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APPENDIX 3

S0ME RESOURCES

Reading together about spiritual and cultural subjects will enrich a group seeking to be in authentic community. Following are some of the resources we have found helpful in our own explorations.

BEING CHURCH

  • The Dream of God by Verna Dozier
  • The 'Givens' of an Authentic Church, sermon by Gordon Cosby
  • Life Together by Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  • A Possible New Form of Church, sermon by Gordon Cosby
  • What on Earth is a Kingdom of God? by David Buttrick

 

FACING OUR CULTURAL ADDICTIONS

  • Breaking the Taboo: Talking About Faith and Money in the Church by John Sonnenday
  • The Other Side of Sin, ed. by Andrew Sung Park &  Susan L. Nelson [In particular see chap. 5 ,
    Beyond the 'Addict's Excuse"' by Ched Myers]
  • Pathologies of Power by Paul Farmer
  • Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger by Ron Sider
  • When Society Becomes an Addict by Anne Wilson  Schaef

JESUS AND JUSTICE

  • The Biblical Jubilee and the Struggle for Life by Ross Kinsler and Gloria Kinsler
  • The Biblical Vision of Sabbath Economics by Ched Myers
  • Cadences of Home: Preaching Among Exiles by Walter Brueggemann
  • Good News to the Poor by Theodore Jennings, Jr.
  • Jesus' Plan for a New World by Richard Rohr
  • Jesus the Rebel by John Dear

LOVE AND MERCY IN COMMUNITY

  • The Art of Spiritual Direction: Giving and Receiving Spiritual Guidance by W. Paul Jones
  • Awakening from the Sleep of Inhumanity by Jon Sobrino
  • Becoming Human by Jean Vanier
  • Community and Growth by Jean Vanier
  • Life of the Beloved by Henri Nouwen
  • Love Set Free by Martin Smith (out of print; check used bookstores or internet sources)

PRAYER/LIVING MINDFULLY

  • Centering Prayer by Basil Pennington
  • Invitation to Love by Thomas Keating
  • Open Mind, Open Heart by Thomas Keating
  • The Power of Now by Eckart Tolle
  • The Way of Love by Anthony deMello

STAYING TRUE TO THE ESSENCE

  • The Divine Conspiracy by Dallas Willard
  • Living in the Vision of God by Dallas Willard
  • Radical Newness: the Essence of Being Church by
  • Gordon Cosby and Kayla McClurg
  • Reluctant Saint: the Life of Francis of Assisi by Donald Spoto
  • Saving Jesus From Those Who Are Right by Carter Heyward

TELL US OF OTHER TITLES
IN THESE SUBJECT AREAS
THAT HAVE BEEN HELPFUL to YOU.

'The checked titles are available from Tell the Word or Potter's House Bookservice.

Others are available from any book supplier. We appreciate your support of the Potter's House Bookservice at 202‑232‑5483 or www.pottershousebooks.org.

MEMBERSHIP COMMITMENT

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APPENDIX 2

THE CHURCH OF THE SAVIOUR MEMBERSHIP COMMITMENT

The following statement of commitment has been used for many years in The Church of the Savior churches. It is a standard that we still strive to embrace and practice in community.

  • I come today to join a local expression of the church, which is the body of those on whom the call of God rests to witness to the grace and truth of God.
  • I recognize that the function of the church is to glorify God in adoration and sacrificial service, and to be God's missionary to the world, bearing witness to God's redeeming grace in Jesus Christ.
  • I believe as did Peter that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the Living God.
  • I unreservedly and with abandon commit my life and destiny to Christ, promising to give him a practical priority in all the affairs of life. I will seek first the kingdom of God and God's righteousness.
  • I commit myself, regardless of the expenditures of time, energy and money to becoming an informed, mature Christian.
  • I believe that God is the total owner of my life and resources. I give God the throne in relation to the material aspect of my life. God is the owner. I am the ower. Because God is a lavish giver, I too shall be lavish and cheerful in my regular gifts.
  • Realizing that Jesus taught and exemplified a life of love, I will seek to be loving in all relations with other individuals, groups, classes, races and nations, and will seek to be a reconciler, living in a manner which will end all war, personal and public.
  • I will seek to bring every phase of my life under the lordship of Christ.
  • When I move from this place I will join some other expression of the Christian church.
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APPENDIX I- THE CHALLENGE AND THE HOPE

Some of the groups use the following as a litany to open each meeting.

THE CHALLENGE

Our lives are filled with so many challenges, struggles and hurts. They make it hard to be the free people God longs for us to be. What makes it even harder is that we are isolated we feel disconnected from others and find it hard to trust each other.

THE HOPE

We believe that new ways are possible. We know that when people come together, new things can happen. One amazing example is Alcoholics Anonymous, which 70 years ago no one knew about. Now the 12 step program is practiced around the world and has saved millions of lives. This gives us hope. Maybe there can be a group that meets for support and prayer that can help all of us deal with what life brings our way, a group that helps us all to grow more free to become the people God wants us to be. Maybe this can save our lives.

Our desire is to be a group that claims our birthright as children of God. We will take into our hearts a deeper understanding that each of our lives is a blessing needed by the community and the world.

OUR HIGHER POWER IS JESUS CHRIST

Jesus loves all people. He challenged the oppressive systems of his time. Our desire is to follow his way of love in our time, in our lives. Our world says that we are not supposed to care about and love people who are different from us. Our world tells us not to be friends with or to love people of different races and backgrounds. Our world says our worth is measured by what we own, how much money we have, who our friends are and what we look like. We believe these worldly assumptions are lies, and we desire to break down these walls of hatred, mistrust and isolation, and to become the free people God created us to be.

AN AFFIRMATION or BELONGING

Having been called out of the world's systems into God's system:

  • we recognize the injustice of the world's systems; we recognize our addiction to these systems
  • we recognize our helplessness to break our addiction and to heal ourselves
  • we cry out for a Saviour and a community of support
  • we commit ourselves to becoming recovering cultural addicts
  • we will give pioneering servant leadership in every dimension of Christ's call on our lives.

WHAT WE CAN'T DO ALONE, WE CAN DO TOGETHER

If you care about the church and long for something more ...

if you want to be a part of God's restorative movement where you live ...

If you want to stay in touch so that we can learn together ...

> Indicate your interest by returning the information below. We look forward to what God has in store.

STAYING IN TOUCH

If you are called to be part of a movement toward building more authentic expressions of church, we would like to hear from you. We hope to be in touch occasionally and offer some companion essays (on topics such as cultural addiction, racism, reconciliation, money, the call to systemic justice, prayer, etc.) as well as pass on what we learn from each of YOU. Let's share our resources and ideas, struggles and joys.

YES! I am ready to begin and want to stay in touch.

Name:

Address:

Telephone:

E mail¬

Tell us something about yourself. What is your sense of having been prepared for this movement? How do you see yourself participating at this point?

Be in touch in one of these ways
Return this page to:

Becoming Authentic Church
2025 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington DC 20036

Or e mail us at office@surfglobal.net with "Authentic Church" in the subject line.
(this is the email for Church of the Saviour, not the keeper of this blog. If you want to converse with me, Dale Lature, email me at dlature-at-comcast.net---replace the '-at-' with the email '@' symbol)

A Few Essentials

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If you sense that you are called to this way of being with others, please know this: you are not alone. And the way is not without complication. Seeking to build a Christ centered group, with diversity, reconciliation and justice at its core, is one of the most difficult and counter-cultural things any of us will ever do. Knowing this from the start can free us to take it seriously and hold it lightly. Here are some pointers that might be of help:

  • Don't go it alone. Begin with two or three others who are internalizing the principles and practices described here and are ready to commit for the long haul. Support and encourage each other; listen for God's guidance; take risks. This is high adventure.
  • Claim your own inner authority as a servant leader called by God. While all members will share group facilitation, you and others who are called will provide ongoing foundational guidance.
  • Keep returning to the central vision. Are you honestly facing your cultural addictions and sharing yourselves vulnerably with each other? Are you seeking radical diversity? Are you moving toward greater depths of reconciliation? Are you pursuing justice for the oppressed and excluded?
  • Focus again and again on the call to justice. Resistance to this call often is deeply ingrained. We wonder, who are we to think we can reform the systems of the world? But of course, the true question is, with God's call to do so, who are we not to?
  • Don't be afraid of failure. Don't be afraid of success. Only be aware of the common tendency to think too much about either one. Stay quietly faithful to the process, whatever comes. And if you sense that you either are sabotaging or relishing the possibility of success, confess and seek guidance.
  • These processes are both simple and complex To manage this reality, keep everything as concreie as possible. Hold to the disciplines of the beginning commitment; follow a consistent meeting format; provide everyone with a membership roll and encourage people to stay in touch and be intentional about their choice to belong; find meaningful ways to celebrate this choice. (In other words, have fun!)
  • If you think you're beginning to "get it," go deeper. The most common failure is the failure to internalize the basics and to stop going deeper. Pray, read, listen, learn, reach out. Prepare to lose your life for the sake of finding Life.
  • Remember that no one knows ALL that it means to follow Jesus in community. Live to the limit of your understanding. Let's learn from each other.

What We Know For Sure

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We must be in community. In small cells of belonging, we are challenged to know and be known intimately. We are not able to hide out any longer, pretending to be other than who we are. As we learn to receive and give God's love in practical, life changing ways, we begin to embody that love on behalf of the world.

This community must have extreme diversity. Being together with the poor and the privileged, men and women of all races and life experiences, we learn to respect and honor the whole family of Christ, The authentic church seeks particularly to be with those whom Jesus was with, who were outside the religious and social systems. We will work to build a diverse membership where differences become gifts.

We must be about reconciliation. The primary work of Jesus Christ is to heal us of our sin ---our separation from God and each other--- and this will be the primary work of the authentic church as well. We continually will seek meaningful ways to bring together whatever has been broken apart and to learn how to love and be loved, even before we are lovable.

We must seek justice. The authentic church finds creative, proactive ways to "love one another as we have been loved." We identify those cultural systems that obstruct the flow of love and strive to create new structures that enhance it. We practice charity as well as justice, reaching out to those who are down and lending the strength of our voices to those who cry out for change.

The Unfolding Story

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To be the church means we are living the unfolding story of God in the world. We open ourselves to God's continuing newness, to unexpected twists and turns of the plot, to all the drama and comedy and suspense that God wants to write. Our small story is part of a much larger story, the ongoing story of God's little struggling band of followers, and we are either a part of that narrative or a part of the world's narrative.

God willing, our story continues. The next chapters are being written and lived into even now. In our willingness to let God do a new thing through us, we are not rejecting our past, but more fully claiming it, more fully harnessing its energy and vision. We are seeking to return to bur first love, a love thaf calls us to become more authentically the presence of Jesus in our neighborhood, our city, our world.

God's vision for the church doesn't change, but the structures of the church must change to speak that vision in authentic ways to each new era. We must be ready at all times to transcend all our loyalties to religious traditions in order to find the new ways that will reach people now. No one knows what any church, genuinely seeking to be Christ's body on behalf of the world, should look like. There is no single right way, only the willingness to move into the new, not knowing with certainty where we are going but with the Holy Spirit's companionship going anyway.

One thing is clear: all of us are desperate for meaningful existence. We are desperate for a place of belonging and trust, desperate for a life free of addiction and compulsion, desperate for meaningful work and a way to contribute to society with dignity, desperate to know people who care. Does the church have a message worth hearing when we feel desperate? If we have nothing to say in the presence of our desperation, we have nothing to say at all.

In saying yes to the church's story, we say no to the world's story of power and violence and greed. Saying yes to the church's story doesn't end our addiction to the world, but it ends our denial. And once we move out of denial, God is set loose in us in a way that wasn't possible before. We are freed at last to become the gift of love that is our deepest nature, who we truly are.

When we enter the authentic church, we enter a recovering community rooted in honesty and accountability whose healing is found in reaching out to help heal the world. Like any addict, we'll be there for the rest of our lives.

An Alternative Seminary

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The authentic church takes seriously that we are called to be committed servant leaders in the world and will provide an "alternative seminary" for the training of such leaders. Utilizing a serious, in depth, "whole life curriculum," we will stretch our minds and our souls as we read, respond to, research and put into practice both classic and new theological, psychological and social/political themes. We will explore what it means to love God with our whole heart, soul, mind and strength, striving to live the Christ life as consciously and Intentionally as we can.

This seminary experience will include classes in theology and scripture, prayer, community, etc., much as our School of Christian Living did in the past. In addition, the seminary will offer life management curricula, guiding us in such issues as money management, addictions, emotional trauma, domestic abuse anything that keeps us from becoming the free and loving people that God intends.

Working with a sponsor over a period of time---possibly as long as a year or two an array of spiritual and theological themes will be explored, as well as themes tailored to particular life circumstances. For example, if we have financial debt that is creating anxiety, our sponsor might go with us to a financial counselor or Debtors Anonymous or a jobs or economic program, where we can begin to make more informed choices about our financial life.

Perhaps our sponsor will suggest that we see a professional counselor to work with the emotional issues of abandonment or incest or violence that keep us in despair. Whatever blocks us, whether material, emotional or spiritual, from receiving God's intimate love and from being available to be used as a catalyst for redemption in our world, will be addressed in this relationship with a sponsor.

Eventually, when we who have been "working our program" discern with our sponsor's guidance that we are prepared and called, we will present to the group a culminating project; an integrated life spiritual autobiography of sorts. We then will become available to serve as sponsors for others. Or perhaps, together with two or three other members who are ready, we will form a new group, welcoming people who are our "opposites" and who hunger for personal and cultural transformation.

And so, like a stone tossed into the water, the ripples of our deepening life together expand and extend to others. The relationship between a sponsor and the one being sponsored is not about an "insider" instructing and preparing an "outsider." It is not for the purpose of fulfilling a list of requirements in order to become a real member of the church.

The relationship between sponsor and sponsored allows both to experience the fullness of what it means to belong to each other. As we are guided by the sponsor to face what has not yet been healed in our lives, all the residual damage of our years of cultural addiction, and as we are given help in working with these damaged parts of ourselves, we can begin to express the fuller gift of who we are.

Freed to love and serve and dream new dreams, our true selves emerge and we find a fuller belonging to the local community and the world community, These are the foundational life skills of the Christian faith and what it means to go deeper.

Going Deeper

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Money certainly is not the only practice of discipleship that will challenge us to grow as a community. There are unimaginable depths to be explored, and the authentic church will encourage continual growth and learning. As we go deeper into a serious journey with Christ, and as we seek to be healed from our addictions and be reconciled to one another, we will want to find additional practices.

We might read together a "book of the month," increase the time we spend alone and together in prayer and silence, prepare spiritual reports and keep a journal of our inner discoveries, go on retreats together, have social gatherings, take a class, go to the movies or do charitable acts together and so on. We will never exhaust all there is to learn and discover and enjoy about building a common life in Christ.

Responding to an inner hunger, some undoubtedly will want to embark on a path of even more focused study and growth in order to make a more informed commitment to Christ and his call on our lives. When any of us who have been a member of the group for a period of at least some months sense that God is calling us to go deeper, we will request a sponsor, someone who has been working with the principles and practices of the faith for a number of years, who will meet with us one on one to start a process of discernment about what next steps might be right.

At this point we will enter what in the past we have called "intern membership," a time of directed exploration to listen for God's deeper callings in the particular circumstances of our life. This exploration will happen within the church's seminary.

MONEY, MONEY, MONEY

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One of the primary questions in most efforts to be church is what to do about money. We consider Alcoholics Anonymous, which decided against owning property or keeping a corporate treasury and instead let each local group be self supporting. We think of how churches often receive an offering and ask members to tithe or pledge to support the church's budget.

We want the Spirit to guide us to practices which might bring greater abandon with our giving. We have much to learn about what these practices are. Like the early Christians, we want to surrender everything to Christ, including our various kinds of wealth. In this new community, with some who have much material wealth and some who have little, we cannot ignore how money and other kinds of privilege have been at the root of our separation. We do not want to cause further harm.

So we are asking, what did it mean for the early church to share all things in common and to sell their goods and distribute the proceeds to whoever had need? What structure might allow us to live as freely as that? We know that being the authentic church will call us to face the power issues inherent in having and not having money, not because it's a rule we will try to follow, but because it's a result of loving and being loved.

Those of us who have more than we need and those of us who have less than we need often suffer silently, ashamed and afraid to acknowledge this shadow between us. In this new experience of community we want to look openly at the specter of money and the ways it has isolated and hurt us. We want the lordship of Christ over all parts of our lives.

In that desire, we are committed to "hilarious generosity" [2 Corinthians 9:71 and to the fundamentals of redistribution. Some of what we have done so far is to give assistance with rent and medical bills and child care expenses. We have helped arrange financial courseling when it's been sought and have responded to needs outside our group as we have been made aware.

The bottom line question for all aspects of the group's life together is, "How is my freedom tied to your freedom?" The creative use of our money is included in that question. Undoubtedly we will make mistakes as we work with these issues. We hope to make as many as possible on the side of generosity.

Each group differs regarding the use of various aspects of worship. We pray together. We use scripture and a thematic teaching to guide our sharing. Two of the groups celebrate Eucharist and one uses mu sic.

We are trying to recapture the essence of the New Testament church, if not its particular forms. We find much to inspire us in the descriptions of that first ecclesia [see especially Acts 2 4 and the epistles]. We hope to discover fresh corporate practices that will draw us deeper into communion with God and each other and will aid our primary intention of loving each other toward wholeness,so as to be reconciled and freed to serve.

The Practice Of Justice

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Simply by being with others in this kind of group, with people who are different from each other yet are committed to knowing each other intimately and healing the differences between us, we become a countercultural presence in the world. And yet there is more. We also seek to apply concretely the principles of Jesus on a broader scale, becoming "evangelists" for reconciliation and justice within the culture. We expect our life together to impact the world, even if that means becoming a threat in the same way that Jesus was a threat to the culture of his day.

We do this primarily by making Jesus central. Not the Jesus who has been made a national icon but the authentic Jesus, who said, "Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you" (Luke 6:27 28); "Why do you see the speck in your neighbor's eye but do not notice the log in your own eye?" (Matthew 7:3); and "This people honors me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me" (Mark 7:6). This is the Jesus who provoked the religious and national authorities of his time by his extravagant acts of mercy and justice. Such extravagant acts will be the hallmark of our life together.

As our burden of separateness is lifted and the Holy Spirit is allowed to reconcile us to one another, we will question what has kept us apart, what has trapped us in a system of "haves" and "have nots," "insiders" and "outsiders," and we will begin to consider how we might impact those systems.

The church rarely has been bold enough or organized enough to be a threat to systemic oppression. Generally we have not been willing to hold the anxiety and tension that can come from addressing the issues at all, let alone working to change the systems. As we seek to be a more authentic expression of Jesus' life, we might look at such things as:

  • a national minimum wage that is not a living wage, and does not pay people what they need to sustain a decent lifestyle
  • 45 million people, some working full time, who lack health care
  • companies outsourcing industry, sometimes to "sweat shops" in the third world where they can offer low wages and give decreased attentionor none at all to environmental concerns
  • a penal system that punishes more than reforms and in which a disproportionate number of inmates are minority race persons
  • half the world's population (about 3 billion people) barely surviving on less than $2 a day, while 3 people report assets greater than the combined GNP of more than 30 poor countries
  • the use of legalized violence, in whatever forms, as a reasonable way to handle social problems

These are only a few examples of how we seem to be living disconnected from God's dream for us as a global family. We want more faithfully to be God's partner in establishing restorative and nonviolent systems of justice and love for the entire creation.

Is There More?

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Just as addicts never outgrow their need for a 12 step group, we do not outgrow our need to be together in diverse community and face up to our condition as addicts of the culture, who have lived in isolation and fear. There is no limit to the benefit that can be derived from the practice of sharing our true selves and listening to each other. We discover again and again, as we break open our lives, that Christ is there as well. We will continue doing this foundational work forever.

As we come to know and trust each other, and start to experience freedom from what has kept us bound, we then find that we are being empowered to extend ourselves into some place of need in the world. The question soon becomes, what might be God's call on our life together? Having experienced such freedom and joy, how might we now become a catalyst for the freedom and joy of others? How might we help liberate some unfree, unjust system in our world?

We are just getting started, but two of the groups have begun to look at ways to work with the "Living Wage Campaign." This is a logical choice because now we know so much more personally what it means to be the working poor as we listen to some of our comembers' stories and struggles. We recognize more concretely this national sin, that people can be working full time and yet not earn enough to meet the basic needs of their families.

Whatever the specifics might be, as we come to know and love each other in our groups some of us currently struggling under the very real weight of injustice we will be compelled to lend our corporate strength to each other's needs and to right some of our nation's unjust systems.

One of our temptations when we talk with others is to stay on the surface of ideas and theories, never taking the risk of sharing from the heart. So in this group we gently draw each other again and again to the heart. We challenge one another to move out of our heads and to go deep sea diving in the ocean of our own pain and joy, sharing the depths of who we really are.

As we are able to do this listen and speak out of our depths, even though our wounds feel so private and severe or, on the other hand, seem almost trivial when held up beside others', and when we see that the same cultural systems that have so deeply hurt some have made life easier for others we begin to recognize how much we all need healing. The Holy Spirit breaks into our midst, and the bonds between us deepen.

Our desire is to create a safe and receptive space where we can speak out loud our experiences of both the presence and "absence" of God in our lives without being judged or analyzed or even advised. Here we can express our feelings of shame and joy and anger and longing, perhaps confessing aloud some life experiences for the first time, and be completely accepted as we are. The group's attentive, lovingly detached listening shines a light on the darkness around an experience, and the heavy burden of separation is lifted.

Finding The Words

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We understand the concern that to talk about spiritual things in an insensitive way can be off putting, creating a barrier of religiosity. However, we have found that most people are eager to talk about themselves and what really matters to them. When we have a conversation with someone new, we easily can say something simple like, "Tell me about yourself"; or, "Tell me who you really are"; or, "What's important to you?"

If they share some of their story, we simply listen. We listen as if we have all the time in the world. We listen on behalf of all the times we have failed to listen in the past.

Then we share with them something of who we are. Perhaps we say something like, "I don't know if this might be true for you, but I have found that I sometimes have trouble being who I want to be and living what I want to live. I don't know about your life, but mine has had a lot of brokenness in it and I find myself struggling with feeling loved. I need others for support: One of the things that has helped me is a group I'm in where we're trying to learn how to love and be loved. Would something like that be of interest to you?" You'll be surprised how often people respond gratefully to this sort of encounter and invitation.

Regardless of what we say in these moments, it is our presence, experienced through our deep listening and our willingness to reveal something genuine about ourselves, that matters most, Our acceptance conveys God's acceptance. What happens next is God's business, not ours. Our task is to be available and to see each other the way God sees us to see how we look in God's eyes. Looking at each other that way evokes that true nature in us. Who wouldn't want to be around people like that?

Finding Our Opposites

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Finding those who are our so called "opposites," and talking about spiritual things, can feel even more intimidating. Basically we get tripped up by fear. We fear seeming arrogant and disrespectful. We fear being ridiculed. We fear being swallowed up by the pain of seeing so directly into the dismal face of poverty or privilege. We fear being paralyzed by our guilt over the discrepancies between us. These fears are legitimate and need to be felt. And then we must go anyway.

Our guiding question will be, where would Jesus go? Most of these places will be where the privileged and connected are the ones on the outside.

Look around your town or county. Where are people struggling for a better life? Where have people been abandoned? Where is the church absent? Find these places and go there. Don't go there to serve anyone. Don't volunteer to answer the phone or organize a clothing drive or teach reading or fix a meal. Don't do anything. Be. That's all. Learn how to hang out with people who are not like you. Hear their stories, and share something of yours. Be in the tension of not knowing for sure what to say or do. Relax and receive whatever God wants to give you. Learn to be present.

We will not be able to be the church that God intends if we don't let God plant in us, very simply, a passion for people. Not a coercive, codepenclent "love that's not love," but true affection that desires nothing else than to be there, and to be real. Crowds gathered around Jesus because he was available, and he was genuine. Who he was with them was who he was within himself. Are we living true to our inner selves? Are we the kind of people others enjoy being around? Do our schedules allow "hanging out time," and do we hang out where destitute, lonely people hang out?

Finding Others

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The compelling desire to be with others in more authentic ways, ways that will foster diversity and reconciliation and help us to act for justice, often presses in on us long before we find others who share that desire. We can feel very alone. We long for something more, but don't know how to find others who might be willing to step out into new structures and processes with us.

You might be wondering where to start. That's easy: start where you are. Let the new way begin in you.

We can't expect others to internalize what we have not yet internalized ourselves. The first "other" we must be reconciled to is our own self. Our true self in Christ waits to know and be known by us. Are we in love yet with that beloved and broken child of God? Are we moving toward freedom from our own addictions? Are we actively seeking to reconcile our own broken relationships? Are we being honest about our own need for transformation, even as we ask God to bring others who are aware of theirs? Our first task is to confront ourselves lovingly and begin to surrender those attachments we cling to that keep us from clinging only to God.

And, of course, we need others. For starters, you have us. We will have conversation and find ways to support each other, even at a distance. We will share with each other how desperate we are for this --- how much we need and want recovery --- until we find that we are no longer satisfied with staying on the surface in any of our conversations. As we dare to speak more deeply with others, God opens doors to find those who also want something more.

What was it about Jesus that drew people to him? Primarily, they liked him. He treated them with respect; listening and confronting and speaking from his depths. When we are freed to be our true selves, our affection for each other will increase, and our conversations will take on a depth that we might not have imagined.

Yes, many of us have had the experience of being held hostage by a religious extrovert, and we might not want to be seen as one of "those Christians," but this is no excuse. We must be willing to take the risks of authentic friendship and compassionate connection, revealing ourselves for who we really are. Often these conversations become the way to discover who will be our companions on this journey.

FINDING OUR OPPOSITES

Finding those who are our so called "opposites," and talking about spiritual things, can feel even more intimidating. Basically we get tripped up by fear. We fear seeming arrogant and disrespectful. We fear being ridiculed. We fear being swallowed up by the pain of seeing so directly into the dismal face of poverty or privilege. We fear being paralyzed by our guilt over the discrepancies between us. These fears are legitimate and need to be felt. And then we must go anyway.

Our guiding question will be, where would Jesus go? Most of these places will be where the privileged and connected are the ones on the outside.

Look around your town or county. Where are people struggling for a better life? Where have people been abandoned? Where is the church absent? Find these places and go there. Don't go there to serve anyone. Don't volunteer to answer the phone or organize a clothing drive or teach reading or fix a meal. Don't do anything. Be. That's all. Learn how to hang out with people who are not like you. Hear their stories, and share something of yours. Be in the tension of not knowing for sure what to say or do. Relax and receive whatever God wants to give you. Learn to be present.

We will not be able to be the church that God intends if we don't let God plant in us, very simply, a passion for people. Not a coercive, codepenclent "love that's not love," but true affection that desires nothing else than to be there, and to be real. Crowds gathered around Jesus because he was available, and he was genuine. Who he was with them was who he was within himself. Are we living true to our inner selves? Are we the kind of people others enjoy being around? Do our schedules allow "hanging out time," and do we hang out where destitute, lonely people hang out?

The Church of the Saviour churches have always been open to diversity, Yet despite seeking welcoming ways to worship, pray, study and work together, most have not become fully diverse. We have had meaningful relationships with people of different races and economic classes, for example, and sometimes we also have been church members together, but generally we have not been a radically diverse and reconciling body at the foundations, with people of widely varying life experiences finding mutual partnership and belonging.

We have hoped that if we consciously sought to give ourselves to God and God's flow of love, reconciling and intimate relationships would happen naturally. By and large, however, they have not. This new process is an attempt to end our complicity in staying separated from each other and to build rich, mutual relationships with those from whom we have been isolated.

If we are going to be the church of Jesus Christ, true to his nature and part of God's redemptive plan for the world, we must find new ways to be together, ways that say, clearly and concretely from the outset, Yes, we are different from each other. We are of different races and cultures, some of us own very little and others of us own much; we have had different opportunities in our lives; there are ways in which we do not understand or trust each other, but we are family, and God has called us to be together.

We no longer wait untiI we have the "race issue" or the "economic issue" or the "power issue" figured out. We no longer will wait until we have a clear understanding of each other and feel completely at ease. Rather, our differences will be our starting place.

The "Basics"

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There aren't a lot of rules for how we function in these groups, but the following patterns have guided our time together:

We meet once a week for one hour.

Leadership rotates so that all who desire to do so will have the opportunity to lead. The leader begins the session on time and facilitates the sharing, often beginning with the principles and the affirmation in "The Challenge and the Hope" [see Appendix 1).

One member, sometimes the leader, serves as teacher and speaks for five or six minutes, usually focusing on one of the five steps and a passage of scripture.

Approximately 45 minutes are given to personal sharing. This sharing, which is the heart of the meeting, is not about ideas but feelings, not conjecture but experience.

Confidentiality is honored. What we say in the group stays in the group.

Generally we follow the 12 step method of attentively listening to what is shared with no response or cross talk.

The leader facilitates prayer at the close of the time, and in some groups a member celebrates the Eucharist.

Group business items are considered at a separate time, as needed.

BECOMING A MEMBER

Becoming a member of this initial group is very simple. We want all to know how much each person is wanted and needed, and how much everyone's participation benefits the whole.

Becoming a full member of the group requires three steps:

At the invitation of a current member, attend two consecutive meetings and indicate a desire to belong.

Be willing to embrace the basic principles named in "The Challenge and the Hope" [see Appendix 11.

Commit to the principles and practices of the five steps, and be willing to share personal experiences and feelings openly and honestly, respecting the confidentiality of the group.

ENDING ONE'S MEMBERSHIP

Ending one's membership in the group is equally simple:

Be absent from two consecutive meetings without notice.

Indicate a desire to withdraw, preferably after prior discussion with the group.

EXTREME DIVERSITY

From the beginning, these groups have been an experiment in extreme diversity, intentionally bringing together seeming "opposites," people who appear outwardly to have little in common with each other and who might not otherwise be likely to find depth belonging together. In overt ways racially, culturally, economically, etc. we are different from each other, and often separated because of these differences. By joining the group we are saying we want to know and be known by others who seem different from us and to offer these seeming differences as a healing gift for the whole.

We intentionally work to maintain a balance of diversity because we want to embody Jesus' nature, and we know Jesus expresses himself through all parts of God's family, reconciling all who are separated. That's just who Jesus is. If we hope to be healed from our isolation and be made whole again, we will seek to reunite with all from whom we have been separated. We therefore seek mutual relationships with our so called opposites. Not to "do for" but simply to "be with" one another. We long for God to heal and redeem what has been broken between us.

To have the desired diversity means that although we believe the life changing love of Christ is available to all, we will guide people toward groups where their presence will more likely complement the balance. Also, we no longer hope that our "opposites" will seek us out and discover how welcoming we are; instead, we will notice who is not represented in our group and accept personal responsibility for inviting them in. We will extend ourselves to others whom we might not have sought to know before. We will ask, who is not represented here and what would need to happen to create a more diverse body?

In a group that is small enough for in depth sharing (probably a maximum of about 20, splitting off into new groups when the number grows larger) it is nearly impossible for all variations of diversity to be represented, but we are committed to making concerted effort to have as much diversity as possible.

Extreme diversity is essential if we are going to become the authentic church, but it does not come to most of us naturally. Our natural gravitation tends to be toward sameness. We want to be intentional about breaking this ingrained pattern. We are inspired by Jesus, who was always crossing the cultural boundaries of his day. He sought to break through walls of separation and injustice, and so shall we. Joined in that desire, we will, as Gandhi said, "become the change we hope to see in the world."

We all are damaged by the ways we have isolated ourselves, trying to avoid being known. Determined to protect ourselves and play it safe, or be as independent as possible, we have adopted various attitudes and behaviors as pathetic substitutes for the holy. We need each other , especially those whom we have hurt and have been hurt by, if we hope to be healed. Letting down our walls and learning to care for each other is the way we begin to find the healing we so desperately need.

The world has told us that we are "opposed" to one another because of our differences, but this is an illusion. We are liberated as we come to know each other more deeply and are able to transcend the illusion of "opposites." Reconciliation requires finding common ground on which we can both transcend and embrace our differences. The authentic church provides that common ground.

What's The Plan?

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KEEP IT SIMPLE

The greatest challenge for most of us who want to go deeper spiritually, and to do so in community, is to find ways that are simple enough to hold the complexity.

Just as Jesus is a gate where the sheep can come in and go out and find pasture [John 10:7 9], we too want to be a gate through which people can come in and go out with ease. We want to make concrete for others the openness and breadth of Jesus' way, as welI as its yet to be discovered treasures. The authentic church will hold the tension between easy and difficult, broad and narrow.

We want processes for this introductory group that are simple enough to enter easily, yet hold the potential of leading us into the untold depths of Christ. We want to be flexible enough to allow the Spirit room to play and yet sturdy enough to hold up under the pressures that inevitably will come.

A FIVE STEP PROGRAM

We have chosen to begin with a simple five step program. The processes of other groups might be different. Changes can be made freely as each group is guided to do so, but we suggest that they be made toward greater simplicity, not greater complexity.

Just as we have tried to keep this little guidebook as simple as possible (while assuming that most readers are familiar with "church language"), it is important to be as straightforward and plain as possible when we share the purposes and hopes of this group.

The following, which some of the groups use as part of a unison litany, states our intentions in language that we hope will speak to all, with or without overtly "religious" experience.

Together
- None of us can become free alone. We will spend one hour together every week, sharing our struggles and joys.

Time In the beginning, we will set aside at least 15 minutes a day for personal prayer and scripture reading, with the intent of getting to know Jesus and sensing how much God loves us. We also will commit to pray for each other,

Task Jesus loves us deeply and passionately and calls us to give back to others. We will seek to find the task that God has for us to do. We want to be with those who are suffering and to help change the unjust structures that cause the suffering.

Take We will take hold of Jesus, the Liberator, who tears us away from the worldly values and systems that bind and kill us. We will name those things in ourselves that keep us from living in a new way of nonviolent love and freedom, and offer them up for healing.

Tell As we are being liberated and freed, we will tell others about the Source of our new freedom.

What's Stopping Us?

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If we can name and embrace what, for us, are the "givens" of being authentic church, and we know we want something more, and we even are willing to let go of old traditions and structures, what keeps us from embodying the new? We see who Jesus is, and genuinely believe that his way is the way for us, but are unable to live that way fully and passionately. We long for Jesus' nature, but we seem to be trapped by our own nature and unable to break free. What causes this disconnect in what we want to do and what we actually do?

The answer is quite simple. We have not yet faced one basic and inescapable fact:

WE ARE CULTURAL ADDICTS AND WE CANNOT BREAK THIS ADDICTION ALONE.

Finally seeing this truth really "getting it" that we are addicted to the very culture and the very way in which we live is the beginning of true freedom. [To begin to learn more about cultural addiction, see Appendix 3, Resources "Facing Our Cultural Addictions,' p. 47.]

When we finally see that we are addicted to a culture of comfort, security, competition, praise, staying busy, controlling people, being in shallow relationships, having too much or too little money, worrying, seeing ourselves as superior or inferior to others that a vast assortment of sensations, behaviors, substances and activities keep us disconnected from our real feelings and needs and disconnected from God we can then unmask the false nature of this cultural system and see that it can never give us what we long for. We will be able to see at last how much we have depended on this false system, and how utterly helpless we are to break our dependence and to heal ourselves.

Then, together with every alcoholic or drug addict who has hit bottom and cried out for help, we too will cry out for a Saviour and for a faithful community to save us from our cultural addiction. At this point, humbled and ready to receive mercy and healing love, we see the truth and commit ourselves to becoming recovering cultural addicts and to being used by God in whatever ways God chooses.

From the deepest parts of us we now understand that we can no longer pretend that everything is fine and we can manage our lives alone. We must join ourselves with others for our mutual healing and transformation. We need others who are equally serious about taking hold of the liberating Christ. We need ...

  • a group, in Christ, that is breaking with the culture, the world's systems, and providing support for total recovery from that culture
  • a reconciling group of extreme diversity, especially highly privileged and severely oppressed
  • a group closing the gap between the deepening of personal faith and the expression of that faith in public political ways
  • a group seeking biblical justice in all forms, including the redistribution of wealth
  • a praying group, growing in our capacity to love, understanding that authentic love is always nonviolent.
    I Knowing that we are cultural addicts and need an authentic community for our recovery ...

Authentic Church: Our Evolving Story

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Some have been asking, what about the earlier model of The Church of the Saviour? Isn't it a good enough way to be in meaningful community with others? As some of us have been exploring this different way of coming together, one thing we have discovered is that this supposedly "new" model is actually a very natural evolution of the "old" model that we've tried to embody faithfully for nearly 58 years.

We have always tried to follow the authentic Jesus, and to do so in small committed groups of people who are intentionally on an inward journey with God and one another and an outward journey with those who have been excluded, who are "other."
We have been richly blessed by God, and yet when we look at our own churches we wonder, have we truly embodied the full, diverse nature of Jesus Christ? Have we impacted our society on behalf of the oppressed, challenging and changing systems that keep some outside? Have we become what God intended?

Sometimes we become so focused on sustaining what we've been given and wanting to honor the traditions of the past that we miss the new thing that God might be trying to do today, something that will build on all that has come before. We miss the surprises that lie in store for us. To be channels of that playful Spirit of eternal newness, we must always be ready to let go of what is in order to receive what will be. We must be ready to return to what is fundamental.

As long ago as 1963, Elizabeth O'Connor wrote in Call to Commitment that people were questioning why The Church of the Saviour was changing its structures. This is how she responded:


We never have expected to hit upon that final stable structure. This is important for a church to understand, for when it starts to be the church it will constantly be adventuring out into places where there are no tried and tested ways. If the church in our day has few prophetic voices to sound above the noises of the street, perhaps in large part it is because the pioneering spirit has become foreign to it. It shows little willingness to explore new ways. Where it does it has often been called an experiment. We would say that the church of Christ is never an experiment, but wherever that church is true to its mission it will be experimenting, pioneering, blazing new paths, seeking how to speak the reconciling Word of God to its own age, It cannot do this if it is held captive by the structures of another day or is slave to its own structures.

We must never let ourselves be held captive by the structures or traditions of any institution, including our own. We must be open to being given new structures and new methods that will serve the mission of Christ even better for this new time.

To be in the flow of God's ever evolving movement, we will transcend all traditional and institutional loyalties, including loyalties to the very institutions we ourselves brought into being. We will adventure out into places where there are no tried and tested ways and be ready to experiment and pioneer and blaze new paths in order to make the news of our extravagantly loving liberating, reconciling God real to this age.

SOMETHING MORE

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The items in Authentic Church are lifted entirely from the Booklet, and my comments will be set apart with a different format, like this , for instance

from p.10ff

Some of us have loved the church for as long as we can remember. We have given ourselves fairly faithfully to seeking the risen Christ in community, and we see things that are right and good about this universal body of believers. And yet, at the same time, we are aware of a growing inner dis ease and discontent among many at what the church has not become. We find that we are not alone in feeling a deep and unequivocal caring for the church ... and yet longing for something more.

We see the realities of our world and recognize that the church has not become a strong and mighty witness for scores of displaced refugees and starving, ill, ignored, assaulted masses. We are not calling the nations to bow before God in recognition of systemic oppression of the poor. We are not demanding that practices of reconciliation and justice be at the heart of national and global policies, nor even at the heart of our own schools, work places and neighborhoods. We are not lending our corporate voice to the voiceless and our power to the powerless,

In short, we are not filled with the fire and passion of Jesus Christ. We have not let our life together be poured out as a sacrificial gift of love, taking on Jesus' nature and proclaiming with him and the prophet Isaiah:

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.

Luke 4:18 19 (see also Isaiah 61:1 2)

No longer do we wish to remain silent in the face of immense needs. No longer will we condone the church's complicity in the violence of war, racism, sexism, addiction, and the growing divide between those with access to wealth and those with access only to poverty. No longer will we accept being separated from each other because we are of different races and cultures and economic classes. We long for a new ecciesia a body of people called out from the world's culture who will speak and act in the Spirit of Jesus Christ, embodying that Spirit and committing ourselves to bold practices of love.

What we are imagining is actually quite simple. We are imagining that this is the time, that this is the kairos moment, when the church of Jesus Christ will become its true Self, poured out in loving surrender. We will let go of our illusions of what we had hoped the church would be and boldly step out into what does not yet exist. We will take on the nature of the One who lives and breathes love restorative, reconciling, nonviolent love love that challenges the world's oppressive systems by empowering the weakest among us, and within us, to find our value and voice.

We will then become, more authentically than ever before, Christ's body in the world.

You say this sounds impossible. You say the church is the most messed up institution you know. You say you can't find even one authentic local expression that is true to Jesus' nature. Which is why we respond:

The Givens

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The items in Authentic Church are lifted entirely from the Booklet, and my comments will be set apart with a different format, like this , for instance


THE "GIVENS" OF BEING AUTHENTIC CHURCH

THE.AUTHENTIC CHURCH IS AN OUTWARD EXPRESSION OF GOD, WHO IS LOVE.

In love and through love, the new community is created. God, who is by nature unlimited love, draws us to let our partial, limited love unfold in depth until we reach our full capacity for giving ourselves to God and to the totality of everything and everyone that God has created. In our present wounded, damaged, distorted condition, it is difficult to imagine what this sort of beloved community might look like or how we even would begin to commit ourselves to it, but we open ourselves to the impossible, trusting the Source of love to show us the way.

THE AUTHENTIC CHURCH FOLLOWS THE AUTHENTIC JESUS.

Most churches claim to follow Jesus, but not all are following the authentic Jesus. Too often we fashion Jesus in our own image and then wonder why there is no radical world change. The authentic Jesus is not in pursuit of privilege and power and prestige, but makes his home among the lowly. The authentic Jesus does not condone violence but is the embodiment of love, embracing all people equally with mercy and the hope of transformation. The authentic Jesus confronts cultural addictions and the systems that create and sustain them. The authentic Jesus says no to the world's power and yes to God's power. There is only one real Jesus into whose being we hope to abandon ourselves, dying to our false illusions and letting our true selves be resurrected in him, who is the world's hope. Together we seek to discover and live his nonviolent, healing nature.


The items in Authentic Church are lifted entirely from the Booklet, and my comments will be set apart with a different format, like this , for instance

At the heart of each of us is a driving hunger for ways to five and be in relationship that are genuine. So it is with churches as well. As unique and different as churches are, the ones that are authentic hope to bear a striking and clear resemblance to Jesus, to be so much like Jesus that people sense they have encountered him when they encounter the church.

How to facilitate such an encounter how to become so much like Jesus that our very way of life comforts the world's brokenhearted and confronts the world's broken systems is a key question for all who seek authentic, faithful belonging.

If ever there were a time for the church universal to become more truly the body of Christ, to find ways to embody the life and ministry of Christ for the sake of the world, it would be now as violence and despair grow. We desperately need an authentic encounter with Jesus, an encounter that will shake us at our foundations and compel us to become the loving, reconciling people we have been created to be.

The processes that we try to describe here offer one possibility for how we who care about the church might follow our primary calling to love each other as we have been loved and to create spaces in which that healing love can be expressed and extended. It is an attempt to make Jesus real for all of us.

The church's structures change, but its message and mission do not. Through those who will risk leaving the familiar in order to pitch our tents in the unknown, God still schemes and dreams the new.

-- Kayla McClurg

This is the first post in a series of posts from the Booklet Becoming the Authentic Church: A Guide Toward Being in Diverse, healing Community Rooted in Reconciliation and Justice
. My firend Bob and I have taken these thoughts and begun to take concrete steps toward finding this Authenitc Church (he in his setting and I in mine) You will notice that I have been quite taken with this vision in the next several days, weeks, months, years. I relish your comments. I have a bit of video from my meeting with Gordon Cosby on Monday Nov.14, and wil begin to post some of that over the next several days, along with photos I took over that time.
The items in Authentic Church are lifted entirely from the Booklet, and my comments will be set apart with a different format, like this , for instance


The processes described in this guidebook represent an attempt to follow the simple way of Jesus.

They are not the only way, they merely express one way by which we are seeking to go deeper in order to be freed to love.

Repetition of primary ideas is intentional.
Even as we share the possibilities with you, we too are hoping to hear and understand them more deeply.

This is a work in progress. We welcome your insights as we learn from each other how to live boldly in the not yet.
Together may we discover new life giving ways to be the diverse and healing body of Christ, becoming love on behalf of the world.
-----------

At this point in my life, and at this point in our world's life, I am asking what is to be my focus to what am I to be giving my limited time and energy? What is the new thing, the genuine thing, that God wants me to be learning, doing, being now?

For me the central question is what it means to be the authentic church of Jesus Christ, crucified and resurrected. What is its nature? Its essence? And how can that essence be structured and expressed so as to become a healing agent for the world?

It's not a question any longer of which issues are of primary concern and what kinds of programs might best serve those issues, but a question of being. How are we to be in the world so as to live the Jesus life with greater boldness and passion?

The temptation always is to turn stones into bread. We have tried over the years to be faithful to Christ by loving and serving the poor giving bread. But have we primarily been offering people helpful ways to get their share of the culture's bread, or have we offered the living bread of God?

The church, when it is true to its nature, is God's channel for sharing both kinds of bread. That is what I long for and want to be a part of in the remaining time that God gives me. I want to let go of whatever doesn't take us deeper, whatever takes more time and energy and effort than it yields, and together with others I want to embody that transforming presence in the world. This might not be what is most important for you, but for me, it is all that ultimately matters.

N. Gordon Cosby

The above was taken from Becoming the Authentic Church: A Guide Toward Being in Diverse, healing Community Rooted in Reconciliation and Justice
. Copies of this booklet are available via Potter's House Book Service for 3.00 each (Well worth it. I have been working with this booklet since I picked it up on Saturday. Comment here and I will make sure Potter's House gets it-----right now, I cannot find it on their Web site. I gotta talk to them about getting thier GREAT book store completely online.

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