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So
what might leadership in an organic, Christ-centered network look like?
When the “preacher”, “elder” and “deacon” as we have traditionally come
to understand those terms have been uprooted, what might emerge from
the soil? That is the question that we have been wrestling with lately,
and there have been some interesting responses surrounding this that I
thought I’d toss around.
Over the last few years, we have truly seen a wave of
Christians leaving church-as-we-know-it and moving into a smaller, more
intimate community of friends. They meet as the Church in their living
rooms, parks, coffeehouses, and anywhere life happens. We’re also
seeing the un-churched or the new believers skip right over
institutional churches in favor of simply living life with God and
friends.
But it usually stops there - from my limited research, at this
point, no one has anything very developed on missional, organic
leadership (save this guy) that extends beyond the local house church.
My instinct says that if this is to be anything more than a flash in
the pan; if there is to be any type of meaningful spiritual nurturing
happening, eventually, Christians in these churches realize that they
must connect to believers outside of their own little group in order to
thrive. That is where leadership comes in.
Followers of Christ realize that Christ is the ONLY head of the
Church, and no one can be a mediator (priest) between Christ’s
disciples and himself. If that is the case, if preachers and bishops
and pastors and all that aren’t here to predigest God’s Word for us, or
to function as judge for God, then what good are they?
They listen to Jesus, and do what he says.
It’s that simple, and its a project that will last for the rest of time.
Some leaders (like missionaries/apostles) will work as catalysts;
spreading the vision for God’s New Life anywhere and everywhere they
hear Jesus calling them. Paul lived and worked like this. He never
pretended to be a church’s Father, (only God could fill that role). He
made it clear that God broke through the barriers that separated man
and God, and nothing could separate them again. Apostles will start new
communities by looking for a “person of peace” (Lk.10, Mt.9) and plant
inside them the seeds and the DNA of the Kingdom. Before long, they are
moving on.
Apostles usually gather around them other leaders: prophets,
evangelists, pastors, and teachers. They work together as a team of
missionaries to resource an emerging network that is spawned out of
others who are listening to Jesus and doing what he says. Working
around missional prayer, incarnational friendship, and pastoral
discipling, a missionary resource team can participate in seeing a
relational network of churches grow. Without preservatives, without
burning out, without false structures…this is God’s family at work. (Eph 4:11-16)
As long as these leaders serve the people they are in
connection with by providing resources and opportunities for deeper
involvement in God’s family, they will be “organic leaders”. They are
the nitrogen in the soil, whereas the seeds are the new communities
that are birthed deep down within God’s good earth.
Spiritual moms and dads will naturally emerge from each of these
churches, working with those God has entrusted to them. Usually, they
will be the people who have been Christians the longest, though this
might not always be the case. Working with a single faith community,
these guides into Christ’s life will grow close with those in their
spiritual family and transformation will happen!
–People still like Google because it offers services (like Gmail and
collaborative online documents) for free. Even more importantly, they
don’t take up your screen with pesky ads like some of the other
websites that offer free content or services. They clearly are keeping
their patrons first in mind, not their advertisers. In this way, Google
is like the missionary leaders of the future. As long as missionary resource teams can function for the network, and not the other way around, you will see healthy growth.
–Leaders in traditional churches are like an exoskeleton, which
allows for structure in an organism (good), but restricts how an
organism can grow (bad). Endoskeletons function like leaders in organic
church networks, serving “behind the scenes” and allowing the organism
to grow and take its own shape.
The only way for Jesus to truly be the head of his Church, and yet
to have leaders who guide networks to become the Bride of Christ that
they were called to be is to allow leaders to simply be the PEOPLE they
were called to be…deep listeners of Jesus Christ.
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