Some thinking from another "quarter".
- The fundamental crisis of the church today is a crisis of the Word of God. The church must recover the full dynamic of the Word, not just as Scripture, but as God-in-communication, especially through the written Word of Scripture and supremely through the Incarnate Word, Jesus Christ. This is another way of saying the church must recover a consciousness of who God is.
- Behaviors and structures in the church reflect fundamental concepts in the church’s self-understanding which often remain unarticulated.
- The church is essentially the community of God’s people, not primarily an organization, institution, program, or building. This is a distinction of fundamental importance because it is linked to the basic models of the church which Christians employ.
- The experience of salvation is incomplete and not fully biblical without genuine experience of the church as the community of God’s people and agent of the Kingdom.
- The most dynamic and prophetic thing the church can do is first of all to be a worshiping and serving community.
- Every believer is a minister, servant and priest of God. Every believer is called to ministry, and all God’s people must be equipped to minister.
- Every believer receives grace for ministry. Therefore spiritual gifts must be identified and employed to God’s glory.
- Leadership grows out of discipleship. Where careful discipling is lacking, leadership cannot be biblical and a crisis of spiritual leadership results. Worldly qualifications for leadership replace biblical ones.
- The church’s concern for and identification with the poor are sure signs of its faithfulness to the Kingdom and are often signs of fundamental renewal.
- In North America today a vital, biblically faithful church will be a countercultural community living in tension with the non-Christian elements of society and marked by a lifestyle that is distinctively Christ-like and Kingdom oriented.
Howard A. Snyder, Liberating the Church: The Ecology of Church and Kingdom (InterVarsity Press, 1983), 17-18.
Tuesday, 16 January 2007
10 Theses for the Church
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