Friday, May 9, 2008

Who Are You, Disciples of Christ?

Have you looked recently at the new identity statement for the Disciples of Christ: http://www.disciples.org/21cvt/docidentity.html? I encourage you to check it out because at some point we will be asked to commit ourselves to it. (After all, of what purpose is a statement of identity if we are not willing to be fully identified with it?)

Maybe it's just me, but I was hoping for more . . . momentum. I wanted a statement shouted back from a speeding bus loaded with workers chugging water and Mountain Dew headed for the mission field. When I read the current statement I have visions of polite conversations in church parlors and board rooms or the tap-tap-tapping of a keyboard and mugs of Chai Latte and Organic Sumatra-Peru Blend.

It is probably a good thing that I have not been charged with writing the Disciples Statement of Identity because it would look something more like this:
We are going into the neighborhood to serve those who serve with Christ until the mission is completed.

I probably would resist the temptation to add more words to an identity statement. Any shouting from a speeding bus is done in phrases - not paragraphs.
If pressed, Id' have to explain that those who serve also help to unite those they serve and that, to me, has always been the polar star of this expression of Christianity.

No one denomination is going to be strong enough to be effectively counter-cultural. The Great Commission, the Great Commandment, and the Good Confession were all given to the whole Body and not to its franchises (which, sadly, is what too many in this culture bring to mind when you mention the word, denomination). The missions of Burger King, McDonalds, Hardees and Wendy's are certainly about satisfying hunger here and now but they are not about ending world hunger forever (a God-sized mission). There is little doubt, however, that if all the brain power and resources and networks of every major food chain and supplier could be marshaled to a much bigger, single goal, the end result would be far more miraculous than most missional efforts to date. Is it stretching the truth to make a similar case for the whole Church about the Great Commission and the Great Commandment?

The current Disciples Mission Statement appears to have been roundly affirmed - almost unanimously - by those who have left their comments. Interesting, considering that Reformation is in our DNA.


And, as you can imagine, my intent is not so much to debate the merits of the Statement of Identiy but to encourage all of us to answer a question that Jesus may be asking the disciples of today; "Who do people say that you are?"

Let's hear from you!

Bill Rose-Heim

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