e-xpressions May 2010

St Luke's in the High Street - refreshmentsWelcome

Welcome to the May edition of e-xpressions. There's a bumper crop of stories and updates on our website this month, including:

May's podcast includes more from Threshold, an update on mission shaped ministry and a challenging interview with Mark Russell, CEO of Church Army.

Graham CrayMixed and Mutual

The fresh expressions initiative is not about fresh expressions of church alone. It is about a mixed economy church.

In February, the General Synod of the Church of England voted unanimously to 'affirm the mixed economy of traditional churches and fresh expressions of church, working in partnership, as the most promising mission strategy in a fast changing culture.'

The key word is 'partnership'. The mixed economy is not a strategic device to allow the newer to coexist with the older. It is a commitment to maintain the unity and common life of the Spirit across an increasingly diverse and fast-changing mission field.

'Economy' is an appropriate word to apply to the Church, as long as we draw its content from Scripture and not from the global economic crisis! In Ephesians 1:10 Paul speaks of God's 'plan' to gather all things up in Christ. The word translated as 'plan' gives us our word 'economy'. It is a word about the proper running of a large Roman household, applied to God's restoring of the universe through his Son. In the next chapter the church is called God's 'household' (2:19), from the same family of words, and has a vital part to play in the 'plan'.

But this also is a mixed economy church. The household of God is established through the reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles in Christ. In Judea the churches were predominantly Jewish. Elsewhere in the Roman Empire they varied from a mixture of Jews and Gentiles to some that were predominantly Gentile – depending on the mission field. But they were all part of the one household playing their part in the one economy of God.

It was not always an easy relationship. The problems it caused resonate through Acts and Paul's letters. Paul's churches sent generous aid to the Jerusalem church, which contained their sternest critics. It was what Christians did!

In the same way fresh expressions of church and more traditional forms are to honour, support and pray for one another. They are to recognise each other's integrity and distinctive gifts. The younger can learn from the older without having to use the same cultural forms. The older can have faith, for their own mission, renewed through seeing what God is doing among the younger. The older will need to exercise patience while the newer finds its own shape and identity. While the newer recognizes that the older gave it birth. Above all the mixed economy is about mutual generosity.

When Visions began in York, its primary mission field was the dance and nightclub culture, and the new community immersed itself in their mission and created appropriate forms of meeting and worship for their calling. But when the parish church's children's work was short of musicians, members of Visions, who had been in the clubs just hours before, led the children's worship, in a style they no longer used for themselves, because that was what you did in God's economy of grace. The mixed economy is about diversity and mutual generosity – for the plan of God. I conclude with a quotation from Archbishop Rowan's speech to the Synod.

The mixed economy takes both elements seriously, both traditional forms of church and emerging forms of church... and when we think about how partnership best works, we must surely realise that it's when both elements are taking each other seriously and gratefully and interacting with each other. Working together creatively in partnership is indeed the most promising mission strategy.

+Graham

You can read another perspective on the mixed economy on Share Malcolm Herbert's post on the Share blog.

MealShare

What exactly is this 'mixed economy' that people keep talking about? The Share website contains a handy page that introduces the subject. Called Share What does a 'mixed economy' church involve?, it sets out simply and clearly the basic concepts, with comments from practitioners along the way.

This page forms part of the first section of the Guide part of Share.
Called Share About fresh expressions, the section contains a number of pages introducing the idea of fresh expressions of church. It includes articles such as:Share What Christian principles lie behind fresh expressions?, Share Can we find fresh expressions in church history? and Share Why do fresh expressions matter?

encouraging fresh expressions of churchencouraging fresh expressions of church

Looking for a simple guide to fresh expressions - what are they, how to introduce them to your church or small group, first steps in mission-shaped thinking, drawing a team together, where to get help and much more? Then you might be interested in encouraging fresh expressions of church, our 12-page booklet packed with information about training and resources, web links and practical help. encouraging fresh expressions of church is available from our shop for £5 (five copies), or as part of our booklet assortment.

Training, jobs and events

Our next vision days are in Gloucestershire on 22nd May, Perth on 5th June and Walsall on 12th June.

Our next mission shaped ministry courses kick off in September but now is the time to think about signing up - check out the mission shaped ministry page for your local course.

Fresh!Fresh!

An introduction to fresh expressions of church: what they are and how they thrive.

Organised in partnership with Cranmer Hall, Durham and the York School of Theology, this week is aimed at people trained for or involved in church leadership in any Christian church.

The week features an in-depth study of the book of Acts, a national overview of fresh and inherited forms of church today, engagement with a broad swathe of new forms of church, thinking through how you might start a fresh expression or plant a new church in your own context, a tour of the beautiful city of York, a Fresh party and times of worship and prayer.

Taking place in York from the 12th-16th July 2010, the week costs £100 and you can find out more and book places by visiting the Fresh! page of our website.

And finally

Did you know, you can now listen to audio clips on an increasing number of our stories? For example, see 308 Nailsea, Focus Service, Loving Hands, The Wesley Playhouse, Presence, Tomatoes or Zac's Place.

See you next month,

The Fresh Expressions team.