Saturday, January 26, 2008

Dear diary, I’m in Crowded House for three weeks - week three

So here’s a diary of all that I’ve got up to this week. Again, if you need clarification as to what anything is then do ask in the comments, and if you don’t know what Crowded House is nor what I’m doing here for three weeks then have a look at my first post by clicking here and my second post by clicking here.

Morning Afternoon Evening
Sunday 20th January Teaching meeting. Broom Spring house church meeting and lunch. Hanging out at the pub.
Monday 21st January GTs meeting, Sharrow Vale leaders’ meeting, outreach project presentation. Lunch with Del, sitting in on a ‘counselling’ session, sermon comparison. TCH leaders’ meeting.
Tuesday 22nd January Group hermeneutic exercise, travelling to Loughborough. Lunch at a greasy cafe, hanging out with Jonny. Hanging out with Jonny and others from the church.
Wednesday 23rd January Hanging out with Matt. Hanging out with Matt, travelling back to Sheffield. Pasta plus with communion, followed by hanging out watching a French film.
Thursday 24th January Porterbrook training. Porterbrook training, coffee with Michael. Sharrow Vale leaders’ meeting.
Friday 25th January GT meeting, Northern Training Institute. Self organised time, coffee with Michael and Martyn (preparing for feedback).  Hanging out with my host family.

For my final week here I wanted to focus on church planting. It’s something that is very much on the cards here and is in fact a core value of the Crowded House as you’ll find on their website:

“6. Growing churches by planting churches: We are committed to starting new congregations - both in areas where no church exists and through subdividing growing congregations. We will not develop into a single, large congregation.”

As you’ll see from my diary I was in Loughborough this week with the Crowded House church there. They are planning on dividing into two teams and planting another church from the existing one. I was also sat in a planning meeting where Tim Chester was sharing his plans for the Edge network (in my previous post I mistakenly called it the Sharrow network!) which included discussion about the possibility of planting churches in the homes of recent converts or even in the homes of those who aren’t Christians but who are interested. The Sharrow Vale church are currently exploring and discussing the possibility of dividing into as many as five missional teams called Out There Teams which would be almost like separate churches with particular foci for mission.

In their book, Total Church, Tim and Steve argue that the best way for mission to be central to the church is by church planting (p.86). The benefits are fairly obvious when you think things through. If you were to take a typical UK church of say around 100 people and take 30 of them to plant a church, those 30 will be right at the front line of mission as they seek to actually do the planting, then the remaining sending church will see the gap and will see the need to fill that gap and so mission occurs. Rather than mission being a part of the agenda, when a church continually and actively pursues church planting, mission becomes the agenda

Tim and Steve identify essentially two models for church planting (p.88). One where a team of apostles (which can simply mean those who are sent) go off to somewhere where there isn’t a church and start sharing the gospel with people but by also meeting together as a church. The other is quitea natural thing where they would grow too large and divide, much like how anamoeba reproduces. Churches met in homes to start with and didn’t start adapting their homes until the mid 100s and didn’t start constructing church buildings until after Constantine ‘became a Christian’!

One thing that this has created in Crowded House is what I’d perhaps describe as a willingness to be experimental in how church is done.Because they are constantly looking to plant and doing so within smaller contexts in houses, there is always a possibility for trying a different means of reaching people with the gospel depending on the context. Sometimes things have gone wrong, but that’s been fine. They do say that Crowded House never stays the same, so the structure I laid out in my previous post, in two months time could be completely wrong!

If you’re interested in reading further about church planting, here’s some recommendations for further reading: Chapter 5 of Total Church by Tim Chester and Steve Timmis, which is where they cover a lot of how they think about church planting, (though it’d do you well to read the whole thing!) Steve has also put together a book called Multiplying Churches, which I’ve had recommended to me at Bible College. Then there is also the book, Organic Church, by Neil Cole. I read the first two chapters and introduction with one of the Loughborough church leaders and it was seeming to go in a very helpful direction. I know Tim Chester has delved into it and been influenced by it too.

So there’s my final reflection from being here. There’s so much I could write on what I’ve seen on how they do things. Of course theirs is not a perfect church and theirs is not the only way of ‘doing’ church, they’d be the first to tell you that. But they’re gospel centred seeking to further God’s kingdom on earth. I think the two most helpful things for me in spending three weeks here have been to see the value of genuine community (aka the allelous element - being devoted to one another, teaching one another etc) and catching the bug for church planting.

(All page references are for Total Church, by Tim Chester and Steve Timmis; published by IVP, 2007)

Posted by Jonny Raine at 17:59:36 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Dear diary, I’m in Crowded House for three weeks - week two

First off, if you don’t know what Crowded House is or why I’m here for three weeks then scroll down to my post last week and you’ll understand!

Second, I’m going to explain the ’structure’ as it stands at the present (though keep in mind that the nature of Crowded House is such that it changes quite frequently). There are two main networks at the moment, the 215 network and the Sharrow network. The 215 network, of which Steve Timmis is a leader, is the one I’m predominantly involved in and is the largest. They have four churches: Sharrow Vale, HuB, Broom Springs and Loughborough. Sharrow Vale meets in a typical (though of course modernised) church building and has two teams seeking to reach out to particular people. So you have the Manor team and the South View team. The hope at the moment is that eventually these teams may become church plants in and of themselves. The other three (HuB, Broom Springs and Loughborough) all meet in homes and Loughborough is expected to plant in the coming months and perhaps will become its own network. The Sharrow network, of which Tim Chester is a leader, is a lot simpler. They have two churches: Abbey and Sharrow. Both meet in homes. I don’t know what their plans and intentions are for the near future, as I haven’t spent as much time with them!

Third, here’s what I’ve been up to this week. If anything doesn’t make sense then do ask in the comments bit and I’ll clarify. 

 

Morning Afternoon Evening
Sunday 13th January Sharrow Vale’s out there sunday - house church meetings. Hanging out with my host family. South View team meeting, meal and communion, followed by the pub.
Monday 14th January GTs (Gospel Trainees) meeting, ’sermon’ prep. Lunch with the GTs, outreach project 215 network leaders’ meeting, Loughborough leaders’ meeting.
Tuesday 15th January Group hermeneutic exercise. Outreach project Tea at Adam and Amy’s with the Aussies, pub quiz on the Manor estate.
Wednesday 16th January GT meeting, prayer with the leader of HuB, Mum’s and Tots. Lunch with the local launderette guy and HuB church people, hanging out with a homeless guy and his mate. Pasta plus, hanging out at the pub.
Thursday 17th January Porterbrook Training. Hanging out with Tim Chester, sitting in on his 1-2-1. Tea with the Chesters, Greenhouse training, pub quiz.
Friday 18th January GT meeting, hanging out with Bobby-Jo (a leader of a house church in Tasmania). Preparing a video for Sundays meeting at Sharrow Vale Being a waiter at Live @ 215 (Jazz cafe).

 

Fourth and finally I want to reflect on how the evangelism is done here. If like me you don’t think that street preaching is the best form of communicating the gospel and that door knocking is not the best way to get into a relationship in order to share the gospel, then you’ve got to ask the question how can I do evangelism? One answer is to hold ‘events’ as a church and tag on a token gospel talk at the end. Another answer is to rely on individuals in the church to go out, build relationships and share the gospel themselves and then when their non-Christian friends become Christians they can be brought into the church. I would have said that the best means of evangelism was the last one, that is until I read Total Church and saw how it worked out here at Crowded House.


The ideal is that the people from the church will go out and meet people. But instead of them and them alone being in contact with the non-Christian, they will introduce the person to other people in the church. Eventually as the church people speak the gospel to each other so the non-Christian will pick up bits of the gospel, they’ll probably also ask questions about the gospel, they may even come to the church meetings (which because they’ll have already met most of the people in the church won’t be so daunting) and eventually they’ll have heard enough of the gospel to make a decision whether or not to come to faith. 

So when the leader of the HuB started getting to know the guy who works in the launderette, he also introduced this guy to other people in the church. So on Tuesday this week the leader of the HuB and I had lunch with the guy from the launderette and also with another guy in the church. Or take the pub quiz I went to on Thursday evening. There were about twelve people there, most of whom weren’t church people. So I asked someone who I knew was a church person and she told me that the old guy, no one can even remember how they all got to know him, then one lady was known by a guy in the church and introduced to everyone, and then that lady had introduced all her friends to the group.

Knowing the Crowded House values, Steve set me the task of imagining I had moved to the area and gotten myself into a house church and now wanted to do some evangelism. So I set out onto the streets to see where I might come into contact with non-Christians and where I might be able to actually get to know them. I settled on a betting shop where, as I passed by on the first day of my task, 30 or so men and women were. The next day I decided to actually go in and actually see and experience what goes on in a betting shop. I hung around for 20 minutes watching people. There were a large number of Oriental looking people, a few Afro-Caribbean in appearance and some Europeans. They were all talking with each other. I watched how you went about betting and had a go myself…I lost two pounds on a horse called Glamarouse…I think it came in third on an 8-1 bet! So, if I had moved to the area and had settled in a house church here, then I’d be spending a significant amount of time in the betting shop with others from the church! (I should probably point out at this stage that I don’t know whether or not the Crowded House would endorse my betting as I haven’t even told Steve what I’ve done. He’s probably going to read this now before I even get to tell him!)

So that’s their ideal, that they meet people then introduce those people to other church people and share the gospel in a gradual sort of way. It’s interesting to see how this works out in practice. So because Sharrow Vale have the church building, they occasionally hold events (without tag-on gospel talks) like the Jazz cafe last night, where Christians can bring their friends and introduce them to other Christians in the church. (You also get people wandering in without personal contact to these events too.) Then the Manor team runs a pub quiz in their local so that they can mingle with people and get to know people. But essentially it’s not events focussed so it is every day evangelism. It is an ideal so it doesn’t always happen that way, but it is definitely an effective means of sharing the gospel together as a community and thus fulfilling the allelous element.
Posted by Jonny Raine at 11:49:35 | Permalink | Comments (5)