We all know we sometimes need to stop. We know that we're created to work from rest, rather than rest from work. Its good to remember that rest is for communities as well as individuals.
The time we spend as community, doing nothing particularly purposeful, is very important. The BBQs, trips, parties and movie nights, are often the times when really significant conversations happen. Sometimes these are the events people bring their friends to. Other times they just get to know each other more deeply. Such times may not help your group achieve your vision, but your community will certainly be better and closer for it.
When I look back at our missional community of 4 1/2 years, it's often the rest time that I remember most fondly, like the times it'd be getting close to 10pm and we still hadn't got properly started because everyone was chatting. Or the picnics at a local stately home we took in the summer. Or the long conversations as relationships were formed over amazing puddings. Our community was better because we rested and had fun together.
I know this is simple, but we often miss the obvious things. My advice would be to make sure there's some rest or fun time in every thing you do as a community (don't meet unless you eat used to be one of our community's mottoes) and then every now and again make sure you devote a good chunk of time to doing nothing in particular, together.
How do you make time to rest as a community?
The picture is by downthewaterfall on flickr
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Stories
King's Church, Warrington and Kairos, Harrogate are two of the churches connecting with us.
Fresh Expressions has written an article on the Kairos story - read it here.
Fresh Expressions has written an article on the Kairos story - read it here.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Taster Day events this week
This week there are two Taster Day events at St. Thomas' Church, Philadelphia. On Wednesday one for churches interested in joining a Learning Community and on Thursday one for people interested in Missional Communities.
There will be people from all over the UK and even Germany coming to Sheffield and we're excited to see what God does. We'll post some stories here from the churches that are connecting with us.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Be Thou My Vision
We live within a Christian culture where vision is very important. For passionate followers of Jesus having vision has become paramount to life. I encounter so many people who are frustrated and disillusioned with life because they’re lacking this thing called ‘vision’. And I’ve been there myself, wishing that God would show me something, anything (!) to give me purpose and security for what my life is about.
But how often does this notion of ‘vision’ become debilitating rather than defining? Do we allow vision, or lack of it, to dictate whether we have purpose, meaning, validation? What is our frustration and what is the fear that instigates this desperation for the big V-word?
In the Bible the word ‘vision’ is used to describe ‘visions’ that come to people through dreams, what we might call a vivid experience or prophetic image. These visions were clear messages from God – He spoke His direct word to unveil His love for nations, direction and discipline, prophecies for the future. And all these things are available to us today, as we have access to the covenant relationship, which includes hearing His voice. Yet the idea of ‘vision’ in the context of knowing our calling is not so clear. The visions experienced by some of the Old Testament characters and Prophets, as well as Paul in the New Testament, enabled them to confidently pursue what God had put before them. But Jesus never once mentions the word vision in the Gospels. Could it be that the man with the greatest calling the world has ever known didn’t seem to have ‘vision’ so high up on his agenda?
We are called and we are given vision, just not always in the way that we expect it. The Great Commission so clearly set out the notion that we are called to something which gives us a goal, a purpose, an earth-effected eternal destiny. So how do we define what our big V is all about?
Whilst Jesus doesn’t talk about vision or calling in the way we do, He does offer an invitation, by literally ‘calling’ the disciples to Him. The call on their lives is to come and be discipled by Him, to journey with Him, learn from Him, be friends with Him. And He offers us a vision: the vision of Himself and the vision of His future glory. It’s a life-giving vision in that, as we look on Him, we ourselves are transformed into His likeness. The things He has created and embedded within us, become fully alive in His Kingdom.
It’s easy to feel like somehow ‘Jesus’ is just not enough. We want to know what our personal calling is, our purpose, how we are going to change the world. But how often is the need for vision about our security in what we’re doing and our fear of sharing our true dreams with those around us?
Relationship with Jesus is the most exciting calling that’s ever been offered to the world. Living out our calling is about responding to His call, to relationship with Him. The vision is having a vision of Him and through that knowing Him and ourselves more. One of the verses I’ve been meditating on recently is from Psalm 37: ‘Delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.’ We must first delight in Him, have a vision of Him and know Him more intimately and He will then show us our true desires that He has placed within us and that He partners with us in bringing about.
So when we question whether we’ve got vision, our starting place is looking at Him. Do I have a clear vision of Jesus; do I pursue the call to having greater relationship with Him; is His purpose the call I am truly pursuing?
As Paul put so well to the Ephesians:
“I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better. I pray that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you…” (Ephesians 1 NIV)
But how often does this notion of ‘vision’ become debilitating rather than defining? Do we allow vision, or lack of it, to dictate whether we have purpose, meaning, validation? What is our frustration and what is the fear that instigates this desperation for the big V-word?
In the Bible the word ‘vision’ is used to describe ‘visions’ that come to people through dreams, what we might call a vivid experience or prophetic image. These visions were clear messages from God – He spoke His direct word to unveil His love for nations, direction and discipline, prophecies for the future. And all these things are available to us today, as we have access to the covenant relationship, which includes hearing His voice. Yet the idea of ‘vision’ in the context of knowing our calling is not so clear. The visions experienced by some of the Old Testament characters and Prophets, as well as Paul in the New Testament, enabled them to confidently pursue what God had put before them. But Jesus never once mentions the word vision in the Gospels. Could it be that the man with the greatest calling the world has ever known didn’t seem to have ‘vision’ so high up on his agenda?
We are called and we are given vision, just not always in the way that we expect it. The Great Commission so clearly set out the notion that we are called to something which gives us a goal, a purpose, an earth-effected eternal destiny. So how do we define what our big V is all about?
Whilst Jesus doesn’t talk about vision or calling in the way we do, He does offer an invitation, by literally ‘calling’ the disciples to Him. The call on their lives is to come and be discipled by Him, to journey with Him, learn from Him, be friends with Him. And He offers us a vision: the vision of Himself and the vision of His future glory. It’s a life-giving vision in that, as we look on Him, we ourselves are transformed into His likeness. The things He has created and embedded within us, become fully alive in His Kingdom.
It’s easy to feel like somehow ‘Jesus’ is just not enough. We want to know what our personal calling is, our purpose, how we are going to change the world. But how often is the need for vision about our security in what we’re doing and our fear of sharing our true dreams with those around us?
Relationship with Jesus is the most exciting calling that’s ever been offered to the world. Living out our calling is about responding to His call, to relationship with Him. The vision is having a vision of Him and through that knowing Him and ourselves more. One of the verses I’ve been meditating on recently is from Psalm 37: ‘Delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.’ We must first delight in Him, have a vision of Him and know Him more intimately and He will then show us our true desires that He has placed within us and that He partners with us in bringing about.
So when we question whether we’ve got vision, our starting place is looking at Him. Do I have a clear vision of Jesus; do I pursue the call to having greater relationship with Him; is His purpose the call I am truly pursuing?
As Paul put so well to the Ephesians:
“I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better. I pray that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you…” (Ephesians 1 NIV)
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