Rethinking the Church: A Challenge to Creative Redesign in an Age of Transition
By James Emery White and Leighton Ford
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Rethinking the Church helps pastors and lay leaders work through questions that must be answered if a church is to rethink evangelism, discipleship, ministry, worship, community, and the structure of the church. Break old molds, check assumptions, and be sensitive, says White. He uses the language and aims of "seeker-targeted" churches but urges readers not to tie themselves to any model without understanding the individual purpose of their church.
Now thoroughly revised and expanded, Rethinking the Church contains more emphasis and key material on how to move from rethinking to transition. White blends biblical reflection and hands-on experience and uses the early church as described in the Book of Acts as the ultimate example.
James Emery White
James Emery White is the founding and senior pastor of Mecklenburg Community Church in Charlotte, North Carolina; former professor of theology and culture at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, where he also served as their fourth president; and author of more than twenty books that have been translated into ten languages.
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Rethinking the Church - James Emery White
Rethinking
the
Church
Also by James Emery White
A Search for the Spiritual
Life-Defining Moments
Long Night’s Journey into Day
Embracing the Mysterious God
© 1997, 2003 by James Emery White
Published by Baker Books
a division of Baker Publishing Group
P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.bakerbooks.com
Ebook edition created 2011
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
ISBN 978-1-5855-8040-8
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com
Scripture quotations identified MESSAGE are from THE MESSAGE. Copyright © by Eugene H. Peterson 1993, 1994, 1995. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group.
Scripture quotations identified NLT are from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, IL 60189. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations identified TLB are from The Living Bible © 1971. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, IL 60189. All rights reserved.
The internet addresses, email addresses, and phone numbers in this book are accurate at the time of publication. They are provided as a resource. Baker Publishing Group does not endorse them or vouch for their content or permanence.
Contents
Foreword
Preface to the Revised Edition
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Rethinking the Foundational Questions
2. Rethinking Evangelism
3. Rethinking Discipleship
4. Rethinking Ministry
5. Rethinking Worship
6. Rethinking Structure
7. Rethinking Community
8. From Rethinking to Change
Conclusion
Notes
Select Bibliography
Foreword
A half century ago I was a high school student in Canada with a deep concern to introduce my generation to Jesus Christ, who had become a living reality for me. Through involvement in Youth for Christ, I came to know a visionary group of young pioneers with a passion to evangelize their generation. Among them were Billy Graham, then a staff evangelist with Youth for Christ; Bob Pierce, who founded World Vision out of his heart for children; Jim Raburn, who saw America’s teenagers as a vast mission field and launched Young Life; Dawson Trotman, who discipled servicemen through the Navigators; and Bill Bright, who targeted the campuses of America. Most of the young pioneers I met were men. All of them had a passion for Christ and the gospel, and they were willing to think in new ways.
I can remember late night prayer meetings at the Youth for Christ conferences at Winona Lake, Indiana, where these young men of God would lift their voices in prayer for the lost and the needy. They left an indelible imprint on my life.
Now, fifty years later, God is raising up a new generation of leaders with new visions for their world. Again, all of them have a passion. I am glad to say they include both men and women. And they are a source of great hope. Their hunger for God, their vision for the world, their fresh thinking, and their deep passion inspire me. Today I encounter these young men and women through Leighton Ford Ministries, where we are committed to raising up young leaders worldwide who will lead others to Jesus.
Jim White is one of those young leaders whom I have come to know and admire. I have watched as he has helped to give birth to a new, vibrant, and fast-growing church in our own exploding community of Charlotte, North Carolina. I have talked with him and have sensed the authenticity that comes from the way Christ has intersected the deep needs of his own life. I have been impressed by the combination of a vibrant heart, a visionary faith, and clear thinking that mark Jim’s ministry. In all this he is typical of this generation of new leaders that God is raising up, not only in the United States but around the world.
But Jim also typifies this new generation of leaders in two other ways. He is not at all satisfied with ministry as usual.
He knows that after half a century of unrelenting evangelism, America is still a mission field. Indeed, the United States is now the largest mission field in the English-speaking world with over two hundred million people who have at the most a vague connection to Christ and his church. Jim knows that we need new ways to attract these people.
Jim is also a church planter. I have noticed that many of the young men and women who have a passion for evangelism believe that the planting of new churches is key to evangelizing America. Many of those who might have gone into para-church ministries forty or fifty years ago are selecting church planting. The parachurch groups still have an essential place, but church planting is on the cutting edge of the future.
So it is important that Jim has written, out of his own experiences and heart and mind, this book, Rethinking the Church. Rethinking
is a good translation for the word repentance, for to repent means to change our way of thinking. It is literally after thought.
Jim is helping us to rethink evangelism, discipleship, ministry, worship, community, and the structure of the church. He begins by taking us back to the source and using the early church as described in the Book of Acts as a paradigm. From this he raises important questions and points to some of the important answers.
This book is not the last word on the church. No book will be. But I pray that God will use this book to help pastors and lay leaders who are frustrated at the way things are and hopeful about the way things can be to rethink and to act in brand-new ways, led and empowered by the Spirit of God.
Leighton Ford
Preface to the
Revised Edition
I am deeply grateful to the editors at Baker for allowing me the chance to revise and expand this work. The modifications throughout have been designed to enhance the ongoing vitality and relevance of this work to bring about thoughtful approaches to change. The distinctives that many found helpful have hopefully been retained—namely, the book’s simple, concise treatments of the key areas for rethinking and the freedom from specific models of ministry or faddish techniques that can often cloud the issues. Because of the book’s uncomplicated nature, a wide range of churches and denominations have been able to use it strategically for the purposes of rethinking foundational issues related to methods and processes.
Where needed, statistics and findings have been updated so that the research on which the book was founded might continue to be vital and, if necessary, corrected. The near universal call from readers for a chapter on moving from rethinking to change has been heeded and has been added to this new edition.
Mecklenburg Community Church recently celebrated its tenth anniversary, bringing clarity to the founding vision and the principles of rethinking on which it was established. I have enjoyed incorporating a decade’s worth of learning throughout this new edition.
When I first wrote this book, I thought that the most important area for rethinking revolved around process. I still hold to its importance, and it is the heart of this book. What I did not foresee was what was truly at hand, which was simply the building of a church that would flourish. Rethinking the Church has been used by denominations and seminaries, leadership teams and entire congregations as a way to explore creative redesign for optimum levels of ongoing effectiveness. My goal in this revision is to serve the continued ministry of this work for many more years to come.
Preface
This is not another book on church growth, future trends, or contemporary models of ministry. It is not a book that tells the success story of a particular church in order to make that church a model for others to follow. It is not a lament of the church’s theological, spiritual, or numerical decline. This is a book on rethinking.
What is rethinking? It is the radical redesign of church processes for dramatic improvement in the fulfillment of the church’s purposes and mission.[1] The most important word in that definition, however, is not radical. There is certainly a need for change in the church, but I am not one to call for change just for the sake of change. What is more important is a return to process, something the church has turned its back on for quite some time. By process I mean a complete end-to-end set of activities that together fulfill the purposes and mission of the church.
There is a pressing need for the church and its leaders to rethink why they do what they do the way that they do it. In recent years, there has been a tendency to break the church down into specialized tasks and programs and then focus on trying to improve those various tasks and programs. Rather than rethinking the church, we have become engaged in repairing the church. But the church’s problem is not a task problem; it is a process problem. As renowned management expert Peter Drucker was often known to say, there is a great difference between increasing efficiency—which is doing things right—and effectiveness, which is doing the right things. Rethinking the church is about effectiveness. It is not about asking, How do I do this better?
as much as it is about asking, Why do I do it this way?
or even more foundationally, Why do I do this at all?
Therefore, this is not just a book for the church professional.
It is a book for everyone who is concerned about the church and is involved in the church. I hope you like it. Even more, I hope you apply it, because the church really is the hope of the world.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank four men in particular. The first two are Rick Warren and Bill Hybels. They are the Roger Bannisters
of the church world. Bannister was the first person to run a mile in under four minutes, a goal that people had been trying to achieve since the days of the ancient Greeks and had concluded was impossible. The year after Bannister broke the four-minute barrier, thirty-seven other runners did the same. The year after that, three hundred runners achieved what had previously been considered impossible. Now it is not unknown for every runner in a single race to run the mile in less than four minutes. Rick and Bill, you were the pioneers who blazed the trail that so many of us have followed. Both of you, in so many ways, have been incredibly generous and giving to me through your life, time, and support.
To Leighton Ford goes great love and admiration for being both mentor and friend. You have selflessly committed your life to passing on the torch to the next generation. I hope my small flame burns half as bright as yours and that I finish the race with as much integrity. Thanks, too, for writing the foreword.
Finally, to David Dockery I extend both affection and gratitude for being that rarest of finds: a good, loyal, and lasting friend. You have always supported my calling.
In addition to these four men, there are two institutions that deserve a word of thanks. Both the Moscow Theological Institute and the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary allowed me the privilege of serving as a visiting professor during 1994. Much of this book was conceived during my time on those two campuses. Being a glutton for punishment, Southern invited me back during the summer of 1996, and the final touches on this book were completed during that time.
I also wish to express my deepest love and gratitude to the family of faith known as Mecklenburg Community Church. You have chosen to believe in both me and the dream. You have given me your trust, your support, and your partnership. You have overlooked my weaknesses and celebrated my strengths. I stand in awe of you and all that you are doing for the kingdom. With you, I can know and be known, love and be loved, serve and be served, celebrate and be celebrated. You are the rethinking embodied.
And finally, I thank my wife, Susan, who continues to be the woman of my dreams. Once again, you made every page possible.
Soli Deo Gloria.
Introduction
My grandfather lived well into his nineties. Toward the end of his life, he made a comment that deeply intrigued me. He said, Jim, I’ve seen the world go from the horse and buggy to the space shuttle.
At the time, I was fascinated by the breadth of his life but equally challenged by the fast-paced nature of change. My grandfather witnessed nothing less than the transformation of the world. But so will you and I. More information has been generated in the last three decades alone than in the previous five millennia. Over four thousand books filled with information and knowledge are published every day. A single weekday edition of The New York Times includes more information than the average person in seventeenth-century England encountered over the course of his or her entire lifetime.[1] The implications of such rapid change have had an impact not only on our lives but on our institutions.
A Lesson from the Business World
For decades, most companies have operated on the basis of Adam Smith’s insight that industrial work is best carried out by breaking everything down into its most basic tasks. In their landmark book Reengineering the Corporation, Michael Hammer and James Champy write that this set of principles laid down more than two centuries ago has shaped the structure, management, and performance of American businesses throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
[2] Yet due to the continual transformation of the world through rapid change, Hammer and Champy go on to say that the time has come to retire those principles and to adopt a new set. The alternative is for corporate America to close its doors and go out of business.
[3] Bottom line: