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May 24, 2005

Comments

Dee Anne

I am looking forward to exploring this model. I truly responded to your description of church as "unscripted." There is something about being able to respond in the moment that is so appealing about a small group or house church. It seems like this concept of seminary will be an entire program of "seminar" classes. My seminar was my favorite class in my master's degree and I am looking forward to more. :-)

Chris

Wow. Lots to think about. The botique concept seems compelling, but I'm not sure what this means for the local church.

Shelley

I also am cativated by thoughts of how the botique concept could be synthesized with the local church. From personal experience, the botique seminary model feels more like "church" than my own local church experience. The local church does allow an entry point of seeking faith for those who are not yet interested in the intensity of the botique experience. It seems that the local church is a "hub" or perhaps part of the "market square." From its vantage point one can enjoy the variety and flavor of the larger community and then proceed to the specialized offerings of the botique.

Todd Stewart

Good words my friends...all up and down the board. I love the vision, and feel the tension/disappointment of the larger, scripted meetings. The big issue for me is to remember to keep function before form. Or, in other words, we must let our forms be driven by our functions. The larger meeting is a place (as Shelley said) to remember we are part of something bigger than even our smaller groups. It is also one of many doorways through which someone can "check out" this Jesus movement. The large meeting frustrates me when I come to it expecting it to "feed me" or to "meet my needs." (As a maturing Christ-follower, I am hopefully moving beyond such a consumeristic/individualistic mindset.) When I remember the functions of the larger meeting (outreach, celebration, common vision casting, etc.), I tend to be less frustrated. In other words, I just need to keep from trying to expect more than I should from the larger gathering. We must constantly evaluate and improve it, but we must also keep its function clear. I also need to understand and help others understand that it is only one piece of being the church.

That brings me to my main beef with much modern ecclesiology. Namely, the thinking that locks us into a large group and small group mentality. Typically, the larger group is where we invite friends and try to "do outreach together" in some way or another. We think of small groups as that place where we go deep with other believers (however you would define "going deep"). I think we are missing at least one very important tier in this thinking. Where do we engage in mission TOGETHER with others on the journey? Classicly, small groups focus on the believer and try to challenge people to "do outreach" out on their own individually. That is okay, but I would argue that it is stunting effectiveness and, frankly, quite boring. There is much value and effectiveness in being on mission together with a community of people. These missional communities (which we call LIFE Groups) try to experience life together while also extending life to others. In other words, they try to love one another AND actually let the world see them loving one another (John 13:34-35). This has been called the "universal apologetic" for good reason. Unfortunately, all too often we only love one another behind closed doors.

These missional communities must not only intentionally extend life together, but they must also intentionally create forms to encourage biblical, relational, and character depth. In other words, they must be "more than a meeting." They must actually be an ever-growing community of people on a journey (a.k.a. a mission) together doing a variety of things for a variety of reasons. Boutique seminaries play right into this way of doing life and church, and can become an incredibly key component of preparing missional communities to go to the unreached places and peoples together.

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