Christ Church is currently in the midst of a major paradigm
shift. As Reggie McNeal describes in his
book MISSIONAL RENAISSANCE: Changing the Scorecard for the CHURCH, this shift is a change in the traditional understanding of who
the Church is and what Christ calls us to do and be.
McNeal defines three shifts, each of which Christ Church is
experiencing in some way: 1) from an
internal to an external ministry focus, 2) from program development to people
development, 3) from Church-based to Kingdom-based leadership.
While we at Christ Church – and the Church universal – have
far to go to fulfill our Great Commission (“Go ye into all the world…” Mark
16:15), we have for too long missed the mark. As we begin to think differently about what it
is to “do church”, we realize church is not just something we do or a place we go, but it is who we are. And it is those who are least likely to ever “do
church”, who need Christ the most. And
it is these we are called to serve.
This all sounds great, right? But then we face serious questions: So how do we reach them, the ones who won’t
become members, who won’t join a Sunday School class, etc., but still need
Christ? We are sent forth. We must be the church outside our beautiful,
stained-glass-filled nave, not just inside it.
But how, you ask?
Currently, Christ Church is partnered with The Well Community, an Oak Cliff-based
ministry for the mentally ill and developmentally challenged adults in our
neighborhood. Also, as part of the
Episcopal Diocese of Dallas’ One Church One
School initiative, we support John
H. Reagan Elementary School, right in our own neighborhood. In 2012, Christ Church Dallas sponsored a
home in the Old Oak Cliff Conservation League’s
Annual Fall Home Tour, the League’s annual fundraiser; these funds are then
returned to the community in matching grants to non-profits that serve Oak
Cliff.
These are just three examples of how we, the members of
Christ Church, corporately reach out God’s hands of love to the community where
we are. This is a very incomplete list
of our corporate outreach, and does not even begin to catalogue the outreach we
do as individuals in our daily lives.
We are, as the world around us, faced with daily
change. Some good, some bad. But our prayer is that we might always meet
the needs of our community; to be Christ to Oak Cliff, Dallas, and the world
beyond. Want to know more? Then, come and see!
The book mentioned here (Missional Renaissance) was recommended to our Parish Vestry by the 7th Bishop Suffragan of Dallas, the Rt. Rev. +Paul E. Lambert. As I understand, Reggie McNeal, the author will be a guest speaker (via Skype) at the 2012 Diocesan Convention (Episcopal Diocese of Dallas).
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