SERVICE: MISSION AND EVANGELISM Jeff Conklin-Miller What is - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

service mission and evangelism
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SERVICE: MISSION AND EVANGELISM Jeff Conklin-Miller What is - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

SERVICE: MISSION AND EVANGELISM Jeff Conklin-Miller What is Mission? Mission as an overseas task 1. Mission as work to identify and 2. solve problems for a community (efficiency model) Mission as multi-faceted 3. Missions


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SERVICE: MISSION AND EVANGELISM

Jeff Conklin-Miller

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What is Mission?

1.

Mission as an overseas task

2.

Mission as work “to identify and solve problems for a community” (efficiency model)

3.

Mission as multi-faceted “Missions”

4.

Mission as a taboo subject: the “disappearing” model

5.

Mission as everything

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Mission as Missio Dei

¨ Missio Dei —Mission of God ¨ “Mission is the participation of the people of God

in God’s action in the world.” (Cardoza-Orlandi, 45)

¨ The mission of the Church is to make disciples

  • f Jesus Christ…

for the transformation of the world.

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Theo-Drama

¨ Act 1: Creation ¨ Act 2: Israel ¨ Act 3: Christ ¨ Act 4: Church ¨ Act 5: Kingdom

  • f God
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Reading Scripture

  • 1. What is the Story of the Biblical

Narrative and how does it implicate us?

¨ “The framework for interpretation

is the story it tells of the mission

  • f God and the formation of a

community sent to participate in it.”

¨ What is the story? “Missio Dei”

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Mission and Evangelism

¨ Greek root--euangelion ¨ Old Testament usage

“to proclaim good tidings”

¤ angelos “messenger” ¤ angelo “to announce”

¨ Announcement of God’s salvific activity

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Who Practices Evangelism?

¨ According to David Bosch,

Evangelism is not a call to put something into effect, as if God’s reign would be inaugurated by

  • ur response or thwarted by the absence of such a

response…In light of this evangelism cannot be defined in terms of its results or effectiveness, as though evangelism has only occurred where there are ‘converts.’ Even so, evangelism does aim at a response.

(Bosch, Transforming Mission, 412-13)

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Who Practices Evangelism?

¨ …all Christians ¨ We are commissioned to

evangelistic ministry by

  • ur baptisms

¨ “…to proclaim the good

news and live according to the example of Jesus Christ.”

(See the UM Hymnal pages 35 and 40)

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Some Definitions of Evangelism

¨ “…evangelism may be defined as that dimension

and activity of the church’s mission which seeks to

  • ffer every person, everywhere, a valid opportunity

to be directly challenged by the gospel of explicit faith in Jesus Christ, with a view to embracing him as Savior, becoming a living member of his community, and being enlisted in his service of reconciliation, peace, and justice on earth.”

  • -David Bosch, “Evangelism: Theological Currents and Cross-

Currents Today,” in Chilcote/Warner, The Study of Evangelism, 17.

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Some Definitions of Evangelism

¨ “We can best improve our thinking on

evangelism by conceiving it as that set of intentional activities which is governed by the goal of initiating people into the kingdom of God for the first time.”

  • -William Abraham, The Logic of Evangelism, 95
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Some Definitions of Evangelism

¨ “My proposal is that we can best

improve our thinking about evangelism by construing it as that set of loving, intentional activities governed by the goal of initiating persons into Christian discipleship in response to the reign of God.”

  • -Scott Jones, The Evangelistic Love of God and

Neighbor, 114.

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Some Definitions of Evangelism

¨ “Evangelism rightly

understood is the holistic initiation of people into the reign of God as revealed in Jesus Christ.”

  • -Elaine Heath, The Mystic Way of Evangelism, 13.
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What is Evangelism?

¨ How do you define evangelism? ¨ What are the components of your

emerging sense of evangelism?

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Centripetal/Centrifugal

http://www.powermasters.com/Centrifugal_Force.html

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Attractional/Missional

http://mattstone.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/ uncategorized/2007/06/19/ attractional_vs_emerging_church_ser.jpg http://harbordistrictnc.org/building-a-discipling-culture/

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¨ Ecclesial Innovation ¨ Public Presence/Witness ¨ Partnership for friendship,

dialogue, and engagement

Evangelism as Intercession

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Ecclesial Innovation

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Public Presence/Witness

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Public Presence/Witness

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Partnerships for Engagement

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Formation fail?

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National Study of Youth & Religion

1.

Most American Teenagers have a positive view of religion but otherwise don’t give it much thought

2.

Teenagers lack a theological language with which to express their faith or interpret their experience of the world

3.

A minority of American Teenagers— but a significant minority—say religious faith is important, and that it makes a difference in their lives.

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National Study of Youth & Religion

4.

Many teenagers enact and espouse a religious outlook that is distinct from traditional teachings of most world religions—an outlook called Moralistic Therapeutic Deism

5.

Most US teenagers mirror their parents’ religious faith

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3DM: Missional Discipleship

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Discipleship Pathways

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Unbinding the Gospel

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Demographic Resources

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Target Population

¨ Demographic Resources

www.census.gov www.gbgm-umc.org/researchoffice/ www.perceptgroup.com www.missioninsite.com

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Kenneson: Marketing the Church

…churches too often cast themselves as one more social institution dedicated to legitimating this marketplace of desire. Such churches, by catering to the whims of discriminating consumers, encourage their constituents to expect the church to function as another service agency whose purpose is to court them by providing a smorgasbord of programs and services. In short, ministry and service are transformed into novel need-fulfillment. (338)

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Nielsen Lifestyle Segmentation

¨ Open: http://www.claritas.com/MyBestSegments/

Default.jsp

¨ Click on “Zip Code Look Up” Tab or Button ¨ Enter the zip code from your home or your

congregation

¨ Answer these questions….

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Nielsen Lifestyle Segmentation

Step One: Study your zip code and answer these questions for yourself

1.

What were the key segments listed?

2.

Did you recognize these segments in your neighbors or in your congregation?

3.

On this basis, did you learn that your congregation is more a “mirror” (reflecting the community) or an “island” (distinct from its surroundings, a plot of land surrounded by an

  • cean of water)?

4.

Did you see yourself in these segments?

5.

What was the most insightful thing you learned from this website? Did an opportunity for evangelistic/missional

  • utreach become visible to you?
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Discussion

¨ What is the “benefit” and what is the “risk” inherent in

this tool?

¨ What doctrinal or theological issues ought to be

introduced? What biblical, historical, or theological basis would serve as the grounding for your evaluation of this particular method or tool for evangelism?

¨ Who makes the decision about whether or not this is

something to be employed?

¤ On what basis would that decision be made?