June 23, 2008 by

Missional: What It Means to Me

3 comments

Categories: changing mindsets, church, missional

(This is part of Rick’s synchroblog on “What Is Missional?” See the end of this post for the list of participants.)

I hope I haven’t bitten off more than I can chew.

Although I’ve been a Christian most of my life, and involved in some form of church “ministry” function for most of the time I’ve been a Christian…I have only known of terms like “missional” and “emergent” for the past year and a half. And just when I’m getting used to reading, hearing and saying these types of words…apparently there is already some frustration about their usage, about the labels, about what is associated with them–what they mean, or what they should mean. Hence, the reason for the synchroblog.

Being fairly new in this stream of thought, I’m actually looking forward to reading the other participants’ responses, because I am far from expert in this category. But when a word like “missional” starts being over-complicated, it helps to go back to the basics; and I think I know enough to get to the heart of this word, and that’s what I think we’re looking for.

First things first–I think we need to begin by swearing off the word “missional” as a label. Descriptive terms become labels when we stop using them to describe what we do and using them instead to describe who or what we are. And when a descriptive term becomes a label, meanings start getting confused, stereotypes start getting applied, and prejudices pile up until eventually we grow weary of using the word at all. (This is precisely why some believers are now avoiding the word Christian, and this is also happening already to the word emergent as well.) So whatever “missional” is, it needs to describe our actions and activities, not identify us as a type of group.

That said…here’s what “missional” means to me…

The word “missional” has to do with the mission of Christ. So I think being missional means simply to live from the heart of Christ’s mission. I think the way we do that is to participate in the ongoing mission of Christ, and to emulate Christ’s approach in fulfilling His mission. (This second point–emulating His approach–is key, and I’ll explain why in a minute.)

What was Christ’s mission? Simply put–to demonstrate God’s love to people and to reconcile them back to God. That was the mission that brought Him to earth; it was His mission while on earth; it was His mission when He went to the cross; it is still His mission today. Missional people recognize that the work of Christ is ongoing on the planet, and they are looking to see what Jesus is doing, and how they can participate in it. They see being a Christ-follower as more than just a personal relationship with Jesus; they see it as following Christ into His mission as well.

Now, what makes being missional different from being merely mission-minded is in the approach–the way things are done. There are many mission-minded people in the modern church today–people who recognize our call to reach people (they call them “the lost”)–but the modern church’s methods actually look very different from the way Jesus approached life, ministry, and mission.

Sometimes the missional approach is compared with the attractional approach. Institutional Christianity typically uses the attractional approach to ministry–setting up a central location and trying to attract people to itself. This method is working less and less as time goes on. The missional approach tries to see the Great Commission for what it is–a “go-to-them” thing rather than a “come-to-us” thing.

Sometimes the word “incarnational” is also used with the word “missional”. I love this word, because it speaks of Christ’s incarnation–how He put aside His heavenly glory and actually became a living, breathing, fully human being. God became man, so He could reach men and women where they were. This is a key part of being missional–to infiltrate the culture rather than invade it; to connect with people where they are at; to approach people from a spirit of humility and acceptance rather than pride and superiority. Jesus humbled Himself and became a man; that’s how He did it. That’s how we should do it.

The number of ways that this can play out is staggering. What truly excites me about emulating Jesus’ approach to mission is that it can take so many creative forms. The missional approach won’t set up a cookie-cutter version of “church” to reach a community; rather, it will let the community flavor what the church will look like. It won’t super-impose a churchy culture upon its mission field; it will allow the church to be formed from within the existing culture, while still keeping Jesus at the center. Every time this happens, the church will look and feel different (which is a wonderful thought to me, since I’m bored stiff with the current models of church). And all the while, when Jesus is at the center of it all…there will be unity within the diversity.

If you think for a moment about the infinite creativity of God–a global church that looks like this would be a far more accurate reflection of Jesus Himself than we have now, don’t you think? (Getting preachy, now…sorry about that.)

One more thing before I finish. To me, being missional is more than an approach to ministry; it is something to be woven into the fabric of our life. It is seeing life, ministry and mission interwoven together. Jesus didn’t turn His “ministry career” on and off; He lived from the heart of love day by day, touching people as He went. Ministry happened as He lived His life. If we’re truly going to be followers of Christ, we need to see things the way He does, allowing His approach to reshape the way we view ministry.

That’s what I think, anyway.

Please visit the other synchrobloggers listed below!
Alan Hirsch
Alan Knox
Andrew Jones
Barb Peters
Bill Kinnon
Brad Brisco
Brad Grinnen
Brad Sargent
Brother Maynard
Bryan Riley
Chad Brooks
Chris Wignall
Cobus Van Wyngaard
Dave DeVries
David Best
David Fitch
David Wierzbicki
DoSi
Doug Jones
Duncan McFadzean
Erika Haub
Grace
Jamie Arpin-Ricci
Jeff McQuilkin
John Smulo
Jonathan Brink
JR Rozko
Kathy Escobar
Len Hjalmarson
Makeesha Fisher
Malcolm Lanham
Mark Berry
Mark Petersen
Mark Priddy
Michael Crane
Michael Stewart
Nick Loyd
Patrick Oden
Peggy Brown
Phil Wyman
Richard Pool
Rick Meigs
Rob Robinson
Ron Cole
Scott Marshall
Sonja Andrews
Stephen Shields
Steve Hayes
Tim Thompson
Thom Turner

Musician. Composer. Recovering perfectionist. Minister-in-transition. Lover of puns. Hijacker of rock song references. Questioner of the status quo. I'm not really a rebel. Just a sincere Christ-follower with a thirst for significance that gets me into trouble. My quest has taken me over the fence of institutional Christianity. Here are some of my random thoughts along the way. Read along, join in the conversation. Just be nice.

3 Responses to Missional: What It Means to Me

  1. Sarah

    Nice! I’m enjoying reading the various entries (although it will probably a couple weeks to read them all as my time for blogs is in scant supply!). But I just wanted to say that I appreciated your point about mission not being a seperate endeavor from everyday life. (I really like the term “missional living” because it kind of captures that).

    I don’t want to exchange one form of religion for a new-and-improved “missional” form of religion. I agree with you that incarnational-missional is more natural (rather than programmed) and happens “on the way” of life. We can be intentional about looking for where God is at work and joining up with Him in it. But post-churchianity, I’m pretty tired of trying to ‘make stuff happen.’ 🙂

  2. kathyescobar

    hey jeff, i really like your thoughts! especially the one about the mission of jesus being woven into the fabric of our hearts. it’s not an on-off switch or a “this is when i’m being missional and this is when i’m not”. rather, it’s a natural part of us, because of him….peace, kathy

  3. Jeff McQ

    Sarah,
    I agree that we don’t need to reduce “missional” to another brand of the same-old. From what I’ve read on the other blogs, it seems there’s a lot of that going on, esp. from larger existing churches that want a piece of the next “thing”. People who think that way never got the point to begin with.
    For me, being missional is a way of thinking/living that I’m having to get used to, like stepping into a cold pool. But it has injected a lot of hope and purpose into my boredom with church as usual. 🙂

    Kathy,
    Like I mentioned to Sarah above, this is something I’m getting used to, something growing in me. So for awhile, in my own life, it might actually look like on-off missionality while I de-construct old ways of thinking. 🙂 But I understand this concept enough to know it needs to be worked through our whole life, not applied as a tactic to whatever it is we’re doing.

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