missional ywamer

A thinking ywamer, living in Seattle working out how to follow Jesus and be grounded enough to hang out. How can I be in YWAM and live out a new kind of Christian life.

Quote: Jesus had strong views about rich men and loose women, but they both enjoyed His company.
Rod White Eagle Wilson

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Location: Seattle, Washington, United States

A YWAM thinker, trying to work out a missional life in YWAM

Monday, March 13, 2006

Bright Hope

I was walking around San Francisco last week with a bounce in my step. No really even a skip or two. I'm really excited about the future. We were looking at some art in SF, the colors were full of hope, bright morning colors, yellows and bright reds. Hopeful and I think I'm catching it. We also walked past Crate and Barrel the home furnishing store, it was not the same, very tame muted colors, lots of white but sterile. It reminded me of the church how we often try to be relevant but end up being tame and sterile.

Anyways I'm looking forward with hope and excitement.

What do you think the future looks like?

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Anti Excellence

I have been thinking about excellence and our preoccupation with it in the church.

Here are a few quotes from a piece Mark Pierson wrote a number of years back.

I’m anti excellence. I’m anti excellence in church life and I’m particularly anti excellence in worship.

It’s not a popular opinion to express in some churches today. In fact excellence has become such an important value in these circles that they sponsor and attend expensive conferences devoted to the theme. I don’t know much about what happens at these junkets for pastors but I did come very close to attending one earlier this year. I even had my ticket, but when I looked at the programme and discovered that the creative-arts-in-worship track consisted entirely of an exhaustive treatment of every aspect of vocal technique and worship-band performance I decided that staying away would be my contribution to excellence that week.

I wonder if excellence is a cultural value rather than a biblical one? I’m sure someone will quote a First Testament verse referring to the excellence required of artisans working on the temple in King Solomon’s time, but I think they’d be hard pushed to squeeze one (even that tenuously linked) from the Second Testament. Particularly from the lips of Jesus. I don’t think excellence in worship is a goal that has any biblical support. Which isn’t to say that excellence in church life is always bad. It doesn’t have to be, but a preoccupation with it is never good - particularly when those promoting it have been reading books like In Search of Excellence and A Passion for Excellence.

Here’s what the latter of these widely read and revered books has to say about excellence. ‘Even a pocket of excellence can fill your life like a wall-to-wall-revolution. We have found that the majority of passionate activists who hammer away at the old boundaries have given up family vacation…birthday dinners, evenings, weekends and lunch hours, gardening, reading, movies and other pastimes. We have a number of friends whose marriages or partnerships crumbled under their devotion to a dream. There are more newly single parents than we expected among our colleagues.

We are frequently asked if it is possible to "have it all" – a full and satisfying personal life and a full and satisfying hard-working professional one. Our answer is: no. The price of excellence is time, energy, attention and focus. At the same time the energy, attention and focus could have gone toward enjoying your daughter’s soccer game.

Excellence is a high cost item’. That sounds like a description of some Christians I know, responding to the vision and expectations of their churches. It doesn’t sound much like a statement you’d find Jesus making to his followers.

Now don’t get me wrong. I’m not against excellence per se. Just it’s elevation to sainthood. In fact I’m really not so much anti excellence as pro participation. I reckon participation is what church life should be about. Participation rather than performance, and a pursuit of excellence always, always, ends up being about performance.

If excellence is a primary goal, then the weak, the timid, the depressed, the disabled, the unskilled, the sick, the introverted, overweight, the less attractive, the poor and the untalented aren’t going to get a look in. They’ll be relegated to being spectators for someone else’s worship performance.

From this perspective excellence doesn’t look so good. In fact it sounds quite unChrist-like, almost evil. How can a process and a value that excludes large sections of a worshipping community from active participation be named in any other way? Jesus had some pretty harsh words for those in his day who devised ways of making it tough for ordinary people to worship God. Something about them being as spiritually alive as painted up tombs, and not being able to see clearly because they had something in their eye.

It seems to me that basically church must be about supporting people in their following of Christ in the world. Everything else flows from that. We come together as followers of Jesus so we can share stories of the successes and failures of our life in the world, find encouragement and support in being with each other and in worshipping God together, and separate to follow Christ through another week. What we need to value most is community – our relationships with one another. That’s why I’m pro participation, regardless of how excellent or poor that participation might be. It’s only in being open to as much participation as possible that community can be built.

The prayer of confession I lead the church in may not be the best theology, it may not be the most polished performance, it may even offend some people with it’s awkward language, but it will reflect who I am and where my relationship with God is at and you’ll get to know me a little more than you did before, and maybe you’ll even get to make your confession. During the week the pastor or some one else may talk with me about how I did, and offer some encouragement and some other perspectives on the theology of forgiveness, and next time I’ll do an even better job. Our community will be strengthened, and most importantly, I’ll have taken a little more responsibility for my own spiritual maturity.

I’ve said I’m anti excellence in church life, but I’m pro excellence in my life and in the life of every person in our congregation. I want to be the best I can be at what I do and who I am. I want the same for everyone at Cityside Baptist where I worship. I want what we offer as worship to be as good as it can be, but I’ll take participation over excellence every time.

I hope our worship and wider life together at Cityside will produce confident, maturing followers of Jesus Christ who live creatively and courageously in the chaotic emerging culture. Maturing followers of Jesus Christ able to interpret their faith in the market place of life. If we produce excellence in some of our services along the way, that’s excellent, but it’s not our goal.


I think that if we are to embody the gospel we have to give room for the people in the community have a say in where that community is going. If we are to grow as followers of Christ we have to allow our selves to be seen for who we really are. Also allow the people around us to speak up out of the understanding they have. How else do we find out where each other is at on the journey of following Christ.