Global Awakening :: Friends blog

May 17, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/292037414/

“The apostolic role within established churches and denominations requires the reinterpreting the denomination’s foundational values in the light of the demands of its mission today. The ultimate goal of these apostolic leaders is to call the denomination away from maintenance, back to mission. The apostolic denominational leader needs to be a visionary, who can outlast significant opposition from within the denominational structures and can build alliances with those who desire change. Furthermore, the strategy of the apostolic leader could involve, casting vision and winning approval for a shift from maintenance to mission. In addition the leader has to encourage signs of life within the existing structures and raise up a new generation of leaders and churches from the old. The apostolic denominational leader needs to ensure the new generation is not “frozen out” by those who resist change. Finally, such a leader must restructure the denominations institutions so that they serve mission purposes.” - Steve Addison

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

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May 13, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/289500178/

On with the series of posts on the mDNA of apostolic environment; It is worthy to note again at this point that the church in the West is facing a massive adaptive challenge: positively in the form of compelling opportunity and negatively in the form of rapid, discontinuous change. These twin challenges comprise a considerable threat to Christianity locked as it is into the prevailing Constantinian (Christendom) form of church with all its associated institutional rigidity. We are in a situation of what Roxburgh calls ‘liminality’. Liminality in his view is the transition from one fundamental form of the church to another necessitating the apostolic role. Environments of discontinuous change require adaptive organizations and leadership. As the apostolic role is responsible and gifted for the extension of Christianity, so too the missionary situation requires a pioneering and innovative mode of leadership to help the church negotiate the new territory in which it finds itself. This is clear enough when we consider the Emerging Missional Church which relies heavily on an innovative pioneering spirit and is therefore fundamentally apostolic in nature. But it is equally true for established churches.



The apostolic person’s calling is essentially the extension of Christianity. As such he/she calls the church to its essential calling and helps guide it in into its destiny as a missionary people with a transformative message for the world. All other functions of the church must be qualified by its mission to extend the redemptive mission of God through its life and witness. The apostolic leader thus embodies, symbolizes, and re-presents the apostolic mission to the missional community. Furthermore, he/she calls forth and develops the gifts and callings of all of God’s people. Without apostolic ministry the church either forgets its high calling or fails to implement it successfully. Sadly, in declining denominational systems, such people are commonly ‘frozen out’ or exiled because they disturb the equilibrium of a system in stasis. This ‘loss’ of the apostolic influencer accounts for one of the major reasons for mainstream denominational decline. If we really want missional church, then we must have a missional leadership system to drive it—it’s that simple.


I am well aware of the various reactions that this subject can evoke. This is so partly because of the confusion between the unique role and calling of the original apostles and that of present day apostol-ic ministry i.e. a ministry gifting that further extends and substantiates the original apostolic work but does not in any way alter it. But another reason for negative reaction has been because many who have claimed ‘apostleship’ do it no justice and in the end discredit this vital role. Sadly church history is littered with false apostles.


The only conclusion from the research and study undergirding this book is that apostolic ministry is a distinct element of Apostolic Genius and because of this we need to find a way to understand and re-embrace it if we want to become a genuinely missional church. Quite simply; a missional church needs missional leadership and it’s going to take more than the traditional Pastor-Teacher mode of leadership to pull this off. Leadership always provides a strategic point of leverage for missional change and renewal. If this is conceded, then the question is what type of leadership is naturally follows. The natural answer is missional and therefore must include the idea of the apostolic. We simply have to get over our historical cringe in this matter if we are going to grow and mature as a missional movement (Eph.4:11ff). It no mere coincidence that all the historical denominations have by and large have rejected apostolic leadership find themselves in long term, systematic, decline in every context in the West. This chapter will therefore focus on why apostolic ministry is needed and why it is a irreplaceable aspect of mDNA.

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

Posted by Alan Hirsch | 1 comment(s)

May 11, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/287947400/

Returning to our series on TFW: I want to take up the theme of Apostolic Environment. But before we go there, let me just touch base with the question that started my journey to writing TFW in the first place. Its all about the remarkable Jesus movements of history. Ones that seem to grow exponentially without the normal resources that we take for granted. The question that bugged me then, and continues to do so now, is ‘how did they do it?’ One of the clear answers is that they didn’t do it without significant leadership. But that just merely begged a further question: ‘what kind of leadership?” We have all sorts of leadership and training resources today and yet we are in serious decline. So, what was/is the difference? It’s a good question and it begs an equally good answer in response.



In every manifestation of Apostolic Genius there is a powerful form of catalytic influence that weaves its way through the seemingly chaotic network of churches and believers. There is no other substantial word for this catalytic social power other than to re-invoke biblical language and call it apostolic. And this is not just the power of the gospel/apostolic doctrine (as powerful as that is in sustaining the faith) but also that of a certain category of leadership, namely that of the apostolic person. I can find no situation where the church has significantly extended the mission of God, let alone where the church has achieved rapid metabolic growth where apostolic leadership cannot be found in some form or another. In fact, the more significant the mission impact the easier it is to discern this mode of leadership.


Apostolic leadership, as in all types of influence, is both identified and measured by the effect it has on the social environment in which it operates. And in these terms it is always present in periods of significant missional extension. Such people might not always call themselves ‘Apostles’ but the apostolic nature and effect of their ministry and influence is undeniable.


More soon…

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

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May 09, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/287057914/

Well, it all started with my relation to Albert Einstein really. I’ve always loved Bertie, but when my sister-in-law did research, she proved that indeed, I am related to him. Here is the proof…



Now it seems that I am in turn related to Marilyn herself. I couldn’t believe me eyes. But to get the point you have to stand six feet back from the image. Spooky


Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

Posted by Alan Hirsch | 2 comment(s)

May 07, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/286077612/

This map is a remarkable visual on the levels of individualism and secularism in various parts of the world. No real surprises, but it is interesting Sweden comes up the highest on both these scores. I was in Sweden over this last week and could not get away from the rather despairing feeling that if something is not done, and soon, we are seeing the last generation of Evangelical belief in that magnificent land. Europe is in deep trouble with the rest of us Westerners not far behind. Your thoughts?



Click on image to enlarge…


(The source of the map is from the World Values Survey)

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

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May 05, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/283932167/

Here is an interview I did for Christianity Today.



BTW, I apologize for not being able to blog as regularly as I would like to. My life has taken a decidedly busy turn and I find myself unable to get to the small and basic things. Not prouid of it, simply apologizing. -)

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

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May 04, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/283438389/

Having been on the road and not having access to the internet, I missed Holocaust memorial day. With the new rise of antisemitism and the British educational system removing references to the holocaust because it offended the delicate sensibilities of Islamic students, I feel that it is necessary to constantly remember, not just as a Jew, but because remembrance is an intrinsic part of biblical faith–we are so tied to history. Let us remember!


in meorium

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

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April 29, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/280648455/

I just got my hard copy of The Multiplying Church, by my good friend BobBob (Bob Roberts Jr.). I wrote the foreword for it and it is genuinely a good book by a great dude. Here is my foreword….



It was bono who once said, “”Dream up the world you want to live in. Dream out loud at high volume”. But it could easily have been Bob Roberts, the big-hearted, vision-on-steroids, huggy-bear, Texan who actually have ushered these words into the world. They just seem to fit the inimitable Rev. Dr. Bob Roberts Jr.. And boy, is he dreaming up a world for us to live in! Its called Glocal Transformation, and you had better hold on to them hats, because Bob’s vision is as big as it is stirring. And talking of Bono, the similarities are worth noting at this point because as far as I can predict, Bob’s ministry trajectory is increasingly taking him along similar paths of glocal nation-building and peace-making in the name of Jesus.


In his first book Transformation, Bob set out a vision for a discipleship that has the world, as well as the local church, in mind. His belief is that the transformed human must lead to a transformed humanity. As I see it, the primary focus in that book remained on the individual, but nonetheless he constantly pointed the reader outward to the world beyond the local church, city, and nation, to what he calls the Glocal world—the highly interconnected reality that all of us now have to live in. In Transformation, Bob envisioned a new way of engaging the Glocal to achieve glocal transformation. He rather cleverly called it “domain jumping” and it involves the willingness to join the Kingdom agenda within the different domains of life (e.g. education, politics, religion, economics, art, etc.) and not limit mission and ministry to the religious, or churchly, sphere. In Bob’s vision of the church, mission always seems to involves a seriously expansive agenda.


In his next book Glocalization, Bob developed these ideas further but focused the reader on the radically changing social, political, economic, and cultural, patterns of the world in which we are all called to live and love in. Drawing inspiration from early church history and the emerging church, and the church in the developing world, he called us to reconstruct a new missional operating system rather than a church program. He proposed ten major glocal issues that demand our attention: communicable disease, hunger, water and sanitation, corruption, migration and refugees, climate change, education, armed conflict, economy, and trade subsidies? Clearly in Glocalization Bob’s agenda has now moved beyond the narrow concerns of “the church” to that of God’s world in all its complexity.


In this book (The Multiplying Church) he lays out not only a vision of a multiplying (and multipli-able) church that can operate effectively in the Glocal context. And this turning of his attention to church planting movements has certain missional logic to it. For God’s church, when it is true and faithful, is by far and away the most powerful agent for the transformation of the world in human history. It is the next, and necessary, piece in the equation. But this is not just theory; Bob is at pains to suggest very practical ways in which we can actually begin the journey toward multiplication church planting. And make no mistake; we have a way to go in this regard. Most churches in the West are beginners when it comes to church planting, let alone in its exponential form. We know from history and experience that a genuine encounter with Jesus result the activation of people-movements that get to change the world. If we wish to transform this complex, glocalized, world in which we live, then multiplication church planting must become a vital part of the missional equation. There can be no dodging here: The 21st Century absolutely requires that we adopt a movement ethos and approach, and The Multiplying Church is Bob Robert’s valuable contribution to the missional agenda of God’s people in God’s Glocal world. We are in real need his guidance.


But what intrigues me the most, and what is perhaps of most importance in the work of Bob Roberts, is that the man himself is well worthy of study and emulation. Bob has an innate capacity to accumulate very important ideas and reconfigure them in ways that the average person can grasp. Make no mistake; he is a very well read, intelligent, “domain jumper” theologian himself. I have had wonderfully wide-ranging discussions with him on numerous occasions and he is disarmingly bright. But intellect aside, what is really distinctive about him is that as a genuine practitioner he does not stop at the ideas-in-themselves. His more primal instincts (thank God) are application as well as demonstration; and it is here where he makes his greatest contribution. He is a genuine apostolic pioneer—the real deal.


Quite honestly, it is exceedingly hard to find anyone comparable with Bob Roberts in the world today. Where does one find a charming, unsubtle, Texan engaging really effectively where experienced, delicately nuanced, diplomats fear to tread? Which Southern Baptist preacher do we know of that gets to meet prime ministers, presidents, warlords, political dissidents, mullahs, communists, or whatever, and somehow bring them together around tables to talk peace and justice? Which local pastor anywhere is involved in “nation-building” (his phrase) in ways that he is? And where do we find a paid-up conservative Evangelical like Bob addressing the glocal issues listed above with such practical, all-encompassing, compassion? And all this whilst at the very same time keeping the living message of Jesus, as well as active missionary church planting, at the center in the equation?


I ask again, who goes where Bob goes and who does what he does? And with the silence that flows from that question I rest my case: the man is worth listening to because God is doing something unique in and through him. We must pay attention.

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

Posted by Alan Hirsch | 0 comment(s)

April 28, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/279569182/

Check this out.

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

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April 26, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/278476415/

Hi all. Sorry I have not been blogging regularly. I have bee so busy and have had little time to blog and interact with my friends here at tfw blog. I have been in three time zones in one week. Having a great time…



1. Was in Oz with my family and tribe (Forge). Had a great grassroots conference. But saying hi’s and goodbye’s (again!)  was very emotionally exhausting.


2. Was deeply involved at Exponential in Orlando last week. This was a fantastic meeting of over 2500 church planters and CPM leaders. Very special.


3. Am now in Germany with Novavox. Had a world cafe creativity sessions with some of the brightest missional practitioners I have ever met.


4. Onto Sweden on Tuesday to be with Interact Youth and Swedish Baptists and then finally home to LA.


I feel a great sense of privilage in seeing some of the most amazing projects and churches and meeting some of the best people in the world! I am very thakful…and tired. Thanks for your support, prayers, and patience.

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

Posted by Alan Hirsch | 0 comment(s)

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