In
the North American House Church Movement
there are all kinds of House Church
Pastors, but we can pretty well divide
them into two groups: Those with formal
training (Bible college or seminary)
and those without. So far, in
my experience and study, the ones without
have far less to learn than those with. I
just got an email from a colleague
who had helped a friend go to seminary
and the experience, so far, hasn’t
been exactly stellar. In fact,
he wrote, “Seminary is whipping
her. Sometimes I wonder if seminary
is the best vehicle for bringing called
people into the pastorate.” Honestly,
I don’t have the reservations
he has. When it comes to the
House Church, seminary is almost certainly
the last place we ought to send people
to get their training.
I can say that because, as most of
you know, I’m a product of the
religious education machine. I
have a bachelor’s degree in theology,
a master’s degree in divinity
(seminary), and a doctorate in ministry
(global House Church movements). Some
of you may remember my first foray
into the House Church—one year
of “sanctuary church” moved
into the living room. All that
education didn’t prepare me at
all for the House Church —for
House Church Movements, yes. For
writing books and articles on church
and church functions, yes. For
designing and implementing a House
Church Network, yes. But for leading a
House Church, no. Let’s
just say it was a hard lesson to learn
on my part, and I bless those who have
hung with us by tolerating the “services” over
that long stretch.
Today, I know better. I’m
still coming into my own as a House
Church Pastor, but I believe we’re
looking more and more like an authentic,
first-century modeled, House Church
that is beginning to transform lives
in order to transform the community
(see The Rock news headlines for 8/17
to see one really good example).
So, here are five things I wish every
House Church Pastor knew—and
did something about in their own lives
and House Churches. Hard learned
lessons from experience.
- Leadership=Servanthood. If
you’ve been to seminary, this
is a tough one to take. The
seminary motto seems to be “God
can use a sharp knife better than
one that’s unprepared.” The
notion behind the slogan is higher
education prepares us so God can
use us better. The problem
with that thought is in the North
American context, the church has
been steadily declining for decades,
and some scholars have postulated
that the decline began at the turn
of the century—the nineteenth century! If
God can use a “sharp knife” better,
seminary seems to be hammering out
dull blades.
In our culture, leadership seems
to have taken its primary metaphor
from ranchers who coral the stock
using horses, fences, dogs, or helicopters
in order to take them where the leader
wants to go. The rancher knows
best what the stock needs and is
trained to gather, coral, brand,
feed, breed, and ultimately slaughter
the herd. Our leaders are trained
that we know what’s
best—after all, we’ve
been hired/called as the leader—and
the herd is under our direction. And
so, as the leaders—even in
the House Church, we lead. We
decide the order of service. We
decide the direction the lesson will
ultimately go (the “church
of perpetual digression” is
a thorn in the side of the well-trained
leader). We have the answers—and
if we don’t, we get uncomfortable
and either terminate the discussion
or move it along to where we want
it to go. We do the reading. We
do the teaching. We do the
praying. And we do the communion.
In the underground House Church
movement in China, according to our
friends who are over there, it’s
difficult to find a leader
of a House Church. If you visit
one you’ll discover that all
the leadership functions are shared
by the group. No one seems
to be “in charge.” Instead,
they take 1 st Corinthians 14:26
seriously that leadership is a shared
function. They also take Mark
9:35 as their primary metaphor: “If
anyone wants to be first, they must
be the very last and the servant
of all.”
“Leaders” in the House
Church must relinquish their control
and learn to lead by example more
than in any other way. They
must be listeners to their charges. God
speaks to them too—often more
powerfully than to the apparent leaders. They
must encourage others to do those
things typically associated with “leadership.” Praying
isn’t a leadership function—it’s
a group function. Serving communion
isn’t a clergy function—it’s
a disciple’s function. And
teaching—well, I’ll talk
about that in a bit.
If you’re a House Church Pastor,
serving means washing feet—or
washing dishes, as the case may be. It
means encouraging others to take
a part—even if that means silently
waiting for the Spirit to move upon
somebody. It means raising
others up above yourself and trusting
the Spirit to lead where He wants
to take the service, because that
is the way of Christian leadership.
- Life Transformation,
not Education, is the House Church
Goal. Teaching has
been at the heart and soul of the
church since the late 1600’s. Somehow
we convinced ourselves that if
people just knew who God
was, who the Spirit was, and who
Jesus was, and if they knew what
Jesus taught—if people knew
the Bible better, they
would be effective Christians. Alas,
centuries later, we still haven’t
seemed to learn that education
doesn’t equal obedience—and
just knowing more about Jesus
does not transform a life.
But still, we try. We put
increasing emphasis on covering great
volumes of Scripture, as if the more
Bible we can get into someone, the
more they’ll be motivated to
be a committed disciple of Jesus. But
in the words of Neil Cole, it’s
not how much of the Bible you get
through, but how much of the Bible
that gets through to you. He
also says that in North America we
are “educated beyond our obedience.”
I have been struck recently about
the effectiveness of the church in
the first couple of centuries. Did
you know that those first Christians
didn’t have a Bible to refer
to—especially the first Gentile
Christians? The synagogues
had copies of the Torah (Genesis,
Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy)
and the Psalms, but the early Gentile
Christians had nothing. Not
even a copy of a single Gospel. And
yet Christianity flourished.
In many nations, in China and India
for instance, the illiteracy rate
is rampant. So most of the
House Churches don’t have copies
of the Bible. Instead, they
learn about Jesus through the stories
they hear and from the way Christians
treat one another. They learn
about Jesus through the miracles
they see and the way Christians treat
one another. They learn about
Jesus through the lives they see
changed and from the way Christians
treat one another. In other
words, it’s not about orthodoxy
(known truth) but about orthopraxis
(embodied truth). It’s
not about what you know, but about
transformed lives. And there
are literally millions upon millions
of transformed lives in China alone
(estimates run from 85 million to
over 100 million Christians in the
underground, illegal House Church
networks).
But still, in the House Church ,
we’re trying to teach our people
to be better Christians.
How do we transform lives? The
short answer is we don’t. Only
God transforms a life. But
we do play a part. As House
Church Pastors we help create an
atmosphere that allows our flock
to connect with the power and the
presence of God. Prayer is
key—not the leader’s
prayer, but everyone pouring out
their hearts to God. Prayer
isn’t the parentheses, but
the heart of worship. Sharing
lives, hurts, and joys isn’t
incidental, it’s the core. How
else can mentors and spiritual guides
rise up? Training must reign
over teaching—learning by doing
is more effective than learning by
listening (or even interacting). The
goal isn’t to get butts in
the seats, but to separate our butts
from the seats in order to do the
works of Jesus.
Transformation isn’t an educational
process, but an experiential explosion. As
House Church Pastors, the less we
teach and the more we lead by creating
an atmosphere ripe for the Spirit,
the more lives and minds we’ll
see being transformed into Jesus’ likeness.
- There’s Power in
Participation. I’ve
been a part of House Church for
over two years now (not a long
time by many standards, but there
we are) and I’ve noticed
interesting about House Church
Gatherings—something that’s
probably true of a sanctuary-based
church as well, but particularly
noticeable in the intimacy of a
House Church. Sometimes, the Gathering
is so filled with the Holy Spirit
that I know God is there and that
the Spirit is ready to do a mighty
work. At other times, dare I say
most times?, the Gathering is so
full of us that I wonder if God could do
anything (see Mark 6:1-6). Recently,
however, I believe God revealed
to me what the difference was.
During those times when the Spirit
was powerfully present, I became
aware that there were a couple of
people who were “giving” their
all into the worship, the prayer,
and the Gathering as a whole. I thought,
at first, that the Spirit showed
up more powerfully because those
who were fully engaged had more faith
than the rest of us, but that’s
not what the Lord showed me. Instead,
I was given this image.
Imaging your House Church participants
sitting around a campfire that had
burned down to embers. Sitting around
the fire ring, everyone had a piece
of wood that they held tightly on
to. Everyone was cold, but no one
seemed willing to put their piece
of wood on the fire. Then someone
took a risk and threw their branch
into the fire ring. There was a stirring
in the embers, but little happened
at first. But then another tossed
theirs into the coals and a small
flame began to flicker. As it grew,
others began to toss their wood into
the ring and the campfire brightened
and began to pour out it’s
power and warm the whole group.
That is the power of participation.
So long as we, and those who gather
with us, are coming to the House
Church for our own edification, we
withhold the power of the Spirit
we have within us. It’s only
when two are more (which is why a
House Church Pastor can’t do
it on their own) release the Spirit
from within them that the power of
God begins to be felt, others release
their inhibitions, and the work of
God can flow freely amongst us.
- Silence Really is Gold. When
you’re the leader of a House
Church, the reality is that most
everyone there looks to you to be
the host, the leader, the resident
theologian, the resident scholar,
and the pastoral counselor. The group
will generally defer to you if they
have a question and will turn to
you when they’re looking for
advice. For those of us with egos,
and that means all of us, this means
we get extra strokes because—let’s
face it—who doesn’t want
to be deferred to and treated as
the resident expert (at least until
someone proves us fallible!)?
Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m
not suggesting that the House Church
doesn’t need leaders who lead.
We do. Rad Zdero in his book The
Global House Church Movement suggests
that each House Church needs two leaders:
(1) a shepherd who coordinates the
spiritual well-being of the flock
and (2) a strategist who helps lead
the direction and training of the
congregation.
On the other hand, what we don’t want
to foster in our leadership is a
resident expert anything. Instead,
as John wrote in 1 st John 2:27,
we don’t so much need a human
teacher—we need the Holy Spirit
to teach us. You see, we as leaders
don’t actually have the
answers. We just have what we’ve
been taught or what we’ve experienced.
And yes, when it comes to the conditions
or the traditions of Palestine during
Jesus’ life, some of us might
know more than the average person
sitting on the sofa. On the other
hand, as interesting as that information
might be, what God is probably wanting
to teach us isn’t obscure history,
but real life instructions for today.
And the only way we’re going
to learn that is to stop the ever
popular history lessons about God,
Jesus, and the Bible, and start listening
to the Spirit’s whisper in
our hearts.
For those who are a product of the
Enlightenment and would pooh-pooh
all of this “subjective nonsense,” allow
me to remind you that our enlightened
belief systems (and they are belief
systems) are largely responsible
for the state of the church in the
U.S. today—and that’s
a pretty sorry state. Perhaps instead
of having—or pretending to
having—all the answers, it’s
about time we tried something different.
Like listening and allowing the Spirit
to work with the hearts, souls, and
minds of those in our Gatherings.
All this is to say that when in
the midst of worship, Bible study,
prayer, and even during relationship
building moments, silence is where
the gold is found because it’s
often in the silence where God is
found. So, when in the midst of a
Bible study someone asks one of the
tough questions and turns to us for
the answer, defer to the group. Live
with the silence. Let the Spirit
move. Listen for the still, small
voice of God to whisper in someone
else’s ear besides yours. The
fact is, we don’t really have
the answers to life’s most
important questions anyway. Only
God does and the Spirit is quite
polite and only speaks when we are
not.
- There is No Growth Without
Prayer. I saved the most
important point for the end of
this article. Prayer is not an
option for the leaders of the House
Church and your House Church will
not grow significantly if you do
not pray.
I’ve noticed that many House
Church Pastors are a bit lax in their
prayer lives. I’ve also noticed
a correlation to the growth in their
House Churches. They, like the rest
of us, get busy and lob off a sentence
worth of prayer every now and again—and
I’ve heard several then try
to say they are living in the presence
of God every minute of the day, so
they don’t really need a dedicated
prayer time. As sincere as they may
be, I have to wonder how their marriages
or friendships would survive if they
applied the same principles. I suspect
they’d end up being pretty
lonely.
Jesus taught that prayer was key
to the success of His work. He repeatedly
told his followers to pray. I find
it interesting that in a world where “Mary
sightings” and visions are
looked at with severe skepticism,
especially by the non-Catholic church,
that the uniform messages from virtually
every one of these sightings and
visions is “Tell my people
to pray.” Pastor Cho, the pastor
of one of the largest churches in
the world, requires his cell church
leaders to pray at least three hours
each day. Oswald Chambers reminds
us that prayer doesn’t get
us ready for the battle, prayer is the
battle. And Jesus asked his apostles
if they couldn’t pray for just
one hour (Matthew 26:40-41). It seems
that prayer might be a pretty important
part of a House Church Pastor’s
life.
Perhaps we don’t pray because
we don’t understand what prayer
does—we don’t really
believe in the power of prayer. But
we read in the Scriptures that prayer:
- Enables or incites God to raise
up and send workers for the harvest
(Luke 10:2).
- Is a conduit for the power of
God in healing and deliverance
(Mark 9:29; James 5:15-16)).
- Bolsters the strength and resolve
of those we pray for (Luke 22:32).
- Enables or incites God to demonstrate
His power (Acts 4:31-32).
- Releases the Holy Spirit upon
those being prayed for (Acts 8:15-17).
- Consecrates what we pray for,
setting it apart for holy use (1
Timothy 4:4-5).
In each of these cases, the inverse
seems also to be true. If we don’t pray,
we shouldn’t expect God to
act. I don’t know how it
works, I only know that prayer does work
and that when we pray we should expect
to see incredible results.
Which goes back to the third thing
I wish every House Church Pastor
knew. Prayer, for whatever reason,
becomes more effective and more powerful
when praying people join
together to pray. Not just bowing
their heads and marking time, but
really offering their own personal “spark” to
the prayer time in earnest. When
that happens, the power of the Lord
rolls in like a mighty, mighty wave.
So, five things I wish every House
Church Pastor knew and did something
about: Leadership is really all about
serving one another; Life transformation
is the goal of the House Church; There’s
power when people participate; Let
the Holy Spirit bring God’s message
by keeping quiet; And prayer is the
key to it all.
So, whatcha gonna do about it? |