity in Christ without Christian community. Can’t have one without the other. As the family of God we need to be so filled up with the life and goodness of Jesus Christ that the gospel is spilling out of us everywhere we go.

Posted in General, The Gospel, Transitioning to Missional | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Missionary or Business Person? Interview with Tara Russell

Tara Russell Founder of Create Common Good

I first learned about Tara Russell and what she is doing for the kingdom of God from the VERGE Conference website. Tara will be one of the speakers at VERGE this week. I was inspired by her story and I trust you will be too.

Missional in Suburbia: Hi Tara. Tell us a little about yourself.

Tara Russell: I was born in the mid-west in Pennsylvania and moved a good bit as a kid.  We lived in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan before moving to Indiana where I graduated from high school.  I’m the oldest of three kids and have fabulous parents (still married) who now live in Ann Arbor, Michigan.  I played a lot of sports, and had many Christian friends, but didn’t grow up in the church.  I went to college at Georgia Tech in Atlanta and studied Mechanical Engineering before going to work for General Motors, Intel and Nike.  I now live in Boise, Idaho with my husband, Jeff, and my kids, Tyson (6) and Lucy (4).

Missional in Suburbia: You are the CEO and Founder of Create Common Good. Explain to us what CCG is all about.

Tara Russell: CCG is about “teaching people how to fish.”  We provide experiential job training and employment to refugees and others in need in order to equip them to find, perform, and retain jobs and move towards self-sufficiency.  We use food to change lives and operate small-farms, value added food production, and culinary training and gourmet food service.  I spent years in Asia working with General Motors in Shanghai, China and then again in Bangkok, Thailand working with women involved in prostitution.  I know first hand the difficulties and challenges one faces when living as an “alien in an unknown land.”  When the economy tanked in 2008, unemployment in the refugee community skyrocketed to nearly 50% in Boise.  Create Common Good was born to fill the gap and prepare refugees to thrive in the workplace.

Missional in Suburbia: NightLight International is an organization for at-risk women in Bangkok, Thailand that you helped start. Tell us about it.

Tara Russell: NightLight is an organization that seeks to bring holistic life transformation to at-risk women.  In many ways, my work starting NightLight with a group of friends in Bangkok was very similar.  I focused much of my effort on the job training and business aspect of the new organization.  NightLight (NL) helps women leave the bars and enter healthy employment by coming onboard to make NL jewelry.  NL jewelry is then sold all over the world.

Missional in Suburbia: Few people wake up one day and just randomly decide to start a company. What inspired and motivated you to start these two companies?

Tara Russell: In 1999, when I was living and working in Shanghai for General Motors, I spent the year praying about whether God wanted me to be a “missionary” or a “business person.”  I was trying to figure out what to do with my life, and I saw these paths as two distinct paths.  During that year, God showed me that I was made for business, but that he wanted me to live in this messy space between I’ll call “social enterprise.”  In essence, I felt God wanted me to figure out how to use business to transform lives.  He affirmed to me that work IS spiritual, and we were all made to work.  We were all given unique gifts and talents, and the challenge we all face is figuring out how to best use them to improve the lives of others.

Missional in Suburbia: Not everyone should attempt to start their own company. With that said, what would you say to the person who is seriously wondering how they can make a difference in such a big world?

Tara Russell: I think the first step is trying to identify what you’ve most gifted with – what’s “in your hand” so to speak.  What do you love?  What keeps you up at night?  What is your heart burdened with?  Whether you start volunteering somewhere, go to work with another organization, start a non-profit or for-profit, all have great purpose.  There isn’t one path that’s the right path, and another that’s wrong.  God asks us to work with all our heart as if working for him, regardless of where we’re at (Col 3:23-24).  I believe we’re all called to tangibly put love in action, somehow.  To me, that is living out the gospel, daily.  Whether you’re being there for a neighbor who needs to be heard, standing up to advocate for women-at-risk, being the best mother possible, or modeling grace to a co-worker, we all have the chance to do that daily.

Missional in Suburbia: Let me guess…you are kinda busy! How do you balance being a wife, mom and an entrepreneur?

Tara Russell: Life is crazy, but crazy wonderful.  My husband and I both run start-ups, and we have two small kids.  That said, we have built a lifestyle that we feel is healthy and we’ve created rhythms that work for our family in the season we’re in.  We protect our quality time as a family ferociously.  Our kids don’t do a million activities – they go to school part-time and then are at home otherwise for the most part.  We enjoy simple dinners at home, sitting down as a family at the same table, and lots of play time on the weekends and breaks (runs, bike rides, hikes, ski dates, etc.).  My husband and I have learned that we’re both quality time, not quantity time people.  :)  We’re both fairly independent, but we treasure our time together.  If he’s been traveling or I’ve been traveling, we create a special space to connect, just the two of us, and have some fun together.  As a mother and entrepreneur, I’ve had to be open and flexible to shifting my work schedule in varying seasons of my kids’ lives.  I’m mom first.  When the kids get sick and need me, I reschedule all my plans.  I have had to be really FLUID essentially, and sometimes it means working in the evenings or at night once my kids are down.  But I do work in an office outside the home, and we have a great babysitter that watches the kids a few afternoons a week.  Another afternoon we “kid share” with a family on our team, and one afternoon a week I work from home.

Missional in Suburbia: Name a few books that have really challenged you lately.

Tara Russell: Books…such a good question!  I’ve been reading a bunch lately and loving it.  I loved VENEER: Living Deeply in a Surface Society (written by some friends, Jason Locy and Tim Willard) and I loved Ordering Your Private World (Gordon MacDonald).  Xealots, by Dave Gibbons, is another great read.  And Leading on Empty, by Wayne Cordeiro.  I’m finding it so important to really work on my “inner life” as consciously as my outside, day-to-day world.

Posted in General, Interviews, The Cultural Mandate, Theology of Work | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

The Greatest Challenge to Missional Community

We have lived inside a caricature of the church for so long that we fail to know what it means to be the body of Jesus Christ.

People in a Missional Community share a few important things in common. 1)  the gospel as central to everything they are and do 2) a deep sense of being part of a family  3) joining God in his redemptive mission in their own neighborhood.

The challenge? I think the old paradigm of “church” is the the greatest challenge. Obvious to you? Yeah, maybe. It just makes me feel better to say it out loud.

The old paradigm mindset is still prevalent; attend on Sunday, sprinkle in a few programs and call it a day. It is sad because many people never experience the joy, the heartache, the hard work that comes from joining hands with other brothers and sisters and living out the gospel for the good of their neighbors.

Posted in Discipleship, General, Missional Community, Missional in the Neighborhood, The Gospel, Transitioning to Missional | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Winner of “A Gospel Primer for Christians”

The winner for “A Gospel Primer for Christians” is Corey Norris from Lee’s Summit, Missiouri. Congratulations! We will be mailing the book to you this week.

Posted in Book Reviews, The Gospel | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Ed Stetzer: Missional Disciple-Making

Some of the stuff you will hear in this video (quotations are not exact)…

    • Disciples join God and his mission and it changes everything.
    • Discipleship through knowledge and not action leads to puffed up gnostics.
    • When we (pastors) do for people what God has called them to do everyone gets hurt and the mission of God is hindered.
    • You can not disciple people with books, you disciple them life on life.
    • Serving one another (in context of 1 Peter 4:8-11) is not just for people within the church.
    • Obedience based discipleship leads to mission shaped discipleship.
    • We show our love through service.
    • If I preach against the sin in our culture I can get an “amen”. We need to do less of that and think more about how we need to change.
    • Pastors can create an unhealthy co-dependence (pastors do the work and people come and watch)

Ed Stetzer: Missional Disciple-making Movements [VERGE 2010 Main Session] from Verge Network on Vimeo.

Posted in General, Missional Community, Missional in the Neighborhood, Transitioning to Missional | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The Suburban Good Life Might Be Killing You

Communities Learn the Good Life Can Be a Killer

By JANE E. BRODY
ACTIVE ANTIDOTE Atlanta transformed an old rail corridor into a trail network that encourages walking and biking.
Atlanta is transforming an old rail corridor into a trail network that encourages walking and biking.

 

Developers in the last half-century called it progress when they built homes and shopping malls far from city centers throughout the country, sounding the death knell for many downtowns. But now an alarmed cadre of public health experts say these expanded metropolitan areas have had a far more serious impact on the people who live there by creating vehicle-dependent environments that foster obesity, poor health, social isolation, excessive stress and depression.

As a result, these experts say, our “built environment” — where we live, work, play and shop — has become a leading cause of disability and death in the 21st century. Physical activity has been disappearing from the lives of young and old, and many communities are virtual “food deserts,” serviced only by convenience stores that stock nutrient-poor prepared foods and drinks.

According to Dr. Richard J. Jackson, professor and chairman of environmental health sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles, unless changes are made soon in the way many of our neighborhoods are constructed, people in the current generation (born since 1980) will be the first in America to live shorter lives than their parents do.

Although a decade ago urban planning was all but missing from public health concerns, a sea change has occurred. At a meeting of the American Public Health Association in October, Dr. Jackson said, there were about 300 presentations on how the built environment inhibits or fosters the ability to be physically active and get healthy food.

In a healthy environment, he said, “people who are young, elderly, sick or poor can meet their life needs without getting in a car,” which means creating places where it is safe and enjoyable to walk, bike, take in nature and socialize.

“People who walk more weigh less and live longer,” Dr. Jackson said. “People who are fit live longer. People who have friends and remain socially active live longer. We don’t need to prove all of this,” despite the plethora of research reports demonstrating the ill effects of current community structures.

The Price of Progress

“We’ve become the victims of our own success,” Dr. Jackson said of the public health mission that cleared cities of congested slums. “By living far from where we work, we reduced crowding and improved the quality of our air and water, which drove down rates of infectious disease.” But as people have moved farther and farther from where they work, shop and socialize, the rates of chronic diseases have soared.

Public transportation has not kept pace with the expansion of suburbs and exurbs. Nor are there enough sidewalks, nearby parks and safe places to walk, cycle or play outdoors in many, if not most, towns. Parents spend hours in cars getting to and from work; children are bused or driven to and from school; and those who can’t drive must depend on others to take them everywhere or risk becoming socially isolated.

In 1974, 66 percent of all children walked or biked to school By 2000, that number had dropped to 13 percent.

“Children who grow up in suburbia can’t meet their life needs without getting a ride somewhere,” Dr. Jackson said. “The average teen in suburbia says it’s boring.”

His new book, “Designing Healthy Communities,” a companion piece to a coming public television series, says: “When there is nearly nothing within walking distance to interest a young person and it is near-lethal to bicycle, he or she must relinquish autonomy — a capacity every creature must develop just as much as strength and endurance.” The book was written with Stacy Sinclair, director of education at the Media Policy Center in Santa Monica, Calif.

“We’ve engineered physical activity out of children’s lives,” Dr. Jackson said in an interview. “Only a quarter of the children in California can pass a basic fitness test, and two in seven volunteers for the military can’t get in because they’re not in good enough physical condition.”

The health consequences, he said, are terrifying. Not only are Americans of all ages fatter than ever, but also growing numbers of children are developing diseases once seen only in adults: Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and fatty livers.

Can Our Suburbs Be Saved?

The four-part series that Dr. Jackson developed with the documentary producers Dale Bell and Harry Wiland, to be broadcast in the spring, highlights changes being made in forward-thinking communities — changes that foster better physical and mental health by redesigning the built environment.

“Health happens in neighborhoods, not doctors’ offices,” Dr. Jackson states in one of the programs.

Metropolitan Atlanta, which is 8,000 square miles and growing and where workers drive an average of 66 miles a day, has suffered the ill effects of high ozone levels, few sidewalks and bike lanes, and crosswalks as much as a mile apart. In what may be the crown jewel in environmental restructuring for better health, the city plans to create an urban paradise from an abandoned railroad corridor over the next two decades, with light rail and 22 miles of walking and biking trails.

In Lakewood, Colo., an abandoned shopping mall (a blight now rampant in suburbia) was converted into housing, businesses and play areas.

Syracuse is converting an old saltworks district into a mixed-income, energy-smart housing and business area, giving residents easy access to work and recreation. The local supermarket, Nojaim’s, offers health and nutrition classes and weekly health checks, and a mobile farmers’ market serves an area that lacks grocery stores.

Another jewel in environmental restructuring is Elgin, Ill., where an island park was created in the middle of the rejuvenated Fox River and a former Superfund site known as auto dealers’ row is now Festival Park, giving families a place to gather for water play, picnics and musical performances. A Bikeway Master Plan will eventually connect all the neighborhoods, and easy access to the river has spurred investment.

“For every dollar the city has spent, we have leveraged that into two or three dollars of private investment through new kinds of buildings, row houses and businesses that have opened because the river has a magnetic quality,” said a former mayor of Elgin, Ed Schock. He might have added another economic benefit: the prospect of lower health care costs.

Further information on healthier communities can be found at designinghealthycommunities.org.

Posted in General, Retrofitting Suburbia | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-01-28

Posted in General | Leave a comment

Churches That Don’t Fit In

Fitting In from The Work Of The People on Vimeo.

Posted in Missional Community, Missional in the Neighborhood, The Gospel | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Free book giveaway, “A Gospel Primer for Christians” by Milton Vincent

Gospel-centered. Easy to say, but what does it really mean? How do we apply the gospel to every area of our life? “A Gospel Primer for Christians” is one of the best resources I have found when it comes to immersing my heart and mind in the gospel. We felt so strongly about this that we gave away a copy of this book to every family in our church. The fuel for missional life in suburbia is first and foremost the gospel of Jesus Christ.

If you would like to win a free copy of this book all you need to do is go to our “contact” and put down your 1) name 2) mailing address 3) name of the book. We will do a random drawing to determine the winner. We will announce the winner by Friday, Feb 10.

Posted in General, The Gospel | Tagged , , | 4 Comments