Month: March 2009

Four Ways to Train MC Leaders

Per Brance’s request, I will answer some of Jeremy’s questions post by post over the next few days. They will not be comprehensive answers, but hopefully offer some take-aways for your own leadership and churches. Question #1:

  • How do you train your missional community leaders?

We train them four main ways:

  1. Leadership Seminars – these occur at least twice a year and focus on the philosophy and practice of leading gospel-centered missional communities. We focus on two areas: Pastoral and Missional leadership.
  2. On-the-Fly Training – because we are a church that spends time together throughout the week, we converse regularly about the challenges and rewards of leading missional communities. This happens through email, at the pub, during social events, eating together, etc. This can be especially effective because leaders are more teachable when they are facing a challenge they don’t have the answer to.
  3. Monthly Coaching – our Director of Missional Community meets with each MC leader to coach them through particular issues each month.
  4. Missional Community Leaders Meeting – MC leaders and spouses meet each month at a local pub to share how MC life and mission is going. It’s like we are MC to one another. We share a joy and a struggle in our MC with the whole group of leaders. We listen to one another, counsel one another, pray for one another, encourage one another. These are proving to be sweet times.

Feel free to contact Nate, our Director of Missional Community with questions. He blogs here.

ESV Study Bible: A 1/3rd Solution

For those of you who often ask the question: “I wonder what this text really means?” or “Who was Archippus?” or “What was the temple like?” the ESV Study Bible offers a wealth of evangelical scholarly insight. What’s more is that the online study features are now online and searchable (free this month only). If you’ve been looking for single volume study resource that is reliable and online, this is the way to go.

Only 1/3rd of the Solution

There is danger in relying on a single perspective Study Bible that does all the work for you. Reading your study Bible is just 1/3 of the solution to the task of interpretation. Another third of the task includes knowing how to interpret texts for ourselves, to develop a way to evaluate notes and commentary. Nothing beats studying the Bible for yourself, learning how to come to reasonable and textually faithful conclusions about the meaning of biblical texts and the joy of personal discovery as you learn to read the Bible well.

Reading in Cultural Stereo

The final third of the interpretive task is to read the Bible in cultural stero. How do we take what the Bible says about human creativity and apply it in a creative culture that is in glorious ruin? What do we do with the well meaning counsel of respectable friends who lack a God-centered perspective on say, marriage? When we are confronted with the two voices of Scripture and Culture, how can we listen closely enough to know when they are harmonizing and when they are dissonant? Developing discernment about how to live, relate, and engage the gammunt of social and cultural issues raised by Science, Pop Culture, Music, Architecture, Urban planning, Goverment, the Arts and so on is also part of the interpretive task.

Interpreting Scripture and Culture

The three-fold task of Bible interpretation, reading others’ interpretations, and interpreting culture is a challenging and rewarding task.  I encourage you to sign up for our Interpreting Scripture and Culture class, which starts Monday, March 16. This class will help you develop patterns of whole Bible reading that equip you, not only for the interpretive task, but also for living a Christ-centered life.