New Questions for a New Day:
It's
time to start asking new questions. Better answers to the same old questions
about the church will not get us through the tumultuous times in which we live.
This is a time for out-of-the box thinking. Old questions keep us in the box.
New questions invite us to move outside.
One
question that has been asked consistently through the years, and even more so
in these days of declining church membership is, "How do we bring them
in?" It would be better for us to ask, "How do we send them out?"
In
these days of changing roles and responsibilities many wonder, "What
should the pastor do?" But a more important question for congregations
today is "What is
our shared ministry?"
When
congregations focus on strategic planning they ask, "What's our vision and
how do we implement it?" What would happen if they instead asked, "What's God up to and how do we
get on board?"
When
congregations have financial struggles, they ask, "How do we
survive?" Instead they might ask, "How
do we serve?"
When
congregations think about their mission, they often ask, "How do we save
people?" or perhaps, "How do we help people?" A better question
might be "How do we
make the reign of God more present in this time and place?"
There
are no "right" answers to these new questions that can be applied to
all congregations. Every congregation needs to live with the questions, because
it is only in living with them that new ways being and doing church emerge. The
familiar line from Rainer Maria Rilke in Letters
to a Young Poet can guide us: "Live the questions now. Perhaps
you will then gradually, without noticing it, one distant day live right into
the answer."
If you
ask these questions there is no assurance that you'll find the way to renew,
revitalize or redevelop your church. It may happen. But you may just as likely
discover that asking these questions takes you down a road to some other
alternative that you hadn't even thought of before. What I feel pretty
confident about, however, is that asking these new questions will bring us
closer to discovering what God is seeking from us in this time. I also believe
asking these new questions will help ensure that whatever the future holds for
us and our congregations we will be more faithful in the work we are about
right now. And that is a pretty wondrous thing!
By Pastor Jeffery D Jones - Alban Weekly
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