Many have asked us, “Do you have online giving available for Renew?”
Good news: we have been working on a secure online giving opportunity for quite some time and now it is available.
Check out the “Donate Now” button at the bottom right of the homepage if you would like to make a donation to Renew.
There is a short article on Renew's house churches in this morning's (Doylestown) Intelligencer.
The article gives a pretty good picture of what we're striving to do with house churches.
When the reporter and I talked, we discussed house churches, but I also mentioned that house churches are part of our "dual expression of church," mentioning that we would be holding public gatherings on Sunday mornings some time in 2009. Wish that would have made it in there as well…
But nonetheless, its a good piece.
Here's the link if you care to read about it.
I remember hearing author and church consultant Reggie McNeal at a one-day church leaders conference several years ago share a story about the way God counts attendance.
Reggie and his wife have three grown daughters. When the oldest one
went off to college the family helped her move into her new dorm, met
her roommate and got her settled in before pulling away in the family
minivan. The family drove home together and sat down at the dinner
table to eat dinner. Reggie was used to seeing the five chairs around
the dinner table occupied, but now he looked around and someone was
missing.
Only four chairs were full. He started to pray for the
meal.
He opened his mouth and the words got stuck.
He just couldn’t. He started to cry.
He missed his
oldest daughter so much. He realized that the family was not complete
without his oldest daughter being there…and it broke his heart.
For Reggie, it hit him: this is how God counts attendance. God sees who is in attendance at our churches, but he grieves over who isn’t there that could and should be.
He went on to say that God is the God of the empty chair.

Reggie could have sat there and said, ‘Well, look at this.
Having four out of five seats full at the dinner table ain’t bad.
That’s 80% capacity. We’re doing pretty good for our little family,
aren’t we?" But instead, he noticed who wasn’t there and he couldn’t get over it.
Imagine if we counted attendance the way God counts attendance?
Imagine
if we counted who wasn’t at the table of the family of God but should
be – the lost, the hurting, the elderly, the younger generations, those
who have been cast to the fringes of society.
When we learn to count those not in attendance – and want to do something about it – we begin to have a more inclusive, more holistic kingdom mindset.
Imagine if we grieved over those who weren’t at the table.
We all remember the rage of the WWJD? bracelets a few years ago.
Started with good intentions off of the terrific old, classic book by Charles Sheldon called "In His Steps" it was intended to encourage people to ask the question at all times "What Would Jesus Do?"

Unfortunately, even though Sheldon’s book of over a hundred years old, about ten years go it turned into a overdone Christian marketing activity. I’m not slamming those little bracelets at all (In fact, unknowingly, I even contributed to it. In high school my friend Stephen and I used to sell them at Christian concerts even before it became the national rage). I know many people benefited from those little bracelets. But it kind of lost its meaning and significance.
Interestingly, a few years ago in an effort to push the green agenda Christian environmentalists attempted to push the WWJD? thing to a new level and announced that the acronym now stood for "What Would Jesus Drive" in an effort to have consumers purchase gas sippers rather than gas guzzlers.
But WWJD? is a hard question because it can be abstract for us as followers of Jesus in the 21st century attempting to follow a man who lived in the 1st century.
What would Jesus do at college? Well, there were no colleges in the 1st century so its hard to say.
What would Jesus do with music? Would he have an iPod? No way of knowing because it was 20 centuries before Steve Jobs was even born…
What would Jesus drive? Probably a donkey or a small colt if he were lucky.
These questions are not impossible, but they are hard and abstract to translate over into contemporary life.
I was talking with a friend recently about this and he suggested that the better question is probably WWJD: Where Would Jesus Be? That seems to work a bit more and help our Christian imagination run into the direction of living out the ways of Jesus.
A missional approach to ministry in essence, simply states that "they don’t come to us; instead, we go to them."
Where would Jesus be?
Physically, geographically, emotionally, spiritually – where would he be?
Where would he spend his time and with whom?
Well, where did he spend his time as recorded in the gospels?
With the hurting people. Where are those who are hopeless and homeless and seemingly useless to society.
With th disgraced. Those living in poverty.
That’s probably where he would be.
And as followers of Jesus that’s where we should be, too.
As a follower of Jesus does that reveal where I spend my time?
We know we need to serve the poor, but do we even know one person who lives under the poverty line that we interact with on a weekly basis? Do I even have one friend who would be considered poor?
We really want to chew on these questions seriously with Renew because how we answer them will be what – and where – we’re called as Jesus followers. And that will require a lot from us – a change of our schedules, priorities, budgets and relationships.
I think my friend is right: WWJB? is the better question for the missional imagination in the 21st century.
But please, don’t put them on a bracelet and sell them.
Many have asked if Renew has a website.
Yes, we will.
It’s not live yet, but we’re working on it.
When it is up and running it will be found at www.renewcommunity.org
(You can check it out here...I worked really hard on it. Hope you like it).
More updates in the future when we have it up and running in the near future.
Someone sent me an article this week about church planting being a biblical assumption. It highlighted the high importance of the local church intentionally focusing on church planting.
Dr. Ed Stetzer, director of LifeWay Research and missiologist in residence, was the keynote speaker last week at the Southern Baptist Founders Conference in Owasso, Oklahoma. He stated that the overwhelming assumption of the New Testament is that local churches plant other churches. He said that pastors should avoid leading churches that are theologically sound but are inwardly focused (he used the term "cul-de-sac churches").
His challenge was to see churches connect sound theology with a mindset focused on church planting. "What was normal in the New Testament has become abnormal today, " he said. "The New Testament church was always multiplying and the church today must always be multiplying. Mission is to be wrapped together with good theology…God is a sending God."
Stetzer gave six points that reinforce the mindset of church planting as being in mission with God.
At Renew, we are committed to being a church planting church plant, believing that in a sense we are "born pregnant." We start with the vision that one day we will plant again so as to participate with what God is already doing. Someone asked me if this was scary to think about. Sure it is. But it’s what we believe God is up to and what is calling us to be about with Renew.

“The gospel must be preached afresh and told in new ways to each generation, since every generation has its own unique questions. The gospel must constantly be forwarded to a new address, because the recipient is repeatedly changing his place of address.”
-Helmut Thielicke
We seem to be living in a lot of uncertainty and risk right now. It’s exciting, but it is risky.
I was encouraged by this quote by theological Hans Kung that I stumbled across recently.
“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.”
I hope and pray that Renew will live out this value for years to come…
The ethos and DNA of Renew is going to continue to develop, especially when our Core Launch Team is developed and we begin to meet regularly.
But there are a few things that we’re dreaming of that we’ve articulated in a philosophy of ministry. We do this in order to give people some context to the type of faith community we dream of shaping and the type of faith community we desire to shape us. Again, this isn’t exhaustive or set in stone, but it simply allows us to articulate just a glimpse of the vision we have for Renew.
"So, what is your vision for Renew?
"What will it be about?"
"What makes it unique and distinct?"
"What do you hope to accomplish with the new church?"
"What are the core values?"
We’ve received a lot of these questions the past few weeks. Great questions.
I’d love to sit down and tell each one of these people who have asked these questions.
However, since I can’t sit down one-on-one with everyone, at the bottom of this post I’ve attached a document of our Mission, Vision and Values.
While we are certain about several things with Renew, this document is a work in progress. It is not intended to be exhaustive, but simply helps us to articulate the dream we have. It’s an attempt to move this exciting vision from our head and our heart onto paper.
Our core launch team – a solid group of passionate and committed people who will help to shape Renew – is currently being developed. As that team is shored up we will spend the next several months developing and cultivating the ethos of Renew as we seek out what God desires this faith community to be and to become.
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