Tag Archive | "David Fitch"

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Falling Idols: The Economics of a Coming Missional Movement

Posted on 02 October 2008 by David Phillips

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Wall Street

The more I read David Fitch, the more I love what he writes.  In a post today entitled, The Idol Hath Fallen – the Financial Crisis and the Reshaping of the Landscape for Mission, Fitch gives his thoughts on how the financial crisis may result in a missional movement in the States.  I have expressed some similar thoughts on both the coming church transition and the impact of the financial crisis on churches.  David provides additional thoughts that are, I believe, spot on!

He says,

Let me explain the shift in culture as I see it. In the post World War 2 period, people looked at jobs, money, houses in terms of the necessities of life. We went to a job to earn an income to support our families and if we were Christians to contribute to the Kingdom of God. We bought a house (we could afford) in order to live in it. We were not obsessed with having a large sum of money for retirement that would enable us “to maintain our lifestyle” (insurance salesman lingo that became canonized in American life as part of what every person should do if he/she is responsible). Starting in the 80’s however, our jobs became “careers” for personal fulfilment, our homes became idols of excess pouring thousands of dollars into upgrades, our money became a scorecard of our success. Each of these things became identity shaping idols. And these idols squeezed out community, Mission and even family from everyday American life. The obsessive focus on these idols emptied American life of depth, meaning and purpose beyond the thin veneers of American consumerism. The zenith of this excess reached its peak in these last 5-10 years. Today we are seeing the leveling of these idols. The idol hath fallen.

I have argued that vast swaths of the American church has accommodated itself in some of the worst of ways to the values inherent in these idols. I believe the missional church movement has emphasized a different response to this culture: that we should live more simply, live beneath our means, reject these idols of career, house and money. We must come together to cultivate communal life, communal sharing, transformational practices that resist consumerism and above all the everyday participation in the Mission of God. Our jobs, our homes and our money each in turn become captive to God’s Mission.

It is my opinion that the current financial crisis, its pure magnitude, is revealing the emptiness and falsity of the idols of the past thirty years of American life. I intend no gloating over this. Much pain is sure to follow. Yet amidst the crumbling home values, the new emptiness of work and the loss of community in our society, I believe Missional living (Acts 2.42ff) becomes compelling in new ways as it calls us to be a community of the redeemed, sharing one another’s burdens, offering each other housing when in need, sharing housing if need be, living simply beneath our means (even in the rich suburbs), offering help to the struggling (even those with a foreclosure sign on their front lawn). As the crisis unfolds, this could create a whole new openness for church as a Missional way of life. Could God be preparing the new fertile ground for His Mission in the United States?

Thank you Dr. Fitch for your observations.  What do you think about what he said?

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When They Will Not Come

Posted on 05 August 2008 by David Phillips

David Fitch is a pastor, professor, author, and blogger.  He works a lot with postmodernity, and missional ministry in the Chicago area.  He has written a great post called When They Will Not Come, describing the reality of post-christian, non-attractional ministry.

This is an excellent post to read.  Here is part of what he says…

Church in post-Christendom therefore is nothing less than a chosen way of life. It is choosing a way of being together. This way of being together encompasses how we worship, how we share and eat food, how we pool together resources to help the poor, how we get together and hear Scriptures read and teach our children how to listen for God in that. Forgiveness, patience, care, speaking truth in love, is part of this way of being together. In this way of living, career and making money is more about taking care of one another and giving glory to God than personal aspiration. And God inhabits this way of being so that miracles, blessings, sustaining times in life and death become a part of everyday life. Mission becomes our rhythm.

When those outside of Christ will not come to our church services no matter how professional they might be, when they will not come to our special out reach events, when they will not come for Sunday school for their kids, or movie night or whatever other crazy finagled way we dream up to get people into our church, then we must somehow rethink the orientation of just about everything we do in church. This would include worship, community and fellowship, discipleship, preaching (part of worship), children’s ministries, leadership, evangelism, justice and of course church-planting.

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Audio From Ecclesia National Gathering

Posted on 27 February 2008 by David Phillips

Todd Hiestand is part of the Ecclesia Network, and last week they had their national gathering. David Fitch & Alan Hirsch were among the speakers. He has put the audio up here. Here are just a few of those:

 
icon for podpress  The Current Practice of the Gospel: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  The Practice of Scripture as Proclamation & Story: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  The Practice of Re-Calibrating the 21st Century Church: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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