Saturday, November 07, 2009 Last Update:07:14 pm ET

Church|Thu, Mar. 12 2009 02:56 PM EDT

Missional Church Movement - The Next Big Thing?

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

More people are talking about going missional. Churches want in on the missional movement. But what is it really and why are some claiming it is the biggest development in Christianity since the Reformation?

The missional movement, in many ways, is a counter force to the traditional way of “doing” church. Rather than being program-focused, the missional church prides itself on being people-focused.

“Missional is a way of living, not an affiliation or activity,” explains missional leadership specialist Reggie McNeal in his new book, Missional Renaissance: Changing the Scorecard for the Church. “To think and to live missionally means seeing all life as a way to be engaged with the mission of God in the world.”

A person or church that goes missional does not measure how well they are doing spiritually by how often they attend church or how many people fill the pews on Sunday. Instead, missional individuals “think about God and the world” and arrange their whole life - every aspect of their life - around their faith convictions and put their faith into every day actions.

“This missional understanding of Christianity is undoing Christianity as a religion,” McNeal writes. “These differences are so huge as to make missional and nonmissional expressions of Christianity practically unrecognizable.”

The three major shifts in thinking and behavior seen in a person or church that goes missional are: from internal to external in terms of ministry focus; from program development to people development in terms of core activity; and from church-based to kingdom-based in terms of leadership agenda.

“For these (missional) leaders, church has moved from being internally occupied to externally focused, from primarily concentrating on its institutional maintenance to developing an incarnational influence,” McNeal writes. “These leaders find themselves thinking of kingdom impact more than church growth.”

Those who are part of the missional movement are “serious” about personal development and not just interested in gaining a lot of Scriptural knowledge but not putting it into practice, explains the expert who has helped churches from as large as 10,000 members to as small as 30 become missional.

Some of the activities that missional churches lead include processing food and a prayer journal into backpacks for underprivileged children and starting micro-economic businesses in inner cities.

“Missional church is not about ‘doing church’ better – at least, not the way we’ve ‘done church’ in North America,” McNeal says. “It is not church growth in a new dress…missional thinking and living change the game completely. The missional renaissance is altering both the character and the expression of the church in the world.”

Given recent surveys that show an increasing number of Americans saying they are unaffiliated or have no religion, the missional concept is particularly appealing because it offers an answer to why church membership is declining and how to fix it.

According to the 2008 American Religious Identification Survey, released on Monday, the percentage of Americans claiming no religion jumped from 8.2 percent in 1990 to 14.2 in 2001, and has now increased to 15 percent.

Moreover, the percentage of those claiming no religion has grown in every state in the country, according to the ARIS survey, while the percentage of Christians in America has declined.

The findings were based on over 54,000 interviews conducted between February and November in 2008 by Connecticut-based Trinity College’s Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture.

“An industry based on come-and-get-it is not penetrating the culture,” McNeal said to The Christian Post in an interview on Tuesday. “We are going to have to figure out how to be the church where people already are as opposed to setting up a separate church domain in our culture and expecting people to identify with it.”

McNeal considers the missional movement still in its “early days,” but he highlights its growing popularity noting that a Google search on “missional” will yield over a million hits, and churches and denominations are increasingly claiming the title of missional.

“The missional renaissance reflects the church’s response in a time of a remarkable manifestation of the kingdom,” he writes. “Those who miss it will find themselves on the other side of a divide that renders them irrelevant to the movement of God in the world.”

Sort by: Newest | Oldest | Agree | Disagree
All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Christian Post or its staff.
  • Sat Oct 24, 2009 1:24 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Being missional is sexy. Social justice is very sexy. That's my big worry. MLK was sexy (in his own way), and Bono is very sexy. Even Obama is sexy. That doesn't take away from what they have accomplished, but, well, it worries me. It worries me that there is a powerful motive to be missional and get mixed up in the world that may not be connected to God: thus caution is needed.

  • 1272 »
    Mon Mar 16, 2009 7:10 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    DRJ, I understand your desire and concern for safety and protection. However, the bible seems to really never talk about playing it safe or operating in safe zones. I think we need to be wise and led of the Holy Spirit in persuing situations yet, avoiding something because of it looks unsafe is a little... I guess I am trying to come out of my safe zone myself and engage a little more than usual. I don't want to tempt God, but nothing is going to happen to me He doesn't allow. I had rather die having been a little to forward for God than die to passive for me(self). Oh, the search for a bold but balanced life.

  • DRJ »
    Mon Mar 16, 2009 3:58 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    Absolutely! The primary mission of the Church is to disciple converts. The methodology of the discipling process includes: Bible Study, Instruction in Worship and evangelism, and finally sending disciples to the work of global evangelism, which is the PURPOSE of the Church! But, let's not forget that the world we inhabit today is a filthy, sinful place. Therefore, it is not a bad thing that churches are large enough to offer their members any number of opportunities within a "safe" invironment. Do YOU want to send your children to the movies by themselves today? What about other recreational activities? We should be thankful that some churches care enough about the nurturing of their children to provide them with "safe" environments overseen by caring parents and adults. To classify a church as "worldly" because it is large enough to provide safe environments for its members activities is just plain wicked.

  • Mon Mar 16, 2009 11:49 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 0

    The biggest problem here, of course, is that many Christians and churches have forgotten the identity, as well as the job, of the church. The church is the body of Christ, comprised of born-again, baptized believers in Christ, gathering together for fellowship, edification, teaching, training and growth, instruction in righteousness in order to give the gospel to the lost.
    The JOB of the church is to go to the lost, indeed a 'missional' job, one that is, indeed, to be a part of our entire, everyday life.
    See, we have different groups who are both, in seeking to obey the Lord, only do half the job-those whose entire focus is the church, and those now whose entire focus is the mission-but both are important: one is the the body of Christ, not to be neglected, and the other is the JOB of the body of Christ, also not to be neglected.

  • Sat Mar 14, 2009 3:38 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    1272,

    Hopefully your post is in jest. If not, your quoting the much shortened Dort Confession (many, many pages into 10 words)with a hyper-Calvinistic logic that would require Calvin to not be a Calvinist, is not biblical but the following of one man's thoughts well past what that one man believed or taught.

    DP,

    Good question!

    Grace and Peace,
    Jim

  • 1272 »
    Sat Mar 14, 2009 12:04 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    If they are elected/predestined and grace is irresistable what the big urgency? No one is gonna go to hell if they are elected. Why all the work if they are gonna get saved anyway. This seems to be a waist of our time and money.
    Help me balance all this.

  • Fri Mar 13, 2009 5:53 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 1

    I didn't know this was a movement, either. My congregation has been doing this for years, and calling it discipleship.

  • Fri Mar 13, 2009 10:18 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 0

    I didn't know this was a "movement". I always thought this was simply the bible. Come in the four-walls to learn and be edified, then quickly get out and "be a doer of the Word" in every area of your life!

  • Fri Mar 13, 2009 9:59 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Christian churches in other countries are sending missionaries to the "American Mission Field" why shouldn't we?

  • Fri Mar 13, 2009 8:53 am Agree: 5   Disagree: 1

    Honestly, the concept is not new...it just has a n ew name. Churches should go outside of their for walls...teh message of Jesus Christ was never meant to stay confined to the inside of the church...without sound pessimistic, i think putting a different label on what should be biblical evangelism is simply another way present the church in a non negative way. whether you call it missional or evangelism. Jesus Christ himself stated he did not come for those who are well, but for those are sick. The church as a whole must reconcile their beliefes with scripture first. If the church in America understood its purupose as a whole you wouldn't need a term "going missional"

    The bible calls it spreading the good news.

  • Fri Mar 13, 2009 8:33 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    Oh good. Another fad. But this one's DIFFERENT. Right.

  • Fri Mar 13, 2009 7:07 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    ARGH!!!

  • Thu Mar 12, 2009 6:32 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    It is very true that one of the biggest
    spiritual event in the format of the former
    reformation is right on track. Jesus said
    "go and preach the kingdom" it was done a few
    centuries back, but later on it was turned to a "caved in a comfort zone" Christianity.
    More buildings, organizations, seminaries, and
    a battalion of everthing in the worldly
    standard was mushrooming at a faster pace
    with a religious signboard.

    Recent financial meltdown caught everybody on a surprise mode. Likewise the
    next spiritual awakening will be more
    powerful and mammoth than the reformation,
    which will shake the whole world.

  • Thu Mar 12, 2009 5:06 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    As long as we don't sacrifice knowledge and learning for living (or vice-versa) His body will reach people. Knowing in our heads is not enough but knowing nothing and living according to biblical commands is moralism.

    Grace ad Peace,
    Jim

Please help us to monitor our message boards by flagging comments that are unlawful, harmful, threatening, abusive, harassing, defamatory, vulgar, obscene, libelous, hateful, or racially, ethnically or otherwise objectionable.
Contact Us if you have any questions, comments, or concerns.
Comment on this story
ID Password

Don't have a Christian Post ID? Signing up is easy. Click Here

  • icon1
  • icon2
  • icon3
  • icon4
  • icon5
The Christian Post reserves the right to terminate the account of any User who violates our Terms of Use.
Advertisement
Advertisement
CP Shopping
  • Jewelry
  • Health
  • Church
  • Gifts
  • Coins

Bracelets | Chains | Crosses | Earrings | Gemstone |

Featured contents & Giveaways
Zondervan

Struggling to succeed in the Nashville music scene, talented singer/songwriter Parker James finds the competition fierce even deadly. A young woman's murder, industry corruption, a

Featured Advertiser Links