Neighborhood Church: Transforming Your Congregation into a Powerhouse for Mission
By Krin Van Tatenhove and Rob Mueller
()
About this ebook
How can we embody the values of love, grace, and justice? As faith communities, how can our collective embodiment of these values shine even brighter? The answers to these questions must always unfold right here, right now, exactly where God has planted us. Neighborhood Churchacts as a resource to inspire churches to become a vibrant and engaging community partner with the families and neighborhoods living around them. The need for transformation is acute. Congregational decline continues across all mainline denominations. The abandonment of the church by the millennial generation is ubiquitous; no denomination is escaping it. This is, in part, a consequence of disconnection from our communities. Van Tatenhove and Mueller believe that, parish by parish, we can reverse this trend. They dare to have an audacious hope for local congregations not only as signs of Gods kingdom but as life-giving institutions that anchor their neighborhoods. Drawing on their combined sixty years of parish experience, wisdom from Asset-Based Community Development, and compelling case stories, Van Tatenhove and Mueller do more than just call us to incarnational ministry. They give practical, essential tools that lead to communal conversion, develop the DNA of listening, spur fruitful partnerships, promote integrated space, and sustain long-term visions. They believe these tools will spark true revival and unleash the power of incarnational ministry.
Krin Van Tatenhove
Krin Van Tatenhove has pastored a variety of Presbyterian parishes for thirty years. He has a Doctor of Ministry in parish revitalization and directs a small nonprofit called Torch of Faith, which offers low-cost development services to other nonprofits promoting social justice.
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Neighborhood Church - Krin Van Tatenhove
NEIGHBORHOOD CHURCH
NEIGHBORHOOD CHURCH
Transforming Your Congregation
into a Powerhouse for Mission
KRIN VAN TATENHOVE AND ROB MUELLER
© 2019 Krin Van Tatenhove and Rob Mueller
First edition
Published by Westminster John Knox Press
Louisville, Kentucky
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28—10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Westminster John Knox Press, 100 Witherspoon Street, Louisville, Kentucky 40202-1396. Or contact us online at www.wjkbooks.com.
Scripture quotations from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible are copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. and are used by permission. Scripture quotations marked NIV are from The Holy Bible, New International Version. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Invitation to Brave Space
poem by Micky ScottBey Jones is used by permission. The material in appendix 1 Sample Asset Mapping Workshop
is used by permission of the Growing Field. The material in appendix 3 Six Dimensions of a Partnership
is used by permission of the Creative Interchange Consultants International.
Book design by Drew Stevens
Cover design by Mary Ann Smith
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Van Tatenhove, Krin, author. | Mueller, Robert J., 1934– author.
Title: Neighborhood church : transforming your congregation into a powerhouse for mission / by Krin Van Tatenhove and Rob Mueller.
Description: Louisville, KY : Westminster John Knox Press, [2019] | Includes bibliographical references. |
Identifiers: LCCN 2018036075 (print) | LCCN 2018052399 (ebook) | ISBN 9781611649161 | ISBN 9780664264789 (pbk.)
Subjects: LCSH: Communities—Religious aspects—Christianity. | Evangelistic work.
Classification: LCC BV625 (ebook) | LCC BV625 .V36 2019 (print) | DDC 253—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018036075
Most Westminster John Knox Press books are available at special quantity discounts when purchased in bulk by corporations, organizations, and special-interest groups. For more information, please e-mail [email protected].
To all those who believe their local church can be a vital sign of God’s presence in their community.
—Krin Van Tatenhove
To the members of Divine Redeemer Presbyterian Church and the neighbors of our 78207 zip code who have taught me how to be a pastor.
—Rob Mueller
When Jesus directs us to pray, Thy kingdom come,
he does not mean we should pray for it to come into existence. Rather, we pray for it to take over at all points in the personal, social, and political order where it is now excluded. . . . With this prayer we are invoking it, as in faith we are acting it, into the real world of our daily existence.
—Dallas Willard
Listen with ears of tolerance. See through eyes of compassion. Speak with the language of love.
—Rumi
I want to live where soul meets body.
—Death Cab for Cutie
CONTENTS
Introduction
1. COMMUNAL CONVERSION
2. THE DNA OF LISTENING
3. TRANSFORMING PARTNERSHIP
4. INTEGRATING OUR SPACE
5. SUSTAINING THE VISION
Conclusion
Appendix 1: SAMPLE ASSET-MAPPING WORKSHOP
Appendix 2: SUGGESTIONS FOR JOINT USE AGREEMENTS
Appendix 3: SIX DIMENSIONS OF A PARTNERSHIP
Appendix 4: BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ASSET-MAPPING RESOURCES
Notes
Excerpt from Sailboat Church, by Joan S. Gray
INTRODUCTION
December 2, 2016, San Antonio, Texas—a federal judge frees hundreds of women and children from two Texas immigration detention facilities. He has deemed the sites unsuitable for holding minors, sending the families into a wet and frigid winter night.
Members of the San Antonio Mennonite Church, longtime advocates for just immigration, gather to address the emergency. How can they respond to the crisis? What is God calling them to do? Their answer, just one of many stories highlighted in this book, spurred this community of faith further along the path of incarnational mission.
Incarnation, from the Latin incarnatio, means the act of becoming flesh.
In various world traditions, it describes the supernatural taking on human form and walking among us. The living lama of Tibet, Vishnu becoming Krishna in Hinduism, or Haile Selassie’s status among Rastafarians are vivid examples.
Incarnation reflects the paradox that spirit and flesh can abide in the same place, that we are able to embody the holy in our own lives, and that the material world is precisely where we experience the divine.
When Christians capitalize the word, Incarnation describes the central event of our faith: Jesus of Nazareth personifying God’s purposes during his brief life on this planet. In the Gospel of John’s poetic prologue, we have this immortal verse, And the Word became flesh and lived among us . . . full of grace and truth.
What Christians call the Incarnation is certainly not a single act. It is a life-giving metaphor, an invitation to follow for all who will listen. Personally, how can we enflesh the values of love, grace, and justice? As faith communities, how can our collective embodiment of these values shine even brighter? The answers to these questions must always unfold right here, right now, exactly where God has planted us. It will happen in this place.
Every Sunday in countless congregations, Christians recite these words from what we call the Lord’s Prayer: Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.
As we mutter this memorized petition, do we grasp its subversive power? What does it mean? Since Jesus taught this prayer as a model, we turn to him for clarity. His entire ministry was a passionate attempt to illustrate basileia tou theou—kingdom of God—as his central metaphor. In one graphic teaching after another, including short stories we call parables, he offers us glimpses of this new reality. It is like
• A father who never stops waiting at the window for his wayward son, and when that son returns, the father celebrates with a sumptuous feast
• A smidgen of yeast that works enormous transformation
• A mustard seed, though tiny, that blooms into a mighty, shade-giving tree
• People who instinctively care for the naked, hungry, imprisoned, or foreigner
• A man who imperils his life and resources to help a stranger of another race, his compassion outweighing prejudice or resentment
• A shepherd so mindful of one missing lamb that he goes on a search-and-rescue mission.
Throughout these teachings, a truth becomes clear. If we want to enter into this kingdom—this new way of being in relationship with God and each other—it requires risk and radical realignment. To say Thy kingdom come
is a revolutionary confession of willingness.
Many of us long for this revolution to take root in our own lives and communities of faith. Hunger for authenticity crosses generations, as shown in multiple studies describing how Millennials view the church and organized religion. Like many of us, they are tired of the old ABCs of church management: attendance, buildings, cash. Despite a diversity that eludes single catchphrases, common themes shape their approach to mission.
Recently, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary uncovered these commonalities by employing a listener.
Rev. Mark Yaconelli spent months hanging out where Millennials hang out, asking questions and deeply listening to their answers. He discovered that Millennials seek a way to incarnate their passions: passion for a just world, passion for a less judgmental church, passion for service that actually makes a difference, passion for a sustainable lifestyle. These desires drive them to act, to incarnate, to take risks by becoming the change they seek for our world.
A good example of Millennial ingenuity is Dr. Matthew Hinsley, whose love of classical guitar and the value of the arts in transforming people’s lives led him to create the nonprofit Austin Classical Guitar (ACG). ACG provides guitar classes for over four thousand students in sixty Austin, Texas, schools. Determined to eliminate barriers to accessing the arts, ACG also offers the only daily fine arts class for incarcerated and court-involved youth in Travis County’s Juvenile Justice System. Further, they teach a Braille-adapted guitar program at the Texas School for the Blind & Visually Impaired.
Efforts like Hinsley’s are filling gaps that the educational and judicial systems have been unable to accomplish. Our failure as a church to capture the imagination, authenticity, and risk-willingness of this generation is crippling our incarnational capacity. It is symptomatic of our reluctance to get messy with the problems of our communities, and to Millennials it communicates a disinterest in real and lasting change.
Pieter Van Tatenhove, age thirty-six, was raised as a preacher’s kid, but veered from mainline faith to attend a conservative Christian university. The rigidity he encountered there swung him hard in the opposite direction. One of his last attempts to fit into organized Christianity was with a church plant in northern California. Initially, its core group valued a diversity of opinions, theologies, and political viewpoints. However, when the pastor decided to align himself with a name-brand denomination, the emphasis changed. There was pressure to adhere to a faith statement, and evangelism
became a numbers game. Though he recently connected with a progressive Episcopal congregation, Pieter had to overcome deep disillusionment. Here he shares some thoughts about his journey:
Most Millennials reject dated definitions of what a ‘community of faith’ looks like, he says.
We want the church to address its internal hypocrisy, to be more vocal about toxic American Christianity that is not recognizing injustice or loving our neighbors. We are seekers first, Christians second (if at all). We are reluctant to make statements of faith because they calcify that part of our brain that seeks new understanding. For me, the idea of going to church again sounded exhausting. I would rather spend time with my chosen community of seekers, where our common ground is our heart and conscience. Most churches no longer seem relevant.
This book joins hands with others in a quest to kindle new relevancy, especially in a country where Christianity is too often a civic religion, supporting a nationalistic worldview out of sync with biblical admonitions for justice. If we are to change, it will require listening to some painful questions and their prophetic challenges.
Consider questions like those posed by Father Jose Marins, a Brazilian priest who has taught a model of congregational incarnation known as Comunidades Eclesiales de Base (Christian Base Communities) since the 1970s. He tells the story of a visit he made to a neighborhood barrio in Los Angeles. It was wracked with violence and disintegration, and yet he observed that there was a church of some kind on nearly every corner. His question to the community was, "Is the church doing anything at all about this violence? How can there be so many churches and yet so little transformation?"¹
Our locales may not be plagued by inner-city ills, but every community has its issues. And for many mainline churches, the streets around them have changed dramatically, reflecting shifts in racial and socioeconomic status. It is our calling to incarnate here and now, exactly where we are planted, even if our old neighborhoods look vastly different than they did a few decades ago.
This is the lesson learned by Christian activist and writer Shane Claiborne, who had the privilege