When my friend asked me to read and review his new book, I
was first surprised and amazed!
Surprise
was because I had not received such an invitation before. (I have read and reviewed books that have
been “around for a while” and others had shared their insight; but not one just
being published.) Amazement was due to
his trust in me to give some constructive thoughts and encouragement that might
draw others to read.
For Such a Time as
This…Aligning Church and Leadership for Missional Ministry by Ircel
Harrison is a short, concise book which seeks to encourage the Church – God’s
representation in our society; my church; your church – to BE what it is to
be. Use of the term “missional” is seen
throughout the book speaking of “missional churches” and “missional Christians.” While this is a fairly new term, it is one
which simply means that one is involved in God’s mission – the redemption of
the world. It is not one program or set
way of doing anything. It is being a
redemptive presence in the world in which one finds itself.
This book is not a resource kit or packaged program one
would use to go and “make” one’s church become missional. It is a small volume filled with
encouragement for the church to do some introspection to determine what it is
doing well, what it is not doing, and what it is doing that no longer is making
an impact on the Kingdom of God.
Harrison writes, “It may mean identifying one thing the church is doing
that is no longer needed and invest that time and energy into a new
outwardly-focused ministry.” I paused to
reflect how many “things” the churches I have been a part of all my life that
continue to do “things” just because. There is no kingdom impact, no one finds a
deeper spiritual journey because of, or other things are not allowed to be
scheduled because of it. What if we were
to face the reality that some things we do once had a meaningful, life-changing
purpose, but now are just someone’s sacred cow of service?
The author encourages those who wish to align church and
leadership into missional ministry to think outside the box. “We've never done it that way before,” may
just be the beginning point of that one ministry opportunity right before our
eyes.
Building and empowering leadership is a key the author
writes passionately about. He states
that as a whole the church has done a good job of Bible teaching “but little to
equip lay leaders.” This topic is one
which not only needs more elaboration, but needs volumes written and seminary
courses taught to both new and experienced clergy. The pastoral call from Scripture states to “equip
the saints…” but for many reasons, this role has been overlooked or pushed to
the back of the priority lists. Early
New Testament followers were not elected to a position but were empowered to a
ministry. How can we in church
leadership shift our focus to empower and equip our membership to do the
ministry God has ordained them for?
It IS time for the
church and its leadership to align itself with God for the missional ministry
only they have been called and ordained to do.
No comments:
Post a Comment