Thursday, December 10, 2009
The Value of Team
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Practicing the Basics
By David Stancil, church planting intern
I began the church planting internship with Brooklyn Church Project a month ago, and there is one recurring theme that keeps coming up in my experience thus far: practicing the basics. What do I mean by practicing the basics? One of the core values of Brooklyn Church Project is the commitment to the central practice of the Christian church: corporate worship. In worship, we are devoted to the Word, prayer, and the sacraments as the means of grace for God’s people. These are the basics of Christian practice.
Peter told the early church, “But in your hearts set apart Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have (1 Peter 3:15). How do we set apart Christ as Lord in our hearts? We take hold of the means of grace: the Word, prayer, and the sacraments. In other words, we practice the basics.
One of the reasons I am taking hold of this value so quickly is because of my familiarity with the concept of practicing the basics in a different realm. A few years ago, I had a short stint as a high school basketball coach. I drilled my players in practicing the basics: passing, dribbling, shooting, rebounding, defense. I drilled my team in practicing the basics of team offense and team defense. I wanted the basics to become such a part of their orientation to basketball that they were ready to respond and execute well in game situations.
When the church practices the basics of the Word, prayer, and the sacraments, worship becomes such a part of their orientation to life that they are ready to respond and perform their faith well in life situations. Peter assumes that lives centered on Christ will demand questions from the watching world. Therefore, a primary focus of the church should be the practice of worship. The practice of worship enables God’s people to celebrate the gospel and thus set apart Christ as Lord in their hearts.
The recurring theme of my experience (practicing the basics) may seem too simple and too obvious. However, the simple and the obvious are good. The church has been practicing these basics throughout its history. So, we will practice the basics of worship in order that we might become a worshipping community that celebrates the gospel throughout Brooklyn.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Proofreading our Mission
By Chris Hildebrand, BCP Director
A few months ago I made a big mistake....
On a newsletter that I was working on I typed the following for our mission statement: Brooklyn Church Project exists to build the kingdom of God in Brooklyn by planting new congregations and partnering with existing Christian ministries. My mistake was using the word build instead of embody. It was just one word, one little verb, but it was a big mistake. Thankfully, someone proofread the mission statement and we caught the mistake before it was sent out. But, as I reflected on my blunder, I realized that it wasn't the only time I've made that mistake. I don't think I've made that blunder in a mission statement, but I do it all the time in the way I think and work towards our hopes for Brooklyn. I find myself acting as though we here in Brooklyn are responsible for building God's kingdom rather than embodying it, which is the big mistake. Here's why...
To suggest that we are building the kingdom of God is to suggest that we are initiating this work, that we are in charge, and ultimately all of this is up to us. And apart from being foolish it also simply isn't true. We believe (and we also see it happening in Brooklyn) that God has been working through his church long before we got here, that he is working here now apart from us, and now that he has called us here he is continuing his work to make disciples of the nations. This is why embody is a better term. It's not simply a matter of semantics. If we are embodying the kingdom, we are taking our rightful position of following after God and his work. If we are embodying then we are celebrating instead of stressing, if we are embodying then we are praying first and strategizing second. Everything changes when we embody the kingdom.
As I read the New Testament I take hope in the fact that I haven't been the only one to make this mistake. It seems as though the disciples made the same mistake when they were trying to find their role in the kingdom. In Mark 9, the disciples who have been traveling with Jesus, are arguing about who among them is the greatest. (That's a question you ask when you are building instead of embodying...) And Jesus' response to them is found in verses 35: And he said to them,"If anyone would be first, he must be last of all and servant of all." Jesus' response is a call to embody. To serve is to embody the practices of Jesus, who came not to be served but to serve. Our hope here in Brooklyn as we try and embody the kingdom is that we will be known as those who serve joyfully and sacrificially our friends, our neighbors, and our borough.
And, after all, its so much easier to sleep when you realize your not building the kingdom.
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Praise for When the Kings Come Marching In by Richard J. Mouw
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Church Planting and Cornerstones
By Chris Hildebrand, BCP Director
I pass the cornerstone of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church several times each day and see the year 1884 etched into the stone. This stone serves as a reminder to me of what we ultimately want to see happen through our labors: we want to move from planting churches to laying cornerstones. There are many reasons we want to lay cornerstones. Perhaps the most obvious reason is that to have cornerstones means you own buildings, and while that may happen that’s not what I’m talking about here. Rather the cornerstones upon which these beautiful old churches rest represent something even more than the buildings themselves.
First, a cornerstone represent longevity. St. Paul’s has been around for 125 years. That’s 125 years on a street where living 3 or 4 years makes you an “old timer”. In church planting often times planning for the future means planning for the next 5 years. But we want to think not just about the next few years but also about the next few decades, and even about the next few generations. So we are always asking ourselves, are we planting churches that will stand the test of time? Are we planting churches that will be the cornerstones of their respective neighborhoods? We want congregations that are serving Brooklyn in word and deed long after we are gone.
Second, a cornerstone represents a specific place. The cornerstone at St. Paul’s has been in the same physical place not just for my eyes to see but for several generations of Brooklynites to see. It has literally weathered the storms of the neighborhood. And we believe that for our church planting efforts to be effective we also need to think in terms of neighborhoods. Like that cornerstone we need to be a presence on specific street corners, worshipping, serving, living with our neighborhood always on our hearts and minds.
Lastly, a cornerstone reminds us of the hope we have in our mission. Paul in his letter to the Ephesians writes: “So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In him you also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit.”
Paul reminds us that our only hope in our mission to plant churches rests on Jesus Christ who is our cornerstone upon whom everything rests, and by the power of his Holy Spirit he continues to work through his church from generation to generation.
So our hope is that the churches we plant now will dig deep roots in their neighborhoods and that in another 125 years these churches, like cornerstones, will represent and proclaim the power and hope of the gospel of Jesus Christ to many generations of Brooklynites.
Friday, April 3, 2009
Preserving Preference
In the spring of the year, the time when many college students go out to sow their wild oats, Reformed University Fellowship (RUF) students from colleges across the nation come to New York to visit churches and Christian ministries during the day and enjoy various restaurants and other attractions at night. All in all, these are great trips that expose Christian students to works with which they would otherwise be unfamiliar and some of them move to the city after graduation in order to participate.
Today we hosted RUF students from the University of Connecticut and I was able to share with them our vision for starting dozens of parish churches throughout the borough. They asked insightful questions about the receptivity of New Yorkers to the Gospel compared to other parts of the country, about our fraternal relations with other churches in our neighborhoods as well as practical questions about our local network.
I have delivered some version of my talk today innumerable times in the last five years to other student groups, churches, boards of directors, potential investors, friends and neighbors, yet I was unusually energized by my experience today. Part of the reason was that today's student group was unusually perceptive. Mainly I was energized by the fact that as Park Slope Presbyterian Church celebrates its 5th anniversary this weekend, I am more convinced today than I was five years ago that God is blessing our church planting efforts. And my conviction is rooted in many things, but the reason most prominent today is that I still love talking about Brooklyn.
Matt Brown, Senior Pastor
Brooklyn Presbyterian Church
Monday, March 23, 2009
It's easier, actually
Sidewalks? Well, before you think I'm too far out in left field with that answer, let me point to someone who actually put into writing what it is about sidewalks that would attract us to urban life. Eric Jacobsen's book, Sidewalks in the Kingdom, points out the obvious, but often overlooked, importance of how one's place shapes how one's life plays out. So, sidewalks. Sidewalks have quickly become my family's most vital tool for building relationships with our neighbors. We routinely meet our neighbors on our way to work or while running errands. We converse with other families as we walk to and from school, perhaps even stopping to hang out with them at the playground between our house and school. Just taking a moment to say hello while someone sweeps off their stoop has been a great way to have simple, but meaningful conversation with our neighbors. Brooklyn, a place with pedestrian friendly sidewalks, public transportation, public spaces, mixed use zoning, local economy, and abundance of people shapes our life for greater community.
If you're from Brooklyn, or from any urban city, you're probably saying, "Duh." But for us, this experience is something we never had and longed for. The places we lived in the past were not designed for this type of community. If we went somewhere, our family got in a car, nicely sequestered in our own little space from others in their own little spaces on wheels. When we came home, we pulled into the garage and went straight in the house, quite effectively avoiding our neighbors. If we played in the yard, we were probably separated from our neighbor by a 7' tall privacy fence.
Can you find community in a neighborhood like I described above? Sure you can. But in our experience, you have to work a lot harder at it. Which is why I say jokingly, but in all seriousness, to pastors and church members where we came from, "You guys have it a lot harder than us. Brooklyn? It's easier, actually."
Brian Steadman
Church Planting Intern
