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Fresh expressions for mission and discipleship in rural contexts

Fresh expressions for mission and discipleship in rural contexts. Where do you come from?. But... what is rural?. What different factors influence mission and discipleship in rural areas in your country compared to urban ones? (Discuss). Mission = Being Sent Discipleship = Being Learners.

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Fresh expressions for mission and discipleship in rural contexts

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  1. Fresh expressions formission and discipleshipin rural contexts

  2. Where do you come from?

  3. But... what is rural?

  4. What different factors influence mission and discipleship in rural areas in your country compared to urban ones? (Discuss)

  5. Mission = Being Sent Discipleship = Being Learners “Go then, to all peoples everywhere and make them my disciples: baptise them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teach them to obey everything I have commanded you.” Matthew 28.19

  6. One minister for several churches

  7. … lack of resources/ facilities

  8. Traditional outlooks Rev’d Collins’ new 8am “hip hop communion service” didn’t quite connect with the congregation at St Mary’s

  9. How is discipleship different in rural areas? • In Britain some of the factors would include... • Smaller numbers • Several churches with one minister • Lack of local facilities/resources • Traditional outlooks (from who?) • “It never used to be like this” • Village community • Possibly lots of people around only part time

  10. Also... The countryside is changing From farming to commuting and tourism Greater mobility Weakening sense of village community Less experience of church in rural dwellers than in the past Community through “networks“ Consumer culture - buying into ideas From a religion of obligation to a religion of consumption - Christendom is dead How do these changes compare to changes in more urban areas?

  11. The Parable of the Would-Be Farmer

  12. Conclusions from Mission shaped church • The existing parochial system alone is no longer able to deliver its underlying missionary purpose • We need a mixed economy – no longer promoting one way of being church This means assessing the old and valuing where and for whom it works It means investing in, creating & nurturing a diversity of the new

  13. Fresh Expressions Of Church • Alternative worship communities • Café church • Cell church • Churches arising out of community initiatives • Midweek congregations • Network based church • Youth congregations

  14. Inculturation - Key Principles • Prayer • Incarnation – a community process “from below” We need to move from detailed advance planning to discernment in context • Dying to live “What you sow does not come to life unless it dies.” 1 Corinthians 15.36

  15. Rural Youth Networks Threshold Network Church – Youung People’s Cell - Lincs

  16. Rural Youth Networks Eden – Youth Congregation (Derek Spencer) Steyning Grammar School West Sussex

  17. Alternative in its context Sunday 4.6 – Holsworthy Area

  18. Alternative Rural Worship The Gathering

  19. Church transformed by rural community initiatives

  20. Rural shades of café church Cafeplus+ • First Sunday of the month • 9:30am - 12:30pm • The Village Hall, Haddenham,  Bucks Cafeplus+ offers a place to: • chill out over a cup of real coffee and the Sunday papers • meet your friends or make new ones! • take the children for some fun activities • get some peace in our 'quiet space' • enjoy breakfast and some 'Food4thought' • join in a range of different activities for young and old alike

  21. Rural shades of cafe church Xpresso, in Loddon, South Norfolk

  22. Tas Valley cell church story

  23. “Alpha” “Cells” “Alpha” “Cells” “Alpha” one way forward – our story Outward Contact Nurture and Discipleship

  24. the theory bit: “inculturation” culture where Gospel is being shared God speaks – His Gospel church/planting team sharing the Gospel

  25. “As the Father sent me, so I send you… Receive the Holy Spirit.” Jesus said, • Starting with God • Mission in the power of the Spirit • The pattern of Jesus mission 1. Incarnation 2. Dying to Live

  26. Georgia’s baptism

  27. thinking about values • All Involved • Becoming Disciples • Creating Community • Doing Evangelism • Encountering God

  28. Why cell is good for rural discipleship • It delivers the small church from having to be all things to all people • It widens principled choice about how to be church • It challenges attendance mentality • It is a natural lead in from process evangelism • It nurtures and develops young Christians in the same participative style in which they found faith • It fits with the best of rural church – local, lay led and small

  29. How can cell sit well with rural? • In a MPB there is variety already, so one more is less threat and parish boundaries are permeable • It fits well with the release of gifts in the laity • Network is normal in a rural context : e.g. Mums groups, schools, farmer’s market • Network based means it’s not controlled by any one parish… Rural Cell church – a new wayside flower ? Encounters on the Edge 29 pp 18ff

  30. praying for our villages

  31. If you get into mission… • Learn to expect that this process will change church, more than you ever expected

  32. General pointers for Rural Mission • Small is good

  33. General pointers for Rural Mission • Remain connected to the Body

  34. General pointers for Rural Mission • Growing the New Alongside the Old

  35. General pointers for Rural Mission • Grow lay leadership and nurture lay initiative

  36. General pointers for rural mission • Work with agricultural seasons and local rhythms

  37. General pointers for rural mission • Connect with the inheritance of the place

  38. General pointers for rural mission • Seek partnership where critical mass is needed

  39. General pointers for rural mission • Be committed for the long haul

  40. Don’t forget the basics.... “As the Father sent me, so I send you… Receive the Holy Spirit.” • Starting with God • Mission in the power of the Spirit • The pattern of Jesus mission 1. Incarnation 2. Dying to Live

  41. Oak trees and primroses “We treated our churches as if they were all oak trees – able to grow to any size and live virtually for ever. One plant could fill the whole parish garden more or less permanently. But most congregations are primroses – they have a limited, vigorous individual life, and they grow and spread to fill the ground by division into large numbers of individual plants” Bob Jackson, Hope for the Church, Church House Publishing, 2002. p.132

  42. Judea … the familiar? Samaria … the disagreeable? The ends of the earth … the unthinkable? Churched Fringe De-Churched Non-Churched From Jerusalem ….. to PS – Notice what happens to the old centre

  43. Who is it for ? • Adults, teens, multigenerational • It’s here the new Christians grow in faith • Incomers to the village : This is the most significant mission field for rural church. • The new villagers are here for leisure and recreation • They are the growing percentage of the population • Many are there for the long haul • They will by skill and attitude become dominant in the village • Most cell members were the de-churched. The road to the non churched is even longer… Rural Cell church – a new wayside flower ? Encounters on the Edge No 29 pp 10-12

  44. More reasons • Sheer Pragmatism – “I can only come on Tuesday, and Sunday isn’t good because …” • It helps with the anonymous factor • To start going to church would ruin a well cultivated non-religious reputation of a life time • It’s “mixed economy” thinking in practice. • Value the traditional and the fresh expression of church • Have both to be church to a greater variety of people…

  45. One (fellowship/ Love) Holy (obedience/ worship) Catholic (universal) Apostolic (missionary) But is it really church? Dying to live With Jesus at the heart

  46. English Gruyere ? Church Plants fill the holes the parishes cannot reach Something like this ? Mixed Economy means being glad that

  47. Looking at the mission field Regular attenders – at least monthly(10%) Fringe- less than monthly(10%) Non Churched(40%) Open de-churched(20%) Closed de-churched(20%)

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