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	<title>The Institute of Evangelism</title>
	<atom:link href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/feed/podcast/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca</link>
	<description>Every Church an Evangelizing Community!</description>
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<itunes:summary>Fresh Expressions Canada seeks to encourage the development of fresh expressions of church alongside more traditional expressions, with the aim of seeing a more mission-shaped church take shape throughout the country.</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:subtitle>The Web Site of the Institute of Evangelism at Wycliffe College and Fresh Expressions Canada</itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:author>Fresh Expressions Canada</itunes:author>
	<itunes:image href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/institutelogo_200.png" />
	<image><url>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/institutelogo_200.png</url><title>The Institute of Evangelism &amp; Fresh Expressions Canada</title><link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca</link></image>
	<itunes:category text="Religion &amp; Spirituality">
		<itunes:category text="Christianity" />
	</itunes:category>
	<itunes:keywords>fresh,expressions,church,planting,canada,anglican,evangelism</itunes:keywords>
	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
	<itunes:owner>
		<itunes:name>Ryan Sim</itunes:name>
		<itunes:email>webmanager@institute.wycliffecollege.ca</itunes:email>
	</itunes:owner>
			<item>
		<title>Mixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban Context</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/mixed-economy-church-in-a-changing-urban-context/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/mixed-economy-church-in-a-changing-urban-context/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 2011 15:40:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fresh Expressions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lectures]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/?p=7687</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a workshop given by Simon Bell at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/city.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-medium wp-image-7715" title="city" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/city-300x201.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="201" /></a>This is a workshop given by Simon Bell at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
<p>Length: 1h:15m</p>
<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/podcast.png"><br />
</a></p>
<p><a href="/?feed=podcast"><img style="border-style: initial; border-color: initial; border-width: 0px;" title="podcast" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/podcast-150x150.png" alt="" width="60" height="60" /></a><a href="/?feed=podcast">Subscribe to all our Podcasts here</a></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/missional-coaching/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Missional Coaching</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/starting-restarting-community-in-every-generation/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Starting &#038; Restarting Community in Every Generation</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/basics-of-vital-church-planting-fresh-expressions/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Basics of Vital Church Planting &#038; Fresh Expressions</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/vcp-2011-plenary-by-beth-fellinger/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">VCP 2011 Plenary by Beth Fellinger</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/fresh-expressions-in-the-sacramental-tradition/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Fresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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<enclosure url="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/resources/Mixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban Context Simon Bell.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg" />
	<itunes:summary>This is a workshop given by Simon Bell at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
Length: 1h:15m


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Related Posts:Missional CoachingStarting &amp; Restarting Community in Every GenerationBasics of Vital Church Planting &amp; Fresh ExpressionsVCP 2011 Plenary by Beth FellingerFresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</itunes:summary>
<itunes:subtitle>This is a workshop given by Simon Bell at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.</itunes:subtitle>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Basics of Vital Church Planting &amp; Fresh Expressions</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/basics-of-vital-church-planting-fresh-expressions/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/basics-of-vital-church-planting-fresh-expressions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 2011 15:40:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fresh Expressions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lectures]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/?p=7685</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a workshop given by Nick Brotherwood at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/Nick-at-VCP2.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-medium wp-image-2367" title="Nick at VCP2" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/Nick-at-VCP2-228x300.jpg" alt="" width="228" height="300" /></a>This is a workshop given by Nick Brotherwood at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
<p>Length: 1h:14m</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><a href="/?feed=podcast"><img style="border-style: initial; border-color: initial; border-width: 0px;" title="podcast" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/podcast-150x150.png" alt="" width="60" height="60" />Subscribe to all our Podcasts here</a></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/starting-restarting-community-in-every-generation/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Starting &#038; Restarting Community in Every Generation</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/missional-coaching/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Missional Coaching</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/mixed-economy-church-in-a-changing-urban-context/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Mixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban Context</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/vcp-2011-plenary-by-beth-fellinger/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">VCP 2011 Plenary by Beth Fellinger</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/fresh-expressions-in-the-sacramental-tradition/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Fresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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<enclosure url="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/resources/Basics of Vital Church Planting FX Nick Brotherwood.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg" />
	<itunes:summary>This is a workshop given by Nick Brotherwood at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
Length: 1h:14m
 

Subscribe to all our Podcasts here
 
 
 
 
Open post to play audio recording
Related Posts:Starting &amp; Restarting Community in Every GenerationMissional CoachingMixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban ContextVCP 2011 Plenary by Beth FellingerFresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</itunes:summary>
<itunes:subtitle>This is a workshop given by Nick Brotherwood at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.</itunes:subtitle>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Missional Coaching</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/missional-coaching/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/missional-coaching/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Oct 2011 15:40:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fresh Expressions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lectures]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/?p=7686</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a workshop given by Duke Vipperman at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/dukeLrgeImage.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-medium wp-image-7701" title="dukeLrgeImage" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/dukeLrgeImage-224x300.jpg" alt="" width="224" height="300" /></a>This is a workshop given by Duke Vipperman at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
<p>Length: 1h:16m</p>
<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/podcast.png"><br />
</a></p>

<p><a href="/?feed=podcast"><img style="border-style: initial; border-color: initial; border-width: 0px;" title="podcast" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/podcast-150x150.png" alt="" width="60" height="60" />Subscribe to all our Podcasts here</a></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/starting-restarting-community-in-every-generation/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Starting &#038; Restarting Community in Every Generation</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/basics-of-vital-church-planting-fresh-expressions/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Basics of Vital Church Planting &#038; Fresh Expressions</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/mixed-economy-church-in-a-changing-urban-context/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Mixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban Context</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/vcp-2011-plenary-by-beth-fellinger/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">VCP 2011 Plenary by Beth Fellinger</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/fresh-expressions-in-the-sacramental-tradition/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Fresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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<enclosure url="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/resources/Missional Coaching Duke Vipperman.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg" />
	<itunes:summary>This is a workshop given by Duke Vipperman at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
Length: 1h:16m



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Related Posts:Starting &amp; Restarting Community in Every GenerationBasics of Vital Church Planting &amp; Fresh ExpressionsMixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban ContextVCP 2011 Plenary by Beth FellingerFresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</itunes:summary>
<itunes:subtitle>This is a workshop given by Duke Vipperman at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.</itunes:subtitle>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Teaching the Faith to Beginners Workshop</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/teaching-the-faith-to-beginners-workshop/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/teaching-the-faith-to-beginners-workshop/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Oct 2011 15:40:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Christian Basics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Evangelism - General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lectures]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/?p=7684</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a workshop given by Jenny Andison and John Bowen at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/bowen.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-7693" title="bowen" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/bowen-114x120.jpg" alt="" width="114" height="120" /></a><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/jandison.jpg"><img class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-7694" style="border-style: initial; border-color: initial;;  float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;" title="jandison" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/jandison-100x120.jpg" alt="" width="100" height="120" /></a>This is a workshop given by Jenny Andison and John Bowen at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
<p>Length: 1h:15m</p>
<div>
<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/jandison.jpg"><br />
</a></p>

<p><a href="/?feed=podcast"><img style="border-style: initial; border-color: initial; border-width: 0px;" title="podcast" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/podcast-150x150.png" alt="" width="60" height="60" />Subscribe to all our Podcasts here</a></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/starting-restarting-community-in-every-generation/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Starting &#038; Restarting Community in Every Generation</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/missional-coaching/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Missional Coaching</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/basics-of-vital-church-planting-fresh-expressions/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Basics of Vital Church Planting &#038; Fresh Expressions</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/mixed-economy-church-in-a-changing-urban-context/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Mixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban Context</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/vcp-2011-plenary-by-beth-fellinger/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">VCP 2011 Plenary by Beth Fellinger</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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<enclosure url="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/resources/Teaching the Faith to Beginners John Bowen and Jenny Andison.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg" />
	<itunes:summary>This is a workshop given by Jenny Andison and John Bowen at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
Length: 1h:15m




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Related Posts:Starting &amp; Restarting Community in Every GenerationMissional CoachingBasics of Vital Church Planting &amp; Fresh ExpressionsMixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban ContextVCP 2011 Plenary by Beth Fellinger</itunes:summary>
<itunes:subtitle>This is a workshop given by Jenny Andison and John Bowen at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.</itunes:subtitle>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Starting &amp; Restarting Community in Every Generation</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/starting-restarting-community-in-every-generation/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/starting-restarting-community-in-every-generation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 24 Sep 2011 15:40:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fresh Expressions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lectures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Youth and Children]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/?p=7683</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a workshop given by Melissa Graham Burke at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/mgb.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-full wp-image-7690" title="mgb" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/mgb.jpg" alt="" width="144" height="193" /></a>This is a workshop given by Melissa Graham Burke at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
<p>Length:  1h:13m</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><a href="/?feed=podcast"><img style="border-style: initial; border-color: initial; border-width: 0px;" title="podcast" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/podcast-150x150.png" alt="" width="60" height="60" />Subscribe to all our Podcasts here</a></p>
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<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/missional-coaching/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Missional Coaching</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/basics-of-vital-church-planting-fresh-expressions/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Basics of Vital Church Planting &#038; Fresh Expressions</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/mixed-economy-church-in-a-changing-urban-context/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Mixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban Context</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/vcp-2011-plenary-by-beth-fellinger/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">VCP 2011 Plenary by Beth Fellinger</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/fresh-expressions-in-the-sacramental-tradition/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Fresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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<enclosure url="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/resources/Starting and Restarting Community in Every Generation Melissa Graham Burke.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg" />
	<itunes:summary>This is a workshop given by Melissa Graham Burke at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
Length:  1h:13m
 

Subscribe to all our Podcasts here
 
 
 
 
Open post to play audio recording
Related Posts:Missional CoachingBasics of Vital Church Planting &amp; Fresh ExpressionsMixed Economy Church in A Changing Urban ContextVCP 2011 Plenary by Beth FellingerFresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</itunes:summary>
<itunes:subtitle>This is a workshop given by Melissa Graham Burke at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.</itunes:subtitle>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>VCP 2011 Plenary by Steve Croft</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/vcp-2011-plenary-by-steve-croft/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/vcp-2011-plenary-by-steve-croft/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 24 Sep 2011 15:30:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fresh Expressions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lectures]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freshexpressions.ca/?p=7652</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a plenary talk given by Bishop Steve Croft at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/Bishop-Croft_web.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-full wp-image-7661" title="Bishop-Croft_web" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/Bishop-Croft_web.jpg" alt="" width="320" height="448" /></a>This is a plenary talk given by Bishop Steve Croft at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
<p>Length: 1h:08m each</p>
<p>Session 1: </p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Session 2: </p>
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	<itunes:summary>This is a plenary talk given by Bishop Steve Croft at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
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<itunes:subtitle>This is a plenary talk given by Bishop Steve Croft at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.</itunes:subtitle>
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		<title>VCP 2011 Plenary by Beth Fellinger</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/vcp-2011-plenary-by-beth-fellinger/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2011 15:34:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[This is a plenary talk given by Beth Fellinger at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/bethf.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-full wp-image-7664" title="bethf" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/bethf.jpg" alt="" width="210" height="253" /></a>This is a plenary talk given by Beth Fellinger at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
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</a>Session 1:  Length: 1h:00m</p>
<p>Session 2: Length: 0h:47m</p>
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	<itunes:summary>This is a plenary talk given by Beth Fellinger at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
 

Session 1:  Length: 1h:00m
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<itunes:subtitle>This is a plenary talk given by Beth Fellinger at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.</itunes:subtitle>
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		<title>Fresh Expressions in the Sacramental Tradition</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/08/fresh-expressions-in-the-sacramental-tradition/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2011 14:59:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Sim</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[This is a workshop given by Bishop Stephen Cottrell, and facilitated by Father David Harrison, at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_7639" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 265px;  border: 1px solid #dddddd; background-color: #f3f3f3; padding-top: 4px; margin: 10px; text-align:center; float: right;"><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/Bishop_Stephen_Cottrell.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-7639" title="Bishop Stephen Cottrell" src="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/Bishop_Stephen_Cottrell-255x300.jpg" alt="" width="255" height="300" /></a><p style=' padding: 0 4px 5px; margin: 0;'  class="wp-caption-text">Bishop Stephen Cottrell</p></div>
<p>This is a workshop given by Bishop Stephen Cottrell, and facilitated by Father David Harrison, at the <a href="http://vitalchurchplanting.com">Vital Church Planting Conference 2011</a>.</p>
<p>Length:  1 hour</p>
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	<itunes:summary>Bishop Stephen Cottrell
This is a workshop given by Bishop Stephen Cottrell, and facilitated by Father David Harrison, at the Vital Church Planting Conference 2011.
Length:  1 hour




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		<title>DNA: The Mechanisms of Planting</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/03/dna-the-mechanisms-of-planting/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2008 13:55:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>George Lings</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008 : Session TWO
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In the 1st session we looked at DNA understood as what was being planted.
The 2nd session takes DNA in another sense and teases out how it happens &#8211; what are the processes or mechanisms of creating or planting [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="Times20" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"><strong>This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008 : Session TWO</strong></p>
<p class="Subhead14" style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt">Listen to the Podcast:</p>
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<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p class="Times20" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"><span lang="EN-GB"><span style="font-size: x-large; font-family: Times New Roman;"><strong><a title="View as Microsoft Powerpoint File" href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/dna-the-mechanisms-of-planting.ppt">View as Microsoft Powerpoint File</a></strong></span></span></p>
<p class="Times20" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p class="Times20" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p class="12normal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"><a href="http://www.institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/surfer.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-full wp-image-801" title="surfer" src="http://www.institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/surfer.jpg" alt="surfer" width="300" height="200" /></a>In the 1st session we looked at DNA understood as what was being planted.</p>
<p>The 2nd session takes DNA in another sense and teases out how it happens &#8211; what are the processes or mechanisms of creating or planting churches. </p>
<p>In England we have nearly stopped using the noun a church plant for at least two reasons. One we have found there are many kinds of churches that can be planted so the language of church plant is too restrictive. 2nd our experience has been that too many so called church plants have been unhelpfully similar to the parent body that sent them and not well enough adapted to their mission context. If effect they were transplanted.  So we prefer to call what is being created &#8220;fresh expressions of church&#8221;. However we still think that the verb church planting is valuable, it describes a process,  and the first session partly explored why. Church Planting is the discipline and Fresh Expressions are the fruit of that discipline. So we would talk of planting fresh expressions of church. [FXC]</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">This connects with the first point to make about DNA understood as how planting FXC happens.  </p>
<p style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt"><strong>1       Seeds are key</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Going our from existing church in apostolic mission we take with us seeds &#8211; of both the gospel and church &#8211; as we saw in session one.  The seeds only get taken out and planted as the missionary journey unfolds.  These seeds then must die to take root in the context to which we are sent.   The essential principle is, SEEDS MUST BE ALLOWED TO DIE.   The report</p>
<p>Mission-shaped Church  talks about this both in its 3rd chapter on church planting and its chapter 5 on theology. </p>
<p>This instinct is rooted in Jesus words in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=John+12" class="bibleref" title="MSG John 12" target="_new">John 12</a>; they suggest that dying to live is inherent in the Christian way.  This is not some weird game only those in planting FXC play. Baptism should have reminded us of that, it is symbolic enactment of, and identification with, the Death and Resurrection of Christ. He makes it clear that his patterns are to be ours.  <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=John+12" class="bibleref" title="MSG John 12" target="_new">John 12</a>  contains the text &#8220;If any one serves me, he must follow me; and where I am, there shall my servant be also.&#8221;   It is curious and worrying that while we have taken the notion of death and resurrection into some liturgical rites, we link it to the church&#8217;s year, we embrace it in some patterns of spirituality, but we have broadly omitted taking it into mission. Yet the very person who taught mission to us said it was the pattern of his mission.   Jesus made it quite clear that his followers are committed to his pattern.  Turn on in the same Gospel, to <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=John+20" class="bibleref" title="MSG John 20" target="_new">John 20</a>, and the same Jesus is bringing peace among the startled disciplines. He shows them his hands and his side &#8211; the cost is not glossed over. Then these missionary headline words follow, or if you prefer ecclesiological language &#8211; at this point apostolic identity, is conferred on the church.&#8221;As the Father sent me so I send you.&#8221;     What a word as is: As &#8211; in the same manner as I was sent as God&#8217;s apostle &#8211; so I send youAs &#8211; on the same journey from incarnational identification with culture, to disclosure of the Lordship endorsing counter cultural engagement &#8211; so I send you.As &#8211; in the same way as I the seed died in the ground and have now emerged both similar and different &#8211; so I send you.As I &#8211; [in the way Paul described in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=Philippians+2" class="bibleref" title="MSG Philippians 2" target="_new">Philippians 2</a>] the eternal Son was willing to die to the glories of heaven, to be transformed into the form of a dying slave &#8211; so I send you.As  - in the same way of becoming very different to become like those to whom I was sent,  - so I send you.  Have no doubt that the patterns of Jesus are for us all. They are for the whole church, most especially when it gets clear that Church is extension of the mission of Jesus.  The patterns apply to the creation of Fresh Expressions of Church. They apply in all cross cultural work.  Dying to live is normal., because it was the norm set by Christ.  </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Jesus teaching on dying to live , is normative for the church. In <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=John+12" class="bibleref" title="MSG John 12" target="_new">John 12</a> he shows that he saw his own life and ministry, as a seed that would die,  only by this could new life come as he was raised by the Father, and would this lead to the creating of much fruit.   </p>
<p>Lets move from theology to practical experience. We know that to grow a plant you must sow a seed. Seeds left in an unopened packet cannot be described as planted. They must be moved out of the packet. What then happens is that they are buried in the soil. That means an intentional end of their existence.  You don&#8217;t see them again.  But then something related to the seed, but different from it,  starts to grow up, out of the ground.  Paul knows this factor of similarity and difference and he teaches it in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=1+Cor+15" class="bibleref" title="MSG 1Cor 15" target="_new">1 Cor 15</a> in relation to death and eternal life.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s translate that dynamic into the church planting process in any mission context.  The seed stands for the incoming church planting team, bearing in their bones the essence of the gospel and of the church.  This seed dies to its previous identity in this sense.  These people were part of a particular sending church; which had its own particular manifestations and culture.  They have to be willing to set aside those preferences and likes, to find how to be church and how to communicate gospel in the context to which God sends them.  This is not new. It is like Paul saying in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=1+Cor+9" class="bibleref" title="MSG 1Cor 9" target="_new">1 Cor 9</a>  &#8221;to the Greeks I became as a Greek&#8221;.  For some today it might mean, to the Pagans, I became as a Pagan.  So this seed will become a body, a plant, that it was not before.  The Plant and the seed are related, but also different, as <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=1+Cor+15" class="bibleref" title="MSG 1Cor 15" target="_new">1 Cor 15</a> teaches.  Dying to Live is inherent in the church planting discipline and process.  The planting team [or seed], by mixing with its mission context, becomes rooted there. It draws nourishment and resources from that environment as it sends out roots and then a shoot emerges. By this process, it dies as a seed, changing from what it was. In church planting, the seed community becomes a new body of believers, as well as a body of new believers. As such the planting analogy has real strengths.  It conveys by analogy, what should occur theologically, in all mission and is especially obvious when it is cross cultural.</p>
<p>There are however a dangers in the planting way of thinking. One comes from a view of what is being planted. Seed is just a helpful analogy. The reality is that a Jesus centred community-in-mission are entering another area or culture in order to be gospel and create church that relates to that area of culture.  This is certainly not a mechanical process that can be totally controlled like a production line. Some teaching about church planting feels rather like that &#8211; do the following 17 precise steps and you will have church. Sorry its more organic and uncertain than that.  Nor is it even only biological, and if a few dozen seeds die it doesn&#8217;t matter because you&#8217;ll get enough vegetables in the end from ones that make it. That won&#8217;t do either &#8211; this is a human and spiritual process.  It needs the kind of love, intention, care, thought and skill that we apply to human reproduction from pregnancy to birth. </p>
<p>Willingness to die to my preferences about how to do church, so that others in the receiving culture may be found by Jesus and a fresh expression of church suited to them comes to life is honourable and essential. Being mechanistic about the process or cavalier about the costs is quite another matter.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Here&#8217;s another skill we learning about in the process &#8211; of how you decide, in the dying to live process what kept and what can change.</p>
<p><strong>2       Double Listening<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">The next principle in methodology, for all cases, is what the Church of England report Mission-shaped</p>
<p>Church  calls DOUBLE LISTENING.  It is related to the seeds dying principle.   To reach other people different from them, those sent have to die to their own preferences about how to do church &#8211; then what is the essence of what must be kept ?   This is very like asking what is the DNA of gospel and church within the dying seed, that grows into the roots put down and emerges to shape the newly planted church?  We looked at that content in session one.</p>
<p>This process of finding that out involves two things.  Both are forms of attending to what God is saying.  Double listening means entering and understanding the culture in which a church might be established, truly listening to the mission context &#8211; like Paul did in Athens in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=Acts+17" class="bibleref" title="MSG Acts 17" target="_new">Acts 17</a>.  It also means sifting the inherited tradition of both gospel and church and finding its essence, not its forms. This is what Paul is doing when he rejects circumcision as necessary for new Greek Christian believers.  Double listening is complex, but it enables hearing a richer more accurate sound and better for determining what expression a new church might take.</p>
<p>Some people misunderstand about the sources to listen to. Here is an example from the Church of England Board of Readers website</p>
<blockquote><p>Double Listening is the faculty of listening to two voices at the same time, the voice of God through Scripture and the voices of men and women around us.</p></blockquote>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">This builds on the John Stott view that we listen to God&#8217;s Word and God&#8217;s world.  I agree that both belong to God. I agree that the Word has a higher authority for us in determining what we believe and do. </p>
<p>However this view is narrow in two ways. It separates out listening to the Word, from the listening that comes from knowing the living tradition, which has grown from the word, and helps us be more humble and flexible in returning to the Word, but which never has a higher authority than the word.  It also separates listening to the Word, from listening to the Holy Spirit, who will be active in the world and the particular culture to which any apostolic person is sent. There will also be the factor that God, as Creator, has left some finger prints of himself within that culture.  The classic NT examples of this process of listening to God through the world would be Peter learning from the Cornelius story and Paul learning from his</p>
<p>Athens visit. So double listening, as I meant it inMission-shapedChurch, is seriously saying that the voice of God is being sought with both ears &#8211; the ear that listens to the living church tradition and the ear that listens to the culture to which a person is sent.</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li>         For the planting of churches, listening to both contemporary culture and to church tradition are vital.  Only listen to culture and you will end up with syncretism &#8211; in which gospel and church are perverted and distorted by the culture. </li>
<li>         Only listen to the inherited tradition and the life and message of Jesus will not engage the culture. It will be disconnected, nothing is gained because it will be irrelevant.</li>
</ul>
<p>In mission we do not come with empty hands, hearts or brains, but it is key to have open ears. In this sense there is an order to this double listening process.  We do bring what we have inherited, but we suspend that to pay attention and listen to the mission context, to culture and the world,. This comes before discerning how the inherited Christian tradition works within that culture.</p>
<p>Mission precedes the shaping of the resultant church, when the seed of the gospel and church roots in the mission culture.    </p>
<p>Some might think  listening to context is all about evangelism, and listening to tradition is all about church.   I&#8217;d say that was disastrous.  Using a farming metaphor,  that&#8217;s the way fruit of evangelism might be gained, but then it gets left to rot in the fields &#8211; because the barn of the church is no good to store it.   Changing the metaphor, though still staying biological, &#8211; Jesus talked about the need for new skins for new wine.  We work at double listening over Church and Gospel. Creating Fresh Expressions of church is two listenings &#8211; over those two tasks.</p>
<p>Lets go back to the order in the double listening and the different dynamics as the discernment within the process unfolds. Listening to the cultural context shapes the gospel bearing church that emerges. </p>
<p>Mission shapes church.  Then the second ear of double listening &#8211; hearing our inheritance of the faith uniquely revealed in the Scriptures &#8211; validates and assesses what the expression of gospel and of church that is emerging.  Even then it is sometimes possible that those in the context will rightly challenge how we, the incoming outsiders, have understood the Word and they may be right.  Examples of this are found in the classic mission book, Christianity Rediscovered. At points Donovan found that the Masai understood better than he did, as a highly trained Spiritan missionary.</p>
<p>So Double Listening is a process which enables something to evolve as its context changes. It holds in tension both a creative engagement with context and a faithfulness to the good news in Jesus. It is not easy, not simple, but essential and creative. Remember too that the order of double listening is very like the theological principle of following the Jesus pattern; firstly incarnation into culture, then counter cultural engagement with it.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Let&#8217;s apply that briefly to the dominant culture we shall encounter &#8211; consumerism. Following paul we might start be saying &#8220;To the consumers I became as a consumer&#8221; but in the case of consumerism, the gospel-shaped community that grows up will have to address questions at the core of the human self, which does make choices.  Living the gospel is only partly about what and why I choose, as well as it is about who chose me.  This informs whom I serve and whom I will be prepared to die for and what I will gladly die to. Jesus will bring new choices about my supposed right of choice. </p>
<p>[3D thinking ]</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Listening to context, then validating it by our inheritance connects to the next insight about process. Mission-shaped</p>
<p>Church  chapter 6 spells that out very clearly, insisting we must ask the right questions, and in the right order. If Mission shapes Church,  it follows we must begin by asking who is a fresh expression of church for,  before going on to ask who will staff it and how it will relate to the wider church. </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Mission Shaped Church  put it like this. p 116</p>
<blockquote>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">start with the church and the mission will probably get lost.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">start with the mission and it is likely that the Church will be found.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In the language that Mission Shaped Church has adopted, To make fresh starts that are thought through, the expression of church should be formed by three considerations, 3 dimensions, taken in this order, for the theological reason that</p>
<p>Mission should shape the Church, not vice versa.  And for the methodological reason that listening to context comes first.</p>
<p>1          Who it is for    - what is the Mission goal &#8211; who are we sent to ?</p>
<p>2          Who is it by     - who are the Mission Resources &#8211; or the sent team ?</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">3          Who is it with  - who are the Mission partners -or sending churches?</p>
<p>You could read Mission-shaped Church  Ch 6 to see how these questions develop.</p>
<p>The Church of the Saviour Washington DC has created a diverse range of congregations each around a specific mission context. These are the 3 questions they always ask in the process &#8211; good questions and in my view in the right order.</p>
<p>I now want to give you a field observation that goes beyond what Mission-shaped Church  dared to say in full, though there are hints on p 117 about worship.</p>
<p><strong>4       Don&#8217;t assume starting with worship</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt">If we begin to realise that mission shapes church &#8211; and this creates a go shape not a come shape, this profoundly questions whether provision of worship is the obvious theological starting point in mission.</p>
<p>Go back to some 1990&#8242;s theory about the functions of Church &#8211; from Robert Warren. What does Church do &#8211; it worships, offers community and acts in mission. Spirituality beats at the heart of these three activities. </p>
<p>Then contrast that ideal picture with much western practice. </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Then you notice a dominant circle about worship. That can be measured by investment of money time, money and personnel in buildings, programmes and clergy to run them all.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">All too often the Community  who meet in this building are somewhat dysfunctional and unattractive. As some wag said &#8211; &#8220;the main reason others aren&#8217;t in church, is because we are.&#8221;  Third, in practiceMission  is a weird thing that either happens overseas or is done by enthusiasts, who thank God, are not people like us.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Try to make such a beast mission minded, let alone mission centred is difficult. So attempts to change it  often turn out only to be a temporary foray out of the fold, in order to invite a few weak minded others to come and worship with us in our way.</p>
<p>Contrast that to the varied mission field we now face. How do elements of the mission field and of being church connect ?</p>
<p>This matrix shows what we have found, on the ground in England. We have learnt to recognize there are different groups in our society. Our members who are our people, the fringe who are willing to explore being our people, the dechurched to used to be our people and they divide into those who would come back and those determined not to come back. Then there are the non churched who have never been our people.   In the Western world the proportions of these groups are different, but what is common to all places are two features. The percentage of the non churched is growing and it is larger, the younger the section of society you take. In short, it is the main mission field of the future. Here then are those groups in a table with the question how do we connect with the different groups?</p>
<p>Its also helpful to look at these groups by context.  Some fringe people still live as though Christendom is alive and well. But there are increasingly those who are post Christian, Anti-Christian and among young people who are children of the latter groups PreChristian.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">The arrows show the overlaps between the two rows. So you will see that I don&#8217;t suggest the Open dechurched and the Pre Christians are the same group &#8211; its just that they do share one similarity I&#8217;ll explore later.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"><strong>Where then do you start with each group?</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Those fringe people still in Christendom mode may well be helped by more accessible worship, that is attractive to them, with a quality welcome that is not over the top. They may well even come to traditional worship if it has quality.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">The open dechurched and the prechristians &#8211; because they don&#8217;t have baggage may well be open to forms of process evangelism &#8211; Alpha is the best known example, but not the only way to do it. They may welcome the chance to explore, to put their questions and observe what Christians actually do to relate to God.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">However if you offer worship to the non churched they will yawn and make excuses. If you dive in with evangelism they are likely to run away. In England the second worst social sin after intolerance is evangelism &#8211; because it is seen as imposing your views on others. So you can&#8217;t do worship or evangelism. What&#8217;s left in the Christian locker?</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">It turns out to be living out community. That will probably mean helping other build their community and also living out a quality of attractive community among them. This had been one of our principal discoveries in the last decade. Unless our lives pose questions, the answers we might want to give cannot be heard.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">What about the dechurched who are hurt and angry. I only know saying sorry. It&#8217;s a painful and slow start.</p>
<p>Please notice the colour coding in the table. But remember these are not necessarily attitudes to God, they are attitudes to the church.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Do notice the difference in style. We actually like to stay in control and that&#8217;s partly what pushes us to offer worship. As soon as real evangelism begins actually it&#8217;s a dialogue &#8211; more double listening going on.  With community building it can mean partnerships with those who don&#8217;t share our faith, but entering them shows if we are secure in who we are. Listening speaks for itself and requires vulnerability to be done well.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s one more vital thing about the table. It only works in one direction. Good community will appeal to virtually everyone. Worship actually reaches the fewest and can&#8217;t do much for the other groups.  Evangelism does work wider but for many it starts too far on. Community will lead to good questions; conversations can eventually lead to commitment, worship then nurtures it. </p>
<p>So it seems from Mission Shaped Church thinking and from field study there is an inherent order in the creation of Fresh Expressions of Church. It is very unlike what we are used to.</p>
<p>It is essential to start with the apostolic or missional community. This group go bearing seeds of the gospel and the church. They live in such a way that others are drawn to them; strangers become friends, prompted by what they see to ask questions. </p>
<p>As the planting team connect with the culture, learn its language and find its priorities, the shape of mission  to that culture or area grows clearer.  Only by being there does the specific shape to the mission emerges. It is part of connecting with discernment of what God is doing there.</p>
<p>Only then  as local people respond to Christ and are discipled in the Christian community does indigenous worship slowly begin to emerge.  It grows out of the stories of finding faith, stories of answered prayers, it meshes with the local musical culture and local people&#8217;s creative gifts.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">What must be characteristic of the worship &#8211; is that it feeds the life, gifting, calling and aspirations of the growing community.  Monastic groups would describe this process as worship nurturing the charism of the community.</p>
<p>But note the order: Public Worship does not come first. Indeed it cannot &#8211; it must be grown as the community in mission co-operates with God in evolving a mission shaped church.</p>
<p>I want to end with an image/ an analogy &#8211; quite different from DNA. One danger of DNA thinking is that we might be tempted into ecclesial genetic engineering.  It shouldn&#8217;t be like that. and frankly when done well usually isn&#8217;t. We need to get back to surprise and not being really in control and working as junior partners to God.</p>
<p>[Springboard to Surfboard]</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">An image I offer you is that to think the Church in its mission is being moved on, from bouncing off a springboards to something both similar and different.   The analogy of a Springboard &#8220;says&#8221; take a humanly controlled risk; the diver decides how vigorously to jump off the board and what difficulty of dive to attempt.  Note too the dive is in a very often in the controlled environment of the indoor heated swimming pool.  The picture &#8220;says&#8221; &#8211; lets tap into resources that enable us the church to do better, what we have already been doing and that will be quite sufficient for what we need and risky enough thank you.   Riding a Surfboard &#8220;speaks&#8221; of a higher risk, in an environment the surfer cannot control.  The analogy suggests a way of working which is also inherently far more reactive; it necessarily involves the surfer waiting for, spotting and then getting up on the wave.  The wave itself is created by two factors.  It crests because of the immediate context of the shelving sea floor beneath it and the fetch of the wind blowing across it. To me that in turn says read the cultural context beneath you and discern what God the Spirit is doing in mission beyond you.  When you are up then it really gets fun. Are you in control ? Well yes and no.  Of course the wave may well carry you somewhere you have not chosen.  Another big difference is this, by definition all surfboarders operate in an outside, perhaps even hostile, environment.  There is similarity: both diver and surfer harness power beyond themselves.  Both diver and boarder possess great technical skills. But the diver is more in control, by deciding the forces to be unleashed by the springboard, and when and how to dive. Whereas the boarder is not in control of what occurs &#8211; only of how she/he reacts. Yet it is immediately clear that it is the picture of the surfer that conjures the  greater sense of adventure, freedom and wildness.  I suggest the paradigm of a springboard; of better ways back to existing church is being overtaken.  In surfing, a far more uncertain but creative apostolic journey is calling, as the way onwards to hitherto unknown fresh expressions of church.  Yet this route  in the wild is not new.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">It is the path of Donovan and Allen, of Venn and Anderson, of Ricci and Xavier, of Aidan and Cuthbert, of Martin and Anthony, of Paul in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=1+Cor+9" class="bibleref" title="MSG 1Cor 9" target="_new">1 Cor 9</a> and Peter in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=Acts+10" class="bibleref" title="MSG Acts 10" target="_new">Acts 10</a>.  This way has never been very welcome. For it demands trust in the Spirit beyond obvious prudence, it makes the church bound up with mission, and forces her to surrender control of outcomes. It breaks the barriers of who may belong, it flows messily over the boundaries of how we are organized and even disturbs how we understand what we believe &#8211; again that&#8217;s not new &#8211; ask Peter on the roof top at Joppa.</p>
<p>Yet it is our Lord who underpins risky surfing.   His patterns are fascinating: ·         John highlights Jesus living reactive attentiveness to waves of the Father.  ·         Luke portrays his surprising outrageous acceptance of the outsider. ·         Mark shows us immediacy of response not measured tread.  ·         Matthew stresses his cultural particularity, ·        Paul in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=Philippians+2" class="bibleref" title="MSG Philippians 2" target="_new">Philippians 2</a> tells the cost of it.  ·         Gethsemane and Golgotha show us Jesus carried to where he did not wish to go.    Surfing in Mission sounds glorious. But Death and Resurrection of the Church as we have known it might be its consequence.  I pray the Church of our day can tolerate its own Holy Saturday &#8211; or period of Exile &#8211; long enough, to sow the seeds of Jesus-centred gospel communities, so that it may be raised, different for tomorrow in the ongoing Mission of God. I guess nothing less will actually do.  What would be dreadful would be if the church only got half the point. It is very capable of saying something like. &#8220;Yes I see that waves are rather good and could be fun.  Why don&#8217;t we install a wave machine in our swimming pools. We could also start courses on responsible safe indoor surfing.&#8221;   &#8221;Let&#8217;s stay in control, let&#8217;s change the game but we&#8217;ll use the new language to try and show that we&#8217;ve got it.&#8221;  To which I say no &#8211; please not. Let&#8217;s do the real thing.  Let&#8217;s go with the Spirit of God already blowing across the face of our culture.  Let&#8217;s listen, wait watch and catch the waves of what God is already doing. Let&#8217;s risk that sometime we will fall off and sometimes we will also get the ride of our lives.  That&#8217;s what some of us meant we meant when we wrote Mission-shaped Church. Funnily enough we actually thought that only by being caught up in a particular mission could you find out what church would result. We didn&#8217;t mean Church shaped mission and don&#8217;t think it will do because that is back to the springboard.  Let&#8217;s do it knowing that even if we may look like artists actually we are totally junior partners. We didn&#8217;t make either the wind, the sea bed or the resultant wave. We just co-operated with what we spotted.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Let&#8217;s do the surfing even if as yet we aren&#8217;t very good at it, even if we can&#8217;t see where it might take us and what waves might come along, and who they might carry us to be among.  </p>
<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/04/parish-missions-a-catalyst-for-evangelism/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Parish Missions: A Catalyst for Evangelism</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/1999/05/equipping-others-for-mission-in-the-inner-city/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Equipping Others for Mission in the Inner City</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/03/dna-the-essence-of-what-is-being-planted/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">DNA: The Essence of What is Being Planted</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2010/06/worship-not-the-starting-point-says-bishop/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Worship Not the Starting Point, says Bishop</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/11/oprahs-religion/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Oprah&#8217;s Religion</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary>This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008 : Session TWO
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In the 1st session we looked at DNA understood as what was being planted.
The 2nd session takes DNA in another sense and teases out how it happens – what are the processes or mechanisms of creating or planting churches. 
In England we have nearly stopped using the noun a church plant for at least two reasons. One we have found there are many kinds of churches that can be planted so the language of church plant is too restrictive. 2nd our experience has been that too many so called church plants have been unhelpfully similar to the parent body that sent them and not well enough adapted to their mission context. If effect they were transplanted.  So we prefer to call what is being created “fresh expressions of church”. However we still think that the verb church planting is valuable, it describes a process,  and the first session partly explored why. Church Planting is the discipline and Fresh Expressions are the fruit of that discipline. So we would talk of planting fresh expressions of church. [FXC]
This connects with the first point to make about DNA understood as how planting FXC happens.  
1       Seeds are key
Going our from existing church in apostolic mission we take with us seeds – of both the gospel and church – as we saw in session one.  The seeds only get taken out and planted as the missionary journey unfolds.  These seeds then must die to take root in the context to which we are sent.   The essential principle is, SEEDS MUST BE ALLOWED TO DIE.   The report
Mission-shaped Church  talks about this both in its 3rd chapter on church planting and its chapter 5 on theology. 
This instinct is rooted in Jesus words in John 12; they suggest that dying to live is inherent in the Christian way.  This is not some weird game only those in planting FXC play. Baptism should have reminded us of that, it is symbolic enactment of, and identification with, the Death and Resurrection of Christ. He makes it clear that his patterns are to be ours.  John 12  contains the text “If any one serves me, he must follow me; and where I am, there shall my servant be also.”   It is curious and worrying that while we have taken the notion of death and resurrection into some liturgical rites, we link it to the church’s year, we embrace it in some patterns of spirituality, but we have broadly omitted taking it into mission. Yet the very person who taught mission to us said it was the pattern of his mission.   Jesus made it quite clear that his followers are committed to his pattern.  Turn on in the same Gospel, to John 20, and the same Jesus is bringing peace among the startled disciplines. He shows them his hands and his side – the cost is not glossed over. Then these missionary headline words follow, or if you prefer ecclesiological language – at this point apostolic identity, is conferred on the church.”As the Father sent me so I send you.”     What a word as is: As – in the same manner as I was sent as God’s apostle – so I send youAs – on the same journey from incarnational identification with culture, to disclosure of the Lordship endorsing counter cultural engagement – so I send you.As – in the same way as I the seed died in the ground and have now emerged both similar and different – so I send you.As I – [in the way Paul described in Philippians 2] the eternal Son was willing to die to the glories of heaven, to be transformed into the form of a dying slave – so I send you.As  - in the same way of becoming very different to become like those to whom I was sent,  - so I send you.  Have no doubt that the patterns of Jesus are for us all. They are for the whole church, most especially when it gets clear that Church is extension of the mission of Jesus.  The [...]</itunes:summary>
<itunes:subtitle>This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008 : Session TWO
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In the 1st session we looked at DNA understood as what was being [...]</itunes:subtitle>
<itunes:author>George Lings</itunes:author>
<itunes:keywords>church,planting,canada,anglican,fresh,expressions</itunes:keywords>
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		<title>DNA: The Essence of What is Being Planted</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/03/dna-the-essence-of-what-is-being-planted/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2008 13:39:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>George Lings</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[
This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008: Session 2
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View DNA: The Essence of What Is Being Planted as a Microsoft Powerpoint File 
 
 
 
I share the view of the Archbishop of Canterbury that we live in the most creative time, that has occurred for many hundreds of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="Times20" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"><span lang="EN-GB"><span style="font-size: x-large; font-family: Times New Roman;"><strong><img style="width: 300px; height: 224px;" title="DNA" src="/images/dna.jpg" alt="DNA" width="300" height="224" align="right" /></strong></span></span></p>
<p class="Subhead14" style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt"><strong>This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008: Session 2</strong></p>
<p class="Subhead14" style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt">Listen to the Podcast:</p>
<p class="Subhead14" style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt"></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman';"><a title="View DNA: The Essence of What Is Being Planted as a Microsoft Powerpoint File" href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/dna-the-essence.ppt">View DNA: The Essence of What Is Being Planted as a Microsoft Powerpoint File</a> </span></p>
<p class="12normal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p class="12normal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p class="12normal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I share the view of the Archbishop of Canterbury that we live in the most creative time, that has occurred for many hundreds of years, over thinking about what church is. As the 21st century unrolls our questions have become more searching and more foundational because of a raft of external contextual changes and also because of creativity from within the church.  Here are some external reasons that have overtaken us:</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in">1.      Nearly all institutions are regarded with suspicion; this makes the past dominant model of Church as institution<a name="_ftnref1"></a>, with its ponderous structures, emphasis on buildings and a separate caste of clergy rather unconvincing.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in">2.      With the burgeoning interest in a whole variety of spiritualities<a name="_ftnref2"></a>,  church is seen as foundering in a muddy backwater of religion. We are thought to be into repression of feelings, concern with outward form and instincts to control others.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in">3.      Cultural and intellectual pluralism, together with the high value placed on tolerance of others views,  makes obsolete any concept that &#8220;one size of church fits all&#8221;.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in">4.      Consumerism is possibly the dominant force in westernised society<a name="_ftnref3"></a> and this has injected a questionable high level of choice into church affiliations. It has increased the transfer rate between them. It may have changed committed members into worship tasters.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in">5.      The dissolving of Christendom<a name="_ftnref4"></a> and the rise of society based on networks has led to a double sense of liminality. By that word I mean going through what is both a threatening but also promising transitional stage beyond an old certainty. This liminality is characterised by the church both being at the edge of society, rather than being at its centre. It is also about existing in a world that no longer has centres at all, which is very different from our territorial instincts based on place.<a name="_ftnref5"></a></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">There are also some changes from within, that I believe have arisen not just because of external changes in society, but have their genesis in the creativity of the Missionary Holy Spirit.  I am not saying each new development is perfect, or above criticism. I make a more modest point that despite our muddles and imperfect experimentation, God is at work among us and I rejoice in it.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I then notice the following:</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in">1.      The creation of fresh expressions of church, and that very language, has prompted new questions about what church is. Crucially these questions are unanswerable by using the skills of how to sustain existing churches, nor are they much helped by talk of how to increase the size of existing forms.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 2.15pt 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in">2.      Some examples of fresh expressions of church, like Cell Church and its derivatives<a name="_ftnref6"></a>, and the equally recent but growing group of people, who have what, Alan Jamieson calls, &#8220;Churchless Faith&#8221;<a name="_ftnref7"></a>, point up sharply that some assumptions about Church are just that. Sacred buildings, congregations, paid and ordained ministers are no longer seen as essential to being church. Not all would agree with that view but the question has been logged.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.25in; text-indent: -0.25in; tab-stops: list .25in left .5in">3.      The variety of fresh expressions, and indeed the inherent provisionality and partial character of the very phraseology &#8220;expression&#8221;, has further opened up the realisation that no one expression of church is complete and none of them, either the emerging or inherited church, can fully represent Christ, whose body the church is supposed to be. As Rowan Williams put it. &#8216;If Christ is the embodiment of God, and the Church is his body on earth, then no single expression of church can ever exhaust Christ.&#8217;.<a name="_ftnref8"></a>  In that sense no local church is completely church. It is only an expression of church.<br />
 
</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">So then we find ourselves in a time when the question &#8220;what is church?&#8221; is more live than for a long time. This is actually very helpful in our mission context of needing to plant churches. The worst thing we could do would be to simply replicate the expressions of being church that have partly led to our problems and which only appeal to the current dwindling insiders. Yet at the same time we need some clarity about what church is, otherwise we shall not know what to plant.  In this context people have turned to the analogy of the DNA of church.  They may mean quite different things by it and I will use the two talks to explore the two most helpful meanings.</p>
<p style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt">1       DNA as isolating the essence of Church</p>
<p style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">People are now reaching out for ways of talking about the essence of church, that go behind any specific form, to what is generic about it.  [In an organic world that favours emergence, the analogy of DNA also has become one way of trying to talk about its essence in such a way as enables its  principled ongoing evolution.]  This talk of DNA means the search to encapsulate the irreducible essence of what needs to be reproduced to deserve being called church.  This use of DNA language appeals to the search for a portable minimalism and for yardsticks to assess all expressions of church.  At worst this could be an illusory search for simplistic answers to a complex reality. I like the aphorism &#8220;Simplicity on the near side of complexity is useless; simplicity on the far side of complexity is priceless.&#8221;</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">But at best here is a search for ways to talk about church that are meaningful, accessible and useful for today&#8217;s mission context.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">The second way to look at DNA is to talk about it as the mechanisms by which something is reproduced. This is fair to the analogy and a legitimate question. It will be the controlling metaphor in the second talk.</p>
<p><strong>What then is to be planted, or reproduced?<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 6pt 0in 3pt">I detect in the UK there are two equally flawed positions seeking to understand this which we need to avoid. Some are not sufficiently ecclesial and some are blatantly not missional. Neither will do.</p>
<p><strong>Two distortions to avoid</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">One is an undue emphasis on the Gospel. Some evangelists are guilty of this; it is what I call the &#8220;Jesus is great, though the church is awful&#8221;, approach. It is a view that the Gospel changes lives, while church is just a holding receptacle for them. It&#8217;s a view that focuses on the harvest and complains about the barns.  Another picture could be to say the Gospel is the active ingredient, like yeast, while the church is passive, like a lump of dough. This view says we plant gospel and reap church.  It colludes nicely with the belief that Mission precedes church. And in the story of the NT it is true historically that the mission of Jesus had to occur before thechurch ofJesus appeared.   </p>
<p>At the other end of the spectrum, others over-emphasise Church. Creating fresh expressions then becomes no more than improving a worship service, or perhaps offering another one in the same ecclesial location. This is no more than the fading actress putting on lipstick and hoping she will attract new fame and suitors. Perhaps worse it assumes that church attendance by outsiders is the aim of the game.  The Cyprianic view, that he who would have God as his father, must have the church as his mother and there is no salvation outside the church, has been co-opted in an unhelpful ecclesiocentric view. </p>
<p><strong>Why they are distortions and their dangers.</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">The view that only Gospel is needed is blind to the realisation that there is no disincarnate Gospel. It always has a bearer, who is part of the church. Indeed its embodiment in people is a key part of the witness to the Gospel. We are finding in the UK that those communities who by their life together demonstrate the life of Jesus are those which pose helpful questions to surrounding society and draw people to Christ. &#8220;See how these Christians love one another&#8221; is the gospel embodied.  Over emphasis on gospel also leads to unsustainable activism, the leaders driving congregations, often through guilt, to the point of rebellion, resignation or exhaustion, and it confuses the growth of the church with the purpose of the church.  This becomes like the odd situation of a couple only getting married in order to have children. I would argue</p>
<p><strong>Mission is not the identity of the church, though it is within its DNA.</strong></p>
<p>The over churchy view is dire for other reasons. In places with such a distortion you will notice the person of Jesus is seldom mentioned for that would be embarrassingly personal, the idea of the church as a counter cultural force engaging with society is missing and discipleship, involving a changed life, is not talked about. As opposed to activism, the danger is quietism. As opposed to existing for others, these churches exist for themselves.  Worship and reactive pastoral care become everything. Yes, these are in the DNA of church, but they too are not its identity.</p>
<p><strong>A way forward</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">In church planting it really matters what we think we are planting, because the worrying reality is that we can reproduce our own distortions of church. Let me try to suggest a better way. I have always thought that the language of Church planting should help us here</p>
<p>Here we meet two words, Church and Plant. The first is obviously ecclesial and planting rightly sounds missional. I want to suggest that Church and Plant, ecclesial and missional, are not just like pancakes and maple syrup, which go well together &#8211; but more like chicken and egg. With those two it is hard to say which came first. Yes, historically the mission of Jesus led to the Church, but ever after they are intertwined. Church is the foretaste of God&#8217;s ultimate purposes, it is what Gospel produces. Yet, people made fully alive by encounter with Christ, in such a way that how they relate to each other shows the life of Christ, embody and bear the gospel to others. So Gospel and Church are a more like a helix, interweaving with one more visible at particular moments, but both needing each other.  The need for connection is was graphically put over 50 years ago by Bishop Lesslie Newbigin. &#8220;An unchurchly mission is as much a monstrosity as an unmissionary church&#8221;.<a name="_ftnref9"></a> A monster is language we use when something created has gone badly wrong.  I have shown you what those distortions look like.</p>
<p>I think there are yet deeper reasons why the two, Church and Mission, must co-exist. We best come to know what Church is, that is the people of God, the body of Christ, the Temple of the Spirit, by what God the Trinity are. This was hinted at in the theology ofMission shaped church presented last year. Let me put it another way this year.  Eastern Theologians like Zizioulas for many decades have been insisting that we think of God as Communion or community more than singularity.  Some Western theologians like Barth and Bosch for a similar length of time have been recovering for us the missionary character of God. It is time to insist that these two rather disconnected streams of thought be brought together and must belong together. Thus I am finding it both helpful and persuasive to speak of God the Trinity as community-in-mission. </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I am entirely serious about the order of those three words, that Community is put first. Missional Community is an alternative term, that is not so good. Here are a few reasons. The Godhead existed in loving community before the mission began, though the mission was the natural overflow of their loving life. Being is always deeper than doing, and identity is prior to activity.  Thus communal love comes before missional purpose.  Then we see the same in Jesus.  He came from the Trinitarian Community before the mission unfolded. His identity preceded his activity. He was God the Son in the manger before he had done anything at all.  God the Father expressed his approval of his Son at his Baptism, before the public ministry began.  Jesus himself then chose his followers before they had much of use and note the order in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=Mark+3.13" class="bibleref" title="MSG Mark 3.13" target="_new">Mark 3.13</a>.  &#8221;He called to him those he wanted&#8230; He appointed 12 .. that they might be with him, and that he might send them out&#8221;. Community-in-mission is the better order of words to speak of the Trinity. Their own mission embodies the same order. This sets the pattern for the church.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p>What then is being planted?  Why, Jesus centred community-in mission. Consider the definition the Church of England came up with in Mission-shaped Church, in 2004.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">&#8220;Church planting is the process by which a seed of the life and message of Jesus [that's a way to say gospel] embodied by a community of Christians [in other words church] is immersed for mission reasons in a particular cultural or geographic context. The intended consequence is that it roots there, coming to life as a new indigenous body of Christian disciples [ecclesial] well-suited to continue in mission.[missional]<a name="_ftnref10"></a></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">But what will that community look like, what will it do? How will we know it is church?</p>
<p>[Let me immediately put in a caveat. For me this is like asking the question, what is human? - not what is adult, or mature, much less what is white, male and middle aged? It is a generic question and it deals with inner identity, not outward features, size or success. It also embraces potential, more than measuring performance. Babies are human though all they will become is not yet clear. This way of thinking also requires modesty; for which of us is perfectly even the particular human being we were created to be - let alone an embodiment of all the talents that the human race possesses. We are, if you like, only expressions of being human. None of us is the completeness of being human. Our very gender makes certain of that and our ages underline it. Perhaps its like that with church, the new humanity. There are only incomplete expressions yet there are marks upon them that are diagnostic.]</p>
<p>I confess that my knowledge of the science of DNA is limited to an enjoyable reading of Bill Bryson&#8217;s book A Short History of Nearly Everything.  Yet I learnt from Bryson that DNA has four chemical components. The list is adenine, guanine, cytosine, thiamine. They are apparently all very common substances. The genius is not in some highly specialised existence of one or more of them, but rather in the way they interlink; the particular way they pair in the now famous double helix.  Because I am not the author Dan Brown, who wrote the Da Vinci Code,  I do not seriously suggest to you that these four chemicals are actually secret code for the four marks of the Church; One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic.  Yet in some Anglican circles these four dynamics are being taken as DNA like components that do need to be reproduced in any further expression of church.<a name="_ftnref11"></a>  Last year John Bowen gave conference attendees my mapping of the four historic marks of the church, [One Holy Catholic and Apostolic] onto the directions and labels of four simpler words:  In, Up, Of and Out. Here&#8217;s the diagram by way of reminder.  Let me now push that a bit further, not least in terms of Bryson&#8217;s point that the interlinking of the 4 is crucial.</p>
<p>The pleasant thing about the 4 directions diagram is that it is cross shaped. It also suggests that the four key roles of the church are distinct and that all matter. Mission is no substitute for worship and vice versa. It also suggests that there is a centre at which they all meet.  I could call that being Jesus centred and that church is community, centred in Jesus. That is what it is, from which all these directions need to be explored.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s another shape &#8211; a pyramid &#8211; that does some other work we need. It&#8217;s technically a regular tetrahedron and it has a couple of other virtues. Unlike the cross shape, with four directions, going in different ways, so that they only meet at the centre and only some are next  to others,  in this shape every one of them is connected to all the others.  This is far more like it is in church life. The mission needs to be sustained by the community, energised by its meeting with God in worship and supported by the wider church. The worship is fed by resources from the wider church, needs to spring out of  the ongoing life of the community and to be in conversation with the mission.  The four are dimensions more than directions and they are far more interrelated than the simple four directions diagram visually suggests.</p>
<p>Its other virtue is that however you look at it, there is always some element you cannot see. This reminds us that the church will always defeat our attempts to fully describe it. There is always a sense of mystery. This is partly because the church is on earth only partly what she is called to be. She is the bride who awaits consummation, the temple not yet in New Jerusalem, the New Israel not yet in its promised land, the people on pilgrimage. The New Testament testifies to this mystery by never fully defining the church and using a riot of images to describe her. Read Paul Minear&#8217;s Images of the Church or Dulles&#8217; Models of the Church if you require a second opinion about how essential the mystery is. Of course the Church must be mystery for it was called into being by Grace and who knows exactly how that works, it is indwelt by the Spirit and there&#8217;s a constant source of disturbance and surprise, and it is described as the body of Christ &#8211; an image that is desperately familiar and yet the longer you ponder it, the more elusive and mind boggling it becomes. As Pope Paul VI put it at Vatican II &#8220;The church is a mystery. It is a reality imbued with the hidden presence of God. It lies therefore within the very nature of the Church to be always open to new and ever greater exploration.&#8221;<a name="_ftnref12"></a>  </p>
<p>So let me push the four marks a bit further. Not as demanding measurement to condemn what has been done so far, but as what a group centred in Jesus might aspire to. I also want to explore them as two pairs because it is also clear that the four marks derive their meaning and dynamism not so much from being utterly separate from one another, but through their interconnections.</p>
<p><strong>1          Apostolic</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I have looked at how some current thinkers understand the Apostolic. I suggest what is held in common is that this is a dimension of the church that connects across time, and yet stays faithful.  It looks back in time to its origins in God, Christ and Scripture that give it authenticity and authorisation. It also looks forward with momentum from that very past. Apostolicity is concerned for how those foundational values are faithfully transferred, whether in human lives, by doctrine, ordinations or all of them. By it the church is also called to look forward, through mission, to what is not yet; sending members out and beyond itself into the world and into the future. That journey will take it to fresh locations, though today these will also be defined by culture, not only places or territory.</p>
<p>But being apostolic is more than an existing ecclesial community learning to face outwards, it includes some members leaving and starting a fresh further community elsewhere, as was the case with the Trinity, shown in the Incarnation, and then by Christ calling disciples. Planting fresh expressions by reproduction is closer to this divine pattern than much attractional mission practised by existing churches, let alone the barely missional existence of many churches, for whom apostolicity is too much about authenticity brought by past links. Reproduction by definition then leads to the birth of related but non identical churches. Here note that the apostolic mark alone cannot encompass this. Principled diversity, by which there can be churches that remain apostolic in faithfulness, yet differ from inherited patterns needs engagement with views both of oneness and of catholicity.</p>
<p><strong>2          Catholicity</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">This is in effect a complementary relationship to the Apostolic; Catholicity is concerned for the dimension by which the church exists and connects across space, and across difference.  It seeks to express the wholeness of the Church in each place, through insisting on enduring connection between its twin callings of both universality and particularity, but without the universal degenerating to uniformity.<a name="_ftnref13"></a> Catholicity enshrines all Christians as being in relational connection. This repudiates us seeing ourselves primarily as individual Christians or independent churches. Relational connection with others, who are to some extent unlike us, is what gives us identity as persons. Our model for this is the diverse yet united loving community of the Trinity. Connectivity is also with the communion of saints, for ultimately there is one church and one new heaven and earth. Connection with others unlike us also informs the mission to all, so that the Christian faith may become more universal in geographical scope and yet remain particular in each cultural context. In this sense Catholicity is a mandate for inculturated mission and church.</p>
<p>Reproducing churches is a process which reminds all churches that they came from an outside yet relational source. They were generated humanly speaking either by a founder or a group from another sending church. They are inherently part of something greater than themselves. Such newly born churches have relational catholicity with their apostolic forebears. Here the dimensions of being church across both time and space meet in an obvious way.  Young churches should be very conscious of a wider belonging, or catholicity, that gave them birth. Such a birth reminds them of grace and of receiving a gift of life from beyond themselves, rather than a focus on their own power and ability. </p>
<p>So to the second pair</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"><strong>3          Holiness<br />
</strong>
</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I suggest this mark enshrines the dimension of how the church lives its existence as belonging to God. What is common across recent authors is language of calling, being set apart, being positively different to those outside but without a world denying withdrawal.  This is the vocation of the church. To exist for God becomes also the call to become more like God, morally and spiritually. As Dulles puts it, &#8220;The church must be characterized by holiness otherwise it could not be a sign of Christ&#8221;<a name="_ftnref14"></a>.  Its public worship should be one means by which engagement with God makes it take on his characteristics, but this will be cashed out in discipleship. &#8220;Be holy, as I am holy says the Lord&#8221;.  However the call will always be clearer than its realisation or achievement. Dulles links this to the abiding relevance of the church&#8217;s penitential parts of liturgy,<a name="_ftnref15"></a> and the parable of the wheat and tares is also helpful here. So any claim to holiness must have self aware modesty as well as awareness we are called for a purpose.</p>
<p>Belonging to God and for his purposes will connect holiness to the apostolic mission. An emphasis on calling however opens the question of election, with its attendant temptations to pride and insularity. A corrective is supplied by Newbigin, who is consistent across his writing<a name="_ftnref16"></a> that calling, with all its gifts and privileges, cannot be separated from missional identity. &#8220;They are chosen not for themselves, not to be exclusive beneficiaries of God&#8217;s saving work, but to be bearers of the secret of his saving work for the sake of all. They are chosen to go and bear fruit.&#8221;<a name="_ftnref17"></a>  The reproduction of churches takes this specific calling very seriously and it embodies linkage between holiness and apostolicity.</p>
<p>The emphasis on holiness then reminds those starting churches that novelty is no substitute for integrity, character and spirituality.  Doing what has become popular or fashionable is also no substitute for seeking and hearing the calling of God.  And worship at any expression of church should never descend to self indulgence, either in classical or contemporary tastes, but is to be response to God, in order to be transformed to become more like God in grace and character. </p>
<p><strong>4          Oneness</strong></p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I suggest that this fourth mark complements the third of holiness and describes the dimension of how the church lives out belonging like God.  It deals with the how the church community understands its internal relationships, because of its externally derived identity.  Common to the contemporary writers is that oneness finds its deepest source and understanding from the relationships of the Trinity and the prayer of Christ in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=John+17" class="bibleref" title="MSG John 17" target="_new">John 17</a> that those who follow will be one like Christ and the Father.  There is also some reliance on the list of ones in <a href="http://biblegateway.com/bible?version=65&amp;passage=Ephesians+4" class="bibleref" title="MSG Ephesians 4" target="_new">Ephesians 4</a>: 4-6. Those seven factors are:  one body, Spirit, hope, Lord, faith, baptism, God and Father.  Notably these seven features include allusion to the Trinity.<a name="_ftnref18"></a> John Stott argues that the four remaining qualities are dependent on the Trinitarian three. The Father creates the one family, Jesus creates one faith, baptism and hope, the Spirit creates the one body.<a name="_ftnref19"></a>  Whether or not the Stott argument is sustainable, the Trinitarian base for unity immediately puts diversity on the table alongside it. Today any view of unity that disallows diversity has become suspect.  The Trinitarian base is fertile for holding together unity and diversity.</p>
<p>Have you ever asked yourself why do have the order as One Holy Catholic and Apostolic? Does this wrongly give the oneness a hermeneutical authority over the other three?  It is arguable that this goes back to 3rd century North African Bishop Cyprian and his Roman legal cultural background that prized oneness and singularlity.  He notably compared the Church to a Roman Army camp &#8211; and they were identical throughout the empire.  Thus oneness became code for one centre, one leader, one form &#8211; a universal uniformity. Trinitarian understanding has profoundly challenged this and the communal view embraces unity and diversity. Arguments for overseas contextualisation and indigenisation have fuelled the fire. The creation of fresh expressions of church at home has added pragmatic examples of ways of being church that are both different from the inherited and yet clearly are still church.  It is as though we used to be mono cultural about church and we have been forced to realise there are other cultures that are as valid.</p>
<p>Such an emphasis does however increase the overlap between understandings of catholicity and oneness.  I notice even M level students find it hard to maintain clear borders between them. </p>
<p>Mission-shaped Church follows my suggestion that Oneness today deals more with the dynamics of diversity within a local group of Christians and how they belong together in ways that follow Trinitarian unity and diversity. Catholicity deals more with wider connections across space and thus the bonds and relations between groups of Christians in different places or cultures.<a name="_ftnref20"></a></p>
<p>However the reality is more complex.  Firstly, earliest use of the word Catholic is of the local church and is about its wholeness there.  Secondly, at least in theory, the Oneness of the Church is universal both in time and space, thus Catholicity and Oneness do intertwine.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">So these four marks remain though they continue to be reinterpreted and clearly interact. Hence my three sided pyramid diagram that insist they are interconnected dimensions. These I suspect are deep in the DNA of church. They do not say everything that might be said but as a start for an equivalent to the helix of adenine, guanine, cytosine, thiamine, they are not bad.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I think the OF or Catholic dimension is usually the base. Up In and Out are all action words, whereas OF is a being and belonging word. Christians are the Body OF Christ. Our identity is fundamentally and miraculously to be made part of his identity. We are those who are in Christ. Thus we share in his communion with the Father and the Spirit, we join their mission and are reenergised and redirected by encounter  with God.</p>
<p>I have explained DNA as an analogy to explore what is the essence of God.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">So then a group may be called Church when a diverse community is formed by transformative encounter with Jesus Christ. Called to follow him, this community lovingly responds through the prompting of the Holy Spirit, seeking to live and act as signs of God&#8217;s Kingdom. Their call is to be the people of God for a particular place or culture, will be shown by the emergence of the following:</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in">1          By their presence, acts and words they communicate the reality of Jesus Christ, continuing his mission.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in">2          Living out faithful commitment to one another, they reflect the loving and diverse oneness in the Trinity.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in">3          Knowing they are an integral part of Christ&#8217;s universal people, they love, learn from, and support Christians beyond their own group.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in">4          By their worship of God the Trinity, they encourage transformation into his holiness, including the practices of attending to Scripture and doing Baptism and Communion.</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">I&#8217;d end by saying we need to trust the DNA of church</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt"> </p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt">Here are my wife <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Helen </span>and myself.  Then I pose a question. What will our children look like?  If you have never met them, of course you cannot know.  However when you <span style="text-decoration: underline;">see them</span>, the links become obvious &#8211; facial features, face shapes, even casts of mind. Looking back we can see the family likeness, but we also encounter individuality. So it is with DNA and All Expressions of Church.  You can&#8217;t know what they will be like at the start. When they are grown, the parentage will become apparent.</p>
<p><strong>Notes:</strong></p>
<p>[1] Dulles. Models of the Church. He argues that the Institution model was dominant in Catholic thought from Constantine until 1950.  Since when he detects no less than 5 other models.<br />
[2] For example the creation of a workbook for churches to chart this locally.  Hollinghurst, Richmond &amp; Whitehead. Equipping your church in a spiritual age.<br />
[3] Mission-shaped Church : CHP 2004London, 9-11<br />
[4] This is very uneven and in the UK there are still rural areas where it looks strong and inner city areas that it is virtually absent. Similarly wide differences are detected across different age groups. <br />
[5] Alan +Roxburgh : The Missionary Congregation, Leadership and Liminality : Trinity Press : Harrisburg 1997<br />
[6] Perhaps Phil  Potter, The Challenge of Cell Church, is the most persuasive to English readers.<br />
[7] Jamieson  Churchless Faith,  93. More accurately this could be called Congregationless Faith as the majority have evolved some level of meeting in small groups.<br />
[8] Cited by Graham Cray in a lecture to Network Church Planters . Sheffield 2004<br />
[9] Newbigin L: The Household of God : Paternoster 1998:  p201 originally published in 1953<br />
[10]Mission-shaped Church : CHP 2004:32<br />
[11]Mission-shaped Church Ch 5 explores these categories to re-examine church, as does my own Encounters on the Edge No 5, Joining the Club or Changing the Rule, which begins to explore how we know whether a new body is in fact church.<br />
[12] Dulles 1988: 18<br />
[13] Avis: 2000: 65 acknowledges the latter distortion. &#8220;Catholicity &#8230; in the past has often been a byword for authorisation, uniformity and crushing of local traditions&#8221;<br />
[14] Dulles 1988: 133<br />
[15] Ibid: 134<br />
[16] Two markers could be taken. It is implicit in Ch 6 of his 1953 Ecclesiology Unto the Nations and explicit in the 1989 work The Gospel in a Pluralist Society, Ch 7 The Logic of Election.<br />
[17] Newbigin L:  The Gospel in a Pluralist Society: SPCK 1989: 86<br />
[18] Stott J: God&#8217;s New Society :  IVP 1979: 150<br />
[19] Ibid 1979: 151<br />
[20]Mission-shaped Church : 2004: 99</p>
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	<itunes:summary>
This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008: Session 2
Listen to the Podcast:

View DNA: The Essence of What Is Being Planted as a Microsoft Powerpoint File 
 
 
 
I share the view of the Archbishop of Canterbury that we live in the most creative time, that has occurred for many hundreds of years, over thinking about what church is. As the 21st century unrolls our questions have become more searching and more foundational because of a raft of external contextual changes and also because of creativity from within the church.  Here are some external reasons that have overtaken us:
 
1.      Nearly all institutions are regarded with suspicion; this makes the past dominant model of Church as institution, with its ponderous structures, emphasis on buildings and a separate caste of clergy rather unconvincing.
2.      With the burgeoning interest in a whole variety of spiritualities,  church is seen as foundering in a muddy backwater of religion. We are thought to be into repression of feelings, concern with outward form and instincts to control others.
3.      Cultural and intellectual pluralism, together with the high value placed on tolerance of others views,  makes obsolete any concept that “one size of church fits all”.
4.      Consumerism is possibly the dominant force in westernised society and this has injected a questionable high level of choice into church affiliations. It has increased the transfer rate between them. It may have changed committed members into worship tasters.
5.      The dissolving of Christendom and the rise of society based on networks has led to a double sense of liminality. By that word I mean going through what is both a threatening but also promising transitional stage beyond an old certainty. This liminality is characterised by the church both being at the edge of society, rather than being at its centre. It is also about existing in a world that no longer has centres at all, which is very different from our territorial instincts based on place.
 
There are also some changes from within, that I believe have arisen not just because of external changes in society, but have their genesis in the creativity of the Missionary Holy Spirit.  I am not saying each new development is perfect, or above criticism. I make a more modest point that despite our muddles and imperfect experimentation, God is at work among us and I rejoice in it.
 
I then notice the following:
 
1.      The creation of fresh expressions of church, and that very language, has prompted new questions about what church is. Crucially these questions are unanswerable by using the skills of how to sustain existing churches, nor are they much helped by talk of how to increase the size of existing forms.
2.      Some examples of fresh expressions of church, like Cell Church and its derivatives, and the equally recent but growing group of people, who have what, Alan Jamieson calls, “Churchless Faith”, point up sharply that some assumptions about Church are just that. Sacred buildings, congregations, paid and ordained ministers are no longer seen as essential to being church. Not all would agree with that view but the question has been logged.
3.      The variety of fresh expressions, and indeed the inherent provisionality and partial character of the very phraseology “expression”, has further opened up the realisation that no one expression of church is complete and none of them, either the emerging or inherited church, can fully represent Christ, whose body the church is supposed to be. As Rowan Williams put it. ‘If Christ is the embodiment of God, and the Church is his body on earth, then no single expression of church can ever exhaust Christ.’.  In that sense no local church is completely church. It is only an expression of church.
 

So then we find ourselves in a time when the question “what is church?” [...]</itunes:summary>
<itunes:subtitle>
This lecture was delivered at the Vital Church Planting Conference in Toronto Feb 2008: Session 2
Listen to the Podcast:

View DNA: The Essence of What Is Being Planted as a Microsoft Powerpoint File 
 
 
 
I share the view of the Archbishop [...]</itunes:subtitle>
<itunes:author>George Lings</itunes:author>
<itunes:keywords>church,planting,dna,anglican,evangelism,fresh,expressions</itunes:keywords>
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		<title>Kingdom without Christendom in Canada</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/02/kingdom-without-christendom-in-canada/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/02/kingdom-without-christendom-in-canada/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 2008 20:35:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Connie denBok</dc:creator>
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<p>This was a lecture given at the 2008 Vital Church Planting Conference.</p>
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		<title>Biodiversity in Church Planting- The Unseen Future</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 2008 20:33:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Connie denBok</dc:creator>
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		<title>Getting and Giving the Gospel</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/03/822/</link>
		<comments>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/03/822/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Mar 2007 20:54:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bruxy Cavey</dc:creator>
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This lecture was delivered at the Institute of Evangelism Dinner in 2007.




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<p>This lecture was delivered at the Institute of Evangelism Dinner in 2007.</p>
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	</item>
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		<title>The Gestation, Birth and Early Years of a Church Plant</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Feb 2007 20:59:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Victoria Heard</dc:creator>
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		<title>Five Types of Church Plant</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Feb 2007 20:44:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Victoria Heard</dc:creator>
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		<title>Reshaping a Diocese for Church Planting</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/02/reshaping-a-diocese-for-church-planting/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Feb 2007 01:52:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Victoria Heard</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[This is a talk given by The Rev. Canon Victoria Heard at the 2007 Vital Church Planting Conference.




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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a talk given by The Rev. Canon Victoria Heard at the 2007 Vital Church Planting Conference.</p>
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<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/02/kingdom-without-christendom-in-canada/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Kingdom without Christendom in Canada</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/02/five-types-of-church-plant/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Five Types of Church Plant</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/02/biodiversity-in-church-planting-the-unseen-future/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Biodiversity in Church Planting- The Unseen Future</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/03/822/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Getting and Giving the Gospel</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/02/the-gestation-birth-and-early-years-of-a-church-plant/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">The Gestation, Birth and Early Years of a Church Plant</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary>This is a talk given by The Rev. Canon Victoria Heard at the 2007 Vital Church Planting Conference.




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<itunes:subtitle>This is a talk given by The Rev. Canon Victoria Heard at the 2007 Vital Church Planting Conference.




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		<title>John Bowen Speaking at The Diocese of Huron&#8217;s &#8220;53rd Weekend&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2006/04/john-bowen-speaking-at-the-diocese-of-hurons-53rd-weekend/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 01 Apr 2006 18:07:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Bowen</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Every year, the Diocese of Huron organizes a weekend of spiritual refreshment for those who spend 52 weeks of their year serving in their parish churches. Naturally, they call it &#8220;The 53rd Weekend.&#8221; In 2006, John Bowen, Director of the Institute of Evangelism, was the theme speaker. Here are the talks he gave.
Listen Here to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every year, the Diocese of Huron organizes a weekend of spiritual refreshment for those who spend 52 weeks of their year serving in their parish churches. Naturally, they call it &#8220;The 53<sup>rd</sup> Weekend.&#8221; In 2006, John Bowen, Director of the Institute of Evangelism, was the theme speaker. Here are the talks he gave.</p>
<p>Listen Here to Part 1:<br />
</p>
<p>Part 2:<br />
</p>
<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/03/822/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Getting and Giving the Gospel</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/02/kingdom-without-christendom-in-canada/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Kingdom without Christendom in Canada</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2007/02/reshaping-a-diocese-for-church-planting/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Reshaping a Diocese for Church Planting</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/09/vcp-2011-plenary-by-steve-croft/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">VCP 2011 Plenary by Steve Croft</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/10/teaching-the-faith-to-beginners-workshop/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">Teaching the Faith to Beginners Workshop</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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	<itunes:summary>Every year, the Diocese of Huron organizes a weekend of spiritual refreshment for those who spend 52 weeks of their year serving in their parish churches. Naturally, they call it “The 53rd Weekend.” In 2006, John Bowen, Director of the Institute of Evangelism, was the theme speaker. Here are the talks he gave.
Listen Here to Part 1:

Part 2:

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<itunes:subtitle>Every year, the Diocese of Huron organizes a weekend of spiritual refreshment for those who spend 52 weeks of their year serving in their parish churches. Naturally, they call it “The 53rd Weekend.” In 2006, John Bowen, Director of the [...]</itunes:subtitle>
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		<title>Are &#8220;The Chronicles of Narnia&#8221; an Evangelistic Text?</title>
		<link>http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2005/03/are-the-chronicles-of-narnia-an-evangelistic-text/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Mar 2005 02:36:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Bowen</dc:creator>
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In 1959, C.S.Lewis wrote  to BBC producer Lance Sieveking, who had apparently proposed that a movie be made of The Chronicles of Narnia. Here is part of Lewis’ response:
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><img style="width: 50px; height: 50px;" src="/images/index_cart.gif" alt="" width="50" height="50" align="left" />This lecture is free for reading online, and also for sale in Audio CD format.<br />
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<p><a href="http://www.institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/narnialamppost.jpg"><img style=' float: right; padding: 4px; margin: 0 0 2px 7px;'  class="alignright size-full wp-image-808" title="narnialamppost" src="http://www.institute.wycliffecollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/narnialamppost.jpg" alt="narnialamppost" width="225" height="300" /></a>In 1959, C.S.Lewis wrote  to BBC producer Lance Sieveking, who had apparently proposed that a movie be made of The Chronicles of Narnia. Here is part of Lewis’ response:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>I am absolutely opposed – adamant isn’t in it! – to a TV version. Anthropomorphic animals, when taken out of narrative into actual visibility, always turn into buffoonery or nightmare. At least, with photography. Cartoons (if only Disney did not combine so much vulgarity with his genius!) wld. be another matter. A human, pantomime, Aslan wld. be to me blasphemy.<br />
All the best,<br />
yours<br />
C. S. Lewis</em> </p></blockquote>
<p>So is he turning in his grave at the release of the first two of what is planned as a whole series of Narnia movies? Personally, while I have reservations about both movies, I thought they were neither buffoonery nor nightmare, and I would like to think that, with the advances in movie making since 1959 and the co-direction of Lewis’ stepson Douglas Gresham, he might have been pleased after all.</p>
<p>Most churches have been excited about the movies, and various websites have offered various ways to turn it into a great evangelistic opportunity. One website, for example, had pages for youth groups, one for “Becoming a Parish promoter”, and one for starting a study group. Another invited us to find a Lion party near to us; and a third introduced us to four “deeper truths” (which bore a suspicious resemblance to the Four Spiritual Laws) to be found in the Chronicles. This enthusiasm will probably continue for as long as the series is turned into movies.</p>
<p>Was this the right way to think about the movies, however? My fear is that on the one hand people went expecting the wrong thing and were disappointed, and that on the other hand they may have missed what Lewis the evangelist is actually trying to do, and thus fail to benefit from what the movie does have to offer.<br />
<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong>Definitions of Evangelism</strong></p>
<p>First, it would probably be useful to offer a definition of evangelism. In one sense I can’t improve on J.I.Packer’s 1961 definition of evangelism as “just preaching the Gospel.” In teaching, however, I expand that definition in two directions: one is to say that “evangelism is those words which help people take steps towards faith in Jesus.” In putting it that way, I am deliberately expanding Packer’s definition of “preaching” to include all words whose intention is evangelistic, whether it’s conversation, a Bible study, a word of testimony, or an evangelistic book—not just formal preaching. I also want to introduce the idea that evangelism is a process. There is some evidence, for example, that Canadians need to hear the Gospel nine times before they respond (I’m sure Americans get it much more quickly), and that the process of moving to a response takes on average 4 years.</p>
<p>Secondly, it is helpful to know something of C.S.Lewis’ background. He grew up as an Anglican in Northern Ireland, was alternately bored and terrified by church, and by the age of thirteen declared himself an atheist, which he remained for fifteen years. During those years, however, he had what he later came to recognise as spiritual experiences, flashes of what he called “joy” which spoke to him of something beyond present material experience. These experiences came to him through the beauty of nature and through ancient mythology, particularly Norse mythology.</p>
<p>For years, he made no connection between his experiences of joy and Christianity, until he made friends with J.R.R.Tolkien, who argued that mythology contained glimpses of God’s truth, and that all mythology pointed to Jesus Christ and was fulfilled in Jesus Christ. As Lewis wrote later:</p>
<p>The heart of Christianity is a myth which is also a fact. The old myth of the Dying God, without ceasing to be myth, comes down from the heaven of legend and imagination to the earth of history. It happens—at a particular date, in a particular place, followed by definable historical consequences.</p>
<p>Once he had acknowledged that Jesus Christ was the Son of God, he started going to church again, and began to explore and write about his newfound faith. From that time on, he published on average one book per year till his death in 1963, from the academic (such as The Allegory of Love) to popular theology (The Screwtape Letters) to the fictional (Narnia and the science fiction trilogy), every one demonstrating a deep integration of his faith with his learning and his life.</p>
<p>So what did Lewis think about evangelism? He was ambivalent in his attitude to conventional evangelism. In an interview with Decision magazine in 1963 (six months before his death), he said, “There are many different ways of bringing people into His Kingdom, even some ways that I specially dislike.”  Among other things, he clearly disliked evangelical jargon. When Sherwood Eliot Wirt asked him: “Would you say that the aim of Christian writing, including your own writing, is to bring about an encounter of the reader with Jesus Christ?” Lewis replied: “That is not my language, yet it is the purpose I have in mind.”  </p>
<p>At Oxford, he was reluctant to identify with the OICCU, at that time the only evangelical student organisation at Oxford, and instead started his own student society, The Socratic Club, where Christian faith could be debated.  He did once address the OICCU on the topic “What is Christianity?” Lady Elizabeth Catherwood (daughter of Martyn Lloyd-Jones) called it “a really splendid, perfect talk.” Yet when a student, probably feeling that Lewis had failed to close the deal, asked “If everything you’re saying is true, what should we do about it?” Lewis replied, “God forbid that I should intervene in such a personal matter. Go and talk to your priest about that.”  That’s hardly a standard evangelistic response.<br />
Lewis’ High View of Evangelism</p>
<p>Yet Lewis had a high view of evangelism itself. He wrote: “The glory of God, and, as our only means to glorying him, the salvation of human souls, is the real business of life.”   And for him, this was not merely a theory. He wrote in a letter in 1949:</p>
<p>I have two lists of names in my prayers, those for whose conversion I pray, and those for whose conversion I give thanks. The little trickle of transferences from List A to List B is a great comfort. </p>
<p>He developed an understanding that different people with different gifts contribute different things to the process of evangelism. His contribution, he came to feel, was very specific. In a paper on apologetics, he said:</p>
<p>I turn now to the question of the actual attack. This may be either emotional or intellectual. If I speak only of the intellectual kind, that is not because I undervalue the other but because, not having been given the gifts necessary for carrying it out, I cannot give advice about it. </p>
<p>He came to believe therefore that evangelism was best done by a team:</p>
<p>I am not sure that the ideal missionary team ought not to consist of one who argues and one who (in the fullest sense of the word) preaches. Put up your arguer first to undermine their intellectual prejudices; then let the evangelist proper launch his appeal. I have seen this done with great success. </p>
<p>He had seen it done because in at least two instances he was the “arguer.” When Lewis started doing lectures to the RAF during the Second World War, he worked with an English bishop, A.W.Goodwin-Hudson, to whom he said:</p>
<p>I wish I could do the heart-stuff . . . I can’t. . . I wish I could. . . . I wish I could press home to these boys how much they need Christ. . . . You do the heart stuff and I’ll do the head stuff.</p>
<p>They agreed that Lewis would first of all do a 20-minute lecture presenting the rational case for Christianity, and Goodwin-Hudson would then follow up with the evangelistic appeal. Lewis adopted the same approach by teaming up with Stephen Olford for a crusade at Westminster Chapel in London. </p>
<p>As far as I know, Lewis never wrote about evangelism as a process. But clearly he sees himself as playing a part in the work of evangelism, though not the only part or necessarily the most important part. The way he understood his role was as preparation for the Gospel rather than the Gospel itself, “preparatio evangelica rather than evangelium”</p>
<p>If this is how Lewis sees his own role as an evangelist—as an intellectual John the Baptist—there are nevertheless two distinct ways in his writing in which he fulfils this role. I am thinking of Mere Christianity and the Narnia stories.</p>
<p>Mere Christianity began life as a series of radio broadcasts on the BBC in 1941; these were followed by two other similar series’. They were finally published in the form in which we know them in 1952. At the beginning of the series, he wrote to Dr. James Welch, the producer of the series to explain what he was trying to do:</p>
<p>It seems to me that the New Testament, by preaching repentance and forgiveness, always assumes an audience who already believe in the law of Nature and know they have disobeyed it. In modern England we cannot at present assume this, and therefore most apologetic begins a stage too far on. The first step is to create, or recover, the sense of guilt. Hence if I give a series of talks I should mention Christianity only at the end, and would prefer not to unmask my battery till then. </p>
<p>His intention, then, was to start where people are at—with humankind’s innate sense of right and wrong—and to work back from there to the necessity of a lawgiver, and thence to a sense of sin (our failed responsibility to the lawgiver), and to a saviour from sin. It was a rational, logical, step by step approach, illustrated profusely with brilliant analogies and metaphors.</p>
<p>Although he said it was preparation for the Gospel—what Schaeffer would have called pre-evangelism—in fact it has been the means of countless people coming to faith—most famously, in our generation, Charles Colson.  Which is indicative, I think, of the fact that God is no respecter of our neat categories like evangelism and pre-evangelism. Some of what is intended as pre-evangelism actually brings people to faith; some that is intended to be directly evangelistic is for some people only early preparation for their conversion much later.</p>
<p><strong>The Purpose of the Narnia Books</strong></p>
<p>The Narnia series began in 1950 with the publication of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe . This was two years before Mere Christianity, but six years after the last of the radio broadcasts. Whether or not Lewis was aware of it at first, the Narnia stories demonstrate a quite different approach to evangelism. They do not begin with an attempt to establish a sense of sinfulness. They do not argue in a linear fashion for the truth of Christianity. In fact they do not argue at all. After all, they are children’s fantasies.</p>
<p>Perhaps then we are wrong to think of them as evangelistic. But Lewis’ own words confirm his evangelistic intention:</p>
<p>I thought I saw how stories of this kind could steal past a certain inhibition which had paralyzed much of my own religion in childhood. . . . [S]upposing that by casting all these things into an imaginary world, stripping them of their stained-glass and Sunday school associations, one could make them for the first time appear in their real potency? Could one not thus steal past those watchful dragons? I thought one could.</p>
<p>Lewis is concerned for people like himself who thought they knew Christianity, but had never really known or experienced its true nature. In his life, his experience of church on the one hand and his experience of the things that touched him most deeply on the other were totally different. It took many years before he came to realise (through Tolkien) that the thrill he found in mythology was not an end in itself but merely (to use his own image) a signpost pointing him for its fulfillment toward faith in Christ.  The mythology of Narnia, he felt, might provide a similar kind of signpost to point people to Christ.</p>
<p>Lewis is the master of metaphor, and it is not surprising that he gives another image for what he was doing in Narnia to his friend and biographer, George Sayer:</p>
<p>His idea, as he once explained to me, was to make it easier for children to accept Christianity when they met it later in life. He hoped they would be vaguely reminded of the somewhat similar stories that they had read and enjoyed years before. “I am aiming at a sort of pre-baptism of the child’s imagination.”</p>
<p>The Gospel may not yet have reached their minds or their wills, but if their imagination has been captured by Narnian images of redemption, then when they hear the Gospel, it will resonate more readily because of that preparatory work done by Narnia.</p>
<p>Thus Lewis is still John the Baptist, preparing the ground for the hearing of the Gospel, perhaps years later. Only now, unlike the Lewis of Mere Christianity, he is primarily trying to win the imagination, not the mind.</p>
<p>Not that evangelism was Lewis’ initial motive for writing the Narnia stories. Indeed, he had no idea of even writing a series at first. He says that the images came first (the faun, the queen, the lion), then the fairy tale form, and only afterwards the theological realization of how the books might be helpful in evangelism.</p>
<p>So what is there in the Chronicles that can be understood as evangelistic or pre-evangelistic? Barth says somewhere: “The best apologetic is good dogmatics.&#8221;  If so, there is a wealth of good apologetics in the Chronicles, because behind Lewis the storyteller is Lewis the teacher, fleshing out almost every Christian doctrine. There are theologies of creation, the imago dei, the cultural mandate, and the fall; there is a Redeemer who dies because of sin and is raised again; there is a doctrine of the Spirit (the breath of Aslan); there are experiences of conversion, and lessons in repentance, faith, obedience and sanctification; there is an eschaton, an Armageddon, a heaven and a hell.</p>
<p>All that is lacking is an altar call—but Lewis has already told us he cannot do “the heart stuff.” Yet it seems to me that, in spite of his words, Lewis is not simply baptizing readers’ imaginations, preparing them for a future response. He hopes that people will respond to Jesus, both immediately and in the future.</p>
<p>Why do I say this? There are several occasions in the Chronicles when Lewis comes close to giving away the identity of Aslan. One, for example, is in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, where Lucy visits house of the magician Koriakin, reads through the book of spells, and comes across a story which takes up three pages and tells “about a cup and a sword and a tree and a green hill.” She says, “That is the loveliest story I’ve read or ever shall read in my whole life.” Yet as soon as the story is done, she can’t remember it, and she can’t turn the pages back. She asks Aslan, “Will you tell it to me, Aslan?”  And he says, “Indeed, yes. I will tell it to you for years and years.”</p>
<p>So we imagine Lucy back in our world, knowing only that she had once read the most wonderful story, wondering how Aslan will keep his promise, and then discovering in the most unlikely place in our world people who treasure a story about a cup and a sword and a tree and a green hill. And as she learns more about the story, she realises that Aslan is keeping his promise.</p>
<p>Maybe the clearest clue, however, is at the end of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. There the children meet Aslan in the form of a lamb, who has prepared breakfast for them on an open fire in a beach. The children are about to return to our world, and Lucy is upset because they will be leaving Aslan behind. Aslan, however, reassures her: “But you shall meet me, dear one”:</p>
<p>“Are—are you there too, sir?” said Edmund.<br />
“I am,” said Aslan. “But there I have another name. You must learn to know me by that name. That was the very reason you were brought into Narnia, that by knowing me for a little, you may know me better there.”</p>
<p>Lewis’ intention is that readers, having got to know Aslan in Narnia, should try to discover Aslan’s “other name” in our world, and indeed that what they have learned about Aslan will help them in getting to know him in our world. Thus he does not seem surprised when a girl called Hila wrote to him about this question. He comes close to giving the answer, but not quite:</p>
<p>As to Aslan’s other name, well I want you to guess. Has there never been anyone in this world who (1) Arrived at the same time as Father Christmas. (2) Said he was the son of the great Emperor. (3) Gave himself up for someone else’s fault to be jeered at and killed by wicked people. (4) Came to life again. (5) Is sometimes spoke of as a Lamb . . . Don’t you really know His name in this world. Think it over and let me know your answer!</p>
<p>Like the good teacher he is, Lewis does not spell things out for his students, but points them in the right direction, and lets them discover the truth for themselves. Most evangelists are reluctant to do this! Lewis however is content to sow seeds, nurturing curiosity that he trusts will lead people to consider or reconsider the stories of Jesus without the interference of the watchful dragons. Is this evangelistic? In the sense of calling for an immediate decision to follow Jesus, no. But if evangelism involves all kinds of words whose intention is help people take steps towards faith in Jesus, then the stories of Narnia certainly count.</p>
<p><strong>Does it work?</strong></p>
<p>Some will want to ask, Does it work?—although people like Packer would say that is the wrong question to ask. However, for what it is worth, in the past six months, I have been in email communication with a woman in her 30’s, in England, whom I have never met. She discovered my website, and emailed me with some questions. After some online conversation, I suggested she needed to read the Narnia stories, and sent her the manuscript of my book, <em>The Spirituality of Narnia</em> (Regent College Publishing 2007). With her permission, I’m going to share some of the questions that reading Narnia raised for her:</p>
<p>What have I been created (designed) for?  Who am I meant to be? I found the whole creation scene [in The Magician's Nephew] very moving. It has made me realise that rather than simply (!) being created, I&#8217;ve been called to life for a purpose.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been questioning my work anyway regarding its moral validity [she works in the gambling industry]; reading about how the dwarves loved making the crowns (as you put it, &#8220;it is what they were made to do and thus what they do well&#8221;) has made me question it in another way &#8211; &#8220;Where does my passion lie?&#8221; &#8220;What is it that I have been made to do well?&#8221;</p>
<p>How do logic and faith contribute to what I think is the truth?  In the &#8220;We hear and obey&#8221; chapter, the &#8220;seeing is believing&#8221; / &#8220;believing is seeing&#8221; section has raised questions about my reliance on my own reason to understand/believe some things, but also helped me understand why and how I know the truth I know about other things.</p>
<p>What are the things that stop me following Aslan even though I believe in him (like Susan in Prince Caspian)? This is one I *really* need to work on.</p>
<p>The way Aslan accepts people and their failings has made me understand much better how God accepts us (and question how I accept myself and others).</p>
<p>In your book, one phrase that really hits home is in the description of Uncle Andrew&#8217;s reaction to the creation. &#8220;And Aslan will not force him to give in.&#8221; It actually makes me feel the &#8220;wonder and a certain shrinking&#8221; sort of fear when I think about this.</p>
<p>I cannot imagine that (humanly speaking) any amount of preaching would have caused her to ask such questions. But Narnia has reached very deep into her soul, and drew her closer to Aslan almost by the day. The watchful dragons were indeed driven back.</p>
<p><strong>Conclusion</strong></p>
<p>Lewis leaves me with many questions about our evangelistic practices. Many people in our world are guarded by the watchful dragons—they can smell religiosity a mile off and they do not want it&#8211;how do we get round the dragons? We know how to appeal to people’s minds and wills in our evangelism, but how do we appeal to people’s imaginations? Are we willing to trust the Holy Spirit enough to ask questions and let people figure out the answers themselves&#8211;without our spelling everything out? Do we feel the only way to explain the Gospel is by beginning with sin? Or are we prepared to think there might be other starting points, such as people’s longing for joy, which will lead them to the same conclusion? Are we prepared to make use of a wide range of gifts within the Body of Christ to nurture people’s progress towards Christ, however slow it may seem?</p>
<p>And, most relevantly, are we prepared for the Narnia movies simply to baptize people’s imaginations, rather than producing actual conversions?  I would argue that if the movies succeed in disarming the watchful dragons, that is an essential contribution to the process we call evangelism. And unless such sowing and watering takes place, there will never be any reaping.</p>
<p><em>This article is adapted from its first appearance in the Journal of the Academy for Evangelism in Theological Education, Fall 2005.</em></p>
<div id="crp_related"><P><h3>Related Posts:</h3></P><ul><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2010/11/c-s-lewis-the-voyage-of-the-dawn-treader-coming-to-a-cinema-near-you-on-december-10/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">C.S.Lewis&#8217; The Voyage of the Dawn Treader &#8211;                                                              Coming to a Cinema near You on December 10</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2008/07/the-spirituality-of-narnia/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">The Spirituality of Narnia</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2006/01/the-man-who-created-narnia/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">The Man Who Created Narnia</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2011/11/tftw-8-c-s-lewis-and-fresh-expressions-of-church/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">TFTW #8: C.S.Lewis and Fresh Expressions of Church?</a></li><li><a href="http://institute.wycliffecollege.ca/2004/04/cslewis-premodern-postmodern-and-modern/" rel="bookmark" class="crp_title">C.S.Lewis: Premodern, Postmodern and Modern</a></li></ul></div>]]></content:encoded>
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In 1959, C.S.Lewis wrote  to BBC producer Lance Sieveking, who had apparently proposed that a movie be made of The Chronicles of Narnia. Here is part of Lewis’ response:
I am absolutely opposed – adamant isn’t in it! – to a TV version. Anthropomorphic animals, when taken out of narrative into actual visibility, always turn into buffoonery or nightmare. At least, with photography. Cartoons (if only Disney did not combine so much vulgarity with his genius!) wld. be another matter. A human, pantomime, Aslan wld. be to me blasphemy.
All the best,
yours
C. S. Lewis 
So is he turning in his grave at the release of the first two of what is planned as a whole series of Narnia movies? Personally, while I have reservations about both movies, I thought they were neither buffoonery nor nightmare, and I would like to think that, with the advances in movie making since 1959 and the co-direction of Lewis’ stepson Douglas Gresham, he might have been pleased after all.
Most churches have been excited about the movies, and various websites have offered various ways to turn it into a great evangelistic opportunity. One website, for example, had pages for youth groups, one for “Becoming a Parish promoter”, and one for starting a study group. Another invited us to find a Lion party near to us; and a third introduced us to four “deeper truths” (which bore a suspicious resemblance to the Four Spiritual Laws) to be found in the Chronicles. This enthusiasm will probably continue for as long as the series is turned into movies.
Was this the right way to think about the movies, however? My fear is that on the one hand people went expecting the wrong thing and were disappointed, and that on the other hand they may have missed what Lewis the evangelist is actually trying to do, and thus fail to benefit from what the movie does have to offer.

Definitions of Evangelism
First, it would probably be useful to offer a definition of evangelism. In one sense I can’t improve on J.I.Packer’s 1961 definition of evangelism as “just preaching the Gospel.” In teaching, however, I expand that definition in two directions: one is to say that “evangelism is those words which help people take steps towards faith in Jesus.” In putting it that way, I am deliberately expanding Packer’s definition of “preaching” to include all words whose intention is evangelistic, whether it’s conversation, a Bible study, a word of testimony, or an evangelistic book—not just formal preaching. I also want to introduce the idea that evangelism is a process. There is some evidence, for example, that Canadians need to hear the Gospel nine times before they respond (I’m sure Americans get it much more quickly), and that the process of moving to a response takes on average 4 years.
Secondly, it is helpful to know something of C.S.Lewis’ background. He grew up as an Anglican in Northern Ireland, was alternately bored and terrified by church, and by the age of thirteen declared himself an atheist, which he remained for fifteen years. During those years, however, he had what he later came to recognise as spiritual experiences, flashes of what he called “joy” which spoke to him of something beyond present material experience. These experiences came to him through the beauty of nature and through ancient mythology, particularly Norse mythology.
For years, he made no connection between his experiences of joy and Christianity, until he made friends with J.R.R.Tolkien, who argued that mythology contained glimpses of God’s truth, and that all mythology pointed to Jesus Christ and was fulfilled in Jesus Christ. As Lewis wrote later:
The heart of Christianity is a myth which is also a fact. The old myth of the Dying God, without [...]</itunes:summary>
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