- Aug 3, 2004
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Here is an interesting extract from Michael Frost's thoughtful and stimulating book "Exiles". It will make a lot of sense to many here.
"In his book Liquid Church, Pete Ward argues that there needs to be a shift from solid church to liquid church. He defines solid church in formal, institutional parameters: a more-or-less coherent congregation with a distinct organizational structure meeting in a particular place at a particular time. In solid church, faithfulness tends to be equated with church attendance; suc[wash my mouth]cess is measured in terms of numbers; worship and teaching are standardized, producing a bland and inoffensive diet of middle-of-the-road music and safe spirituality; and membership has become an exclusive and self-serving commitment, little different sociologically from membership in a golf or tennis club.
faithfulness = attendance, &
According to Ward, liquid church, by contrast, takes its identity from the informal and fluid notion of believers in communication with each other. This rather simple idea, if carried through in practice, has significant implications. First, liquid church is not an institution, but something that we "make with each other by communicating Christ." It exists in networks of relationships. Second, the basis for church life is found not in organizational patterns or buildings, but in people's spiritual activity. Ward reemphasizes the suggestion that "church" should be understood as a verb rather than a noun ("I church, you church, we church"). It might not seem all that radical, but rarely is it seriously embraced by many Christians today. Third, liquid church does not have to take the form of a weekly congregational meeting:
"Worship and meeting will be decentered and reworked in ways that are designed to connect to the growing spiritual hunger in society." This points to the fundamental motivation behind the idea of liquid church, which IS mission."
John
NZ
"In his book Liquid Church, Pete Ward argues that there needs to be a shift from solid church to liquid church. He defines solid church in formal, institutional parameters: a more-or-less coherent congregation with a distinct organizational structure meeting in a particular place at a particular time. In solid church, faithfulness tends to be equated with church attendance; suc[wash my mouth]cess is measured in terms of numbers; worship and teaching are standardized, producing a bland and inoffensive diet of middle-of-the-road music and safe spirituality; and membership has become an exclusive and self-serving commitment, little different sociologically from membership in a golf or tennis club.
Solid Church vs. Liquid Church
formal v
informal
institutional v
Fluid
organized congregation v
relationship with others through
communion with Christ
communion with Christ
structured time & place v
flexible to needs of community
flexible to needs of community
faithfulness = attendance, &
success = numbers v
not about the building,
not about the building,
but the spiritual activity
worship & teaching are standardized v
church is a verb, not a noun
membership is exclusive & self-serving v
fundamental motivation is mission
fundamental motivation is mission
"Worship and meeting will be decentered and reworked in ways that are designed to connect to the growing spiritual hunger in society." This points to the fundamental motivation behind the idea of liquid church, which IS mission."
John
NZ