The Church As An Outpost
"A church which pitches its tents without constantly looking out for new horizons, which does not continually strike camp, is being untrue to its calling... We must play down our longing for certainty, accept what is risky, live by improvisation and experiment." - Hans KungOn this cloudy, overcast, threatening day, I'm sitting on the balcony overlooking a cemented, bounded swimming pool, and a vast, unrelenting ocean. Both are full of energizing salt water.
Here's what's really random... I'm thinking of the 1990 movie Dances With Wolves. I'm sure you remember Kevin Costner as John Dunbar and Mary McDonnell as "Stands With Fist." It's one of Sherry's favorite movies, and every time we get to the sexy teepee scene, I have sudden urges to go camping with my bride. (And btw, dressing up as Indians would just be icing on the cake.) But I digress...
In Dances Wolves, John Dunbar's job was to pioneer the west as part of a Civil War, American military initiative. His job was to establish a western outpost where soon coming troops would gather and establish a larger fort... which in turn would eventually proliferate an entire town.
As the United States Cavalry pushed westward, the heathens (known also as native Americans) could either find salvation or be killed... it really didn't seem to matter which. They could "become like us or die"... but the real goal was forts, roads, and buildings, or as we would say, "Brick and mortar."
But John Dunbar didn't do things by the Cavalry rule book. He befriended the heathens. He learned their language. John Dunbar, dubbed "Dances With Wolves," sheds his white-man ways and becomes one of a local, albeit smelly, Sioux tribe. Indian causes and concerns became Dunbar's causes and concerns. Dunbar was entrusted with the very lives of the Sioux people. Best of all, he married what we now know as one of the best looking Indian woman of all time!
Guess which tact had more soul influence --- the harsh extractional ways of the Cavalry, or the missional, relational, incarnational ways of John Dunbar? Take one stab at which way Jesus did ministry on earth as God came with skin, pitched a tent, and started an outpost.
What kind of an outpost should the church be? Do we prefer one that forces heathens (also known as God's creation) to become like us... because our real concerns, if boardrooms could talk, are about brick and mortar? Is there really anyone who would raise their hand and say yes to this? But that's exactly what many, many churches do. Churches hope, pray, and cross their fingers for people to be attracted to accommodating buildings, urge they become people who only buy books, movies, and music in Christian bookstores, and trust they plug into all our programs so we can either afford the buildings we have or go in debt for bigger ones.
This is attractional, dualistic (separating sacred from secular), and heirarchial church. In post-Christian and post-modern Europe it's all but killed the church. Did you know that less than 3% of England currently makes any kind of claim of Jesus? We are seeing warning signs in America as well. Only 9% of American Christians live out of a Biblical worldview. If this is true, and I believe it is, the attractional, dualistic, heirarchial church in America seems to be on life support as well.
What if our understanding of how Christ came incarnationally would affect our mission, which in turn would affect how we view and lived out being the Church? Michael Frost, in "The Shaping Of Things To Come," puts it this way: "Christology determines missiology, and missiology determines ecclesiology."
I say we all sit down for a movie and some popcorn. John Dunbar seemed to have it right. Becoming a Sioux affected his mission, and that impacted the very way he lived out his life.
I'm thinking about going for a swim now. I can choose the chemically-treated pool whose depths only go as far as seven feet. At least I would be safe. There are posted rules to ensure this. Currently only three, very white people are in the pool.
I could also choose the ocean, it's only a few steps further. It is riskier, but there are more people there, more life, and the depth is unfathomable. The pool is very controlled and only open til 10 pm. The ocean is vast, constantly in motion, and filled with opportunities to experience the very nature of God.


