Categories
Discipleship Ecclesiology Evangelism Hospitality Leadership Psychology Sociology Worship

You should throw a party and have people over. The value of gatherings.

I asked eight students in my worship class whether they were the kind of person who plans and hosts parties and celebrations (Super Bowl, Halloween, birthday, anniversary, graduation, Academy Awards, hockey playoffs) and family gatherings (Christmas, Thanksgiving, Easter).

Or were they more of a party pooper or kill joy or wet blanket.
All eight men said they were not much of a planner. The one woman present said she was more of a party-planner.

Martin Short Franck GIF

"But," I asked, "what about Sunday morning church worship services, baptisms, the Lord's Supper, weddings, and funerals? Do you think those are valuable? Are you interested in planning those and getting people together for those?"
"Oh, yes," they said, "*those* are important!"

The question is how those other human celebratory gatherings relate to the explicitly Christian gatherings. Is it concerning that a seminary student sees the value in the latter but not so much in the former?

It seems to me, after a year more isolated from big gatherings because of the pandemic, that people are asking about both secular and Christian events: "Why should we gather together for events and celebrations? Did we really miss them?"

These face-to-face gatherings in groups jostle us out of our logical, self-centered, routine lives and inject some sort of unexpected conversations, interactions, and insights. They are messy emotionally and mess up the house and kitchen too but we are enriched emotionally.

The logical "Spock" person says: "Why get together to eat? I have food to eat at home."
Often the social person is not able to articulate why we should gather and gives poor explanations like "We should" or "We were invited" or "It's tradition."

There is a better explanation but it is still somewhat mysterious. Human beings are social animals. We don't function at our best alone. Solitary confinement is among the worst punishments.

In the Bible, Adam was lonely by himself until Eve was created. The Jewish people gathered in Jerusalem a few times year for festivals and feasts. The stories about Jesus have to do with his interactions with strangers and crowds and his time at meals with his 12 or so disciples.

And numerous studies show that church attendance correlates with happiness and health.

So, yes, Hebrews 10:25 says Christians should "not [be] giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing." But that is not because "it's tradition" but because it is good for us. It's healthy. And the gatherings can "spur one another on toward love and good deeds."

I grant that some gatherings are more important than others.
– "Dudes, let's go to the bar and get hammered!"
– "Come to my baby's gender reveal party!"
BUT, I still think the convener, the gatherer, the host, the partier is on the right track. It is good for people to gather.

Originally tweeted by Andy Rowell (@AndyRowell) on June 1, 2021.

Categories
Bethel Seminary Discipleship Evangelism Leadership Missiology Missional Models of the church Practical Theology Spiritual formation

My 2015-2016 Ministry Leadership syllabi at Bethel Seminary

Here are some of my syllabi from the 2015-2016 school year at Bethel Seminary. 

 

Introduction to Transformational Leadership (hybrid of online with synchronous sessions and intensive)

Download 00 Syllabus ML523 Rowell 2015-09-30

 

Organizational Leadership and Church Governance (traditional)

Download 00 Syllabus ML615 Rowell 2015-09-30

 

The Global Mission of the Church (fully online with synchronous sessions)

Download 00 Syllabus ML632 Rowell 2015-09-30

 

Contemporary Models of the Church (fully online with synchronous sessions)

Download 00 Syllabus ML714 Rowell 2015-09-30

 

Discipleship in Community (traditional)

Download 00 Syllabus ML506 Trad Spring Rowell 2016-02-04

 

Missional Outreach and Evangelism (traditional)

Download 00 Syllabus ML507 Trad Spring Rowell 2016-02-03

 

You can see required textbooks at Bethel Seminary at: 

http://bookstore.mbsdirect.net/bethelseminary.htm

Categories
Discipleship Leadership Leading change Models of the church

Pause before tossing out megachurch for spiritual formation model

I worry a bit about churches that dramatically switch church models. I teach a course on the Contemporary Models of the Church and wants students to see strengths in each and to borrow and adapt those strengths to their situation. One certainly noble aim is to really try to implement "spiritual formation" practices that Dallas Willard recommended (spiritual disciplines, etc.). Still, I worry that a massive shift to this approach may squelch other positive aspects of a church — especially reaching outsiders. I dialogue about this with a friend below.

 

   

  1. This is an fantastically refreshing book. Our leadership team is reading through this together. Highly recommended.

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  2.  

    I thought they fell for spiritual formation fad but if you think it is good, I'll have to rethink.

     
  3.  

    fad? really? If anything, I think they chose to leave the fad of the church growth/attractional fad.

     
  4.  

    Though wary of anti-intellectual, independence, anti-depth, I am sympathetic to the strength of seeker model: evangelism.

     
     
     
    1. I love Willard. Just seen instances where pastor reads book or goes to a conference and falls for new model–destroying church.

       
       
       
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  1.  

    This one is disgruntled member: Both "come and see" (community) and "go and tell" (mission) are needed.

that makes sense. Thanks for your thoughts. Helpful.

 

 

    1. This is an fantastically refreshing book. Our leadership team is reading through this together. Highly recommended.

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    2.  

      I thought they fell for spiritual formation fad but if you think it is good, I'll have to rethink.

       
    3.  

      I believe they wrestled for years (in pain) about it. Admirable. I don't think Willard would endorse a book that's a church fad

       
    4.  

      I love Willard. Just seen instances where pastor reads book or goes to a conference and falls for new model–destroying church.

       
       
       
      Tweet text

      Reply to  
       
       
       
  1.  

    This one is disgruntled member: Both "come and see" (community) and "go and tell" (mission) are needed.