Future Faith: Challenge Five: Affirming Spirit-Filled Communities

“We want power”, “But we don’t know what it’s for.”

The power of God’s Spirit is given to us to be witnesses to God’s transforming love. “We’re not here,” Christine Claine proclaimed, “to entertain ourselves.”

The rise of pentecostalism

Pentecostalism is spreading throughout the world like a spiritual tsunami.

One out of every four Christians in the world is Pentecostal or charismatic. One of four Pentecostals is an Asian, and 80 percent of Christian conversions in Asia are to Pentecostal forms of Christianity. One out of three Pentecostals is in Africa. In Latin America, Pentecostalism is growing at three times the rate of Catholicism.

Think of it this way. One out of every twelve people alive in the world today is Pentecostal.

pentecostalism and the marginalized

“the extraordinary success of the Pentecostal movement is largely due to its reach to those on the periphery of society.”

Early Pentecostalism had a deep, intentional social outreach embedded within its ministries.

Too often Pentecostalism is associated with mass media “prosperity preachers” and “health and wealth” ideology. These movements, though not dominant, are persistent. Where they flourish, the gospel is poorer and positive social contributions are few.

The rapid growth in forms of Christian practice that place a strong emphasis on religious experience as well as the cohesive value of Christian community. These expressions of faith are full of spiritual vitality and highly contextualized to local culture.

emerging pentecostalism

Pentecostalism, especially as it is emerging in the non-Western world, is a postmodern faith. I’ve often said, “An evangelical wants to know what you believe, while a Pentecostal wants to hear your spiritual story.” Perhaps it’s an oversimplification. But Pentecostalism embodies a strong emphasis on narrative and finds reality in spiritual experiences that defy the logic and rationality of modern Western culture.

Understanding Pentecostalism, especially as it is emerging in the Global South as a non-Western religion thriving in a postmodern world, also includes understanding how to grasp the power of its worship and preaching.

Most of the famous Pentecostal preachers I’ve heard at world conferences would fail a homiletics class at any Reformed seminary. But the purpose is not so much to expound well-reasoned theological truths as it is to incite an intensity of spiritual experience.

those worshipping are longing for, and experiencing, a direct, corporate participation in the presence of the Holy Spirit resulting in their spiritual empowerment and giving glory to God.

The Pentecostal movement in Africa today, he argues, is marked by inclusion, promise, and fulfillment.

Todd Johnson and Kenneth Ross, put it this way: “Pentecostalism . . . became the main contributor to the reshaping of Christianity from a predominantly Western to a predominantly non-Western phenomenon in the twentieth century.”

As Christine Caine said in her address, quoting from Isaiah 43, God “is doing a new thing.” The question for those in Babylonian captivity at that time and those in captivity to modern Western culture now is whether we will see it.

bringing together separate worlds

with Pentecostalism’s dramatic growth now being driven largely from outside of the West, new opportunities arise for building bridges. In my estimation, this is the most pressing challenge to building unity within the body of Christ in today’s world. Creating such bridges will uncover some unexpected points of connection. One is the link between contemplative prayer and Pentecostalism.

The recovery of the contemplative tradition in the West, interpreted most powerfully in the past fifty years by Thomas Merton, and more recently by writers like Thomas Keating and Richard Rohr, focuses on restoring the primacy of spiritual experience.

In this light, Richard Rohr sees an affinity to Pentecostal experience: Pentecostals and charismatics are a significant modern-era exception to this avoidance of experience; I believe their “baptism in the Spirit” is a true and valid example of initial mystical encounter. The only things they often lack, which keeps them from maturity, are some good theology, developmental psychology, and social concerns to keep their feet in this incarnate world. Without these, their ego-inflating experiences have frequently led to superficial and falsely conservative theology and right-wing politics. . . . But the core value and transformative truth of initial God experience is still there, right beneath the surface, in many people who were “baptized in both fire and Spirit,” which is Jesus’ baptism (Matthew 3:11b).

While some may assume that the distance between the solitude and silence of a Trappist monastery with monks in contemplative prayer at 4:00 a.m. and the robust, clamoring, hand-waving worship of Pentecostals with mantra-like shouts of praise could not be further apart, they are united in a deep quest for the experiential knowledge of the living God.

Growing opportunities for theological dialogue is one of the hopeful ways that the walls between Pentecostalism and the other parts of global Christian family can begin to break down.

pentecostalism and theology

Pentecostal theology is now plentiful, creative, rigorous, growing, and global.

Certainly, it’s true that the distance between the pew and the “academy” in Pentecostalism is a formidable problem. But critics of Pentecostalism often fail to recognize the serious theological development that has been emerging in this community, especially in the past three to four decades.

Put simply, while spiritual experience is the starting point for Pentecostalism, this movement is now demonstrating the capacity to reflect critically on the meaning of that experience and how it informs the continuing theological task.

a spirit of openness

All this means that Pentecostalism is becoming prepared to make a theological and ecclesiological contribution to world Christianity that is commensurate to its growing size.

As long as Pentecostalism’s image in the United States is shaped by glitzy television preachers with private jets preaching a prosperity gospel, it will be difficult to create the mutual encounter with one-quarter of all Christianity that is so needed.

Growing far faster than Catholicism, Pentecostals are drawn largely from poorer and marginalized communities.

Frank Chikane summarized his convictions simply: “When the Spirit comes, people go out.”

A major test for the future of Pentecostalism is whether its roots among the marginalized and its gift of spiritual empowerment will nurture more than rich personal spiritual fulfillment and be directed toward community and societal transformation.

The struggle for the non-Pentecostal Christian world, particularly in the United States, is to overcome its deep spiritual prejudices and its sense of inherent theological superiority.

Immigration, the unexpected and largely unrecognized vehicle of God’s ongoing mission, is making the realities of the global church local.

The new ecumenical frontier, in many ways, can be found in building bridges close to home that cross the major global divide between Pentecostal and non-Pentecostal worlds.

In that journey, we will be asked whether we believe the words of Paul in First Corinthians: “we all have been made to drink of the one Spirit” (1 Cor 12:13).

discussion guide

  • When you hear the term spirit-filled communities what do you envision? In what ways is your faith community spirit-filled? In what ways is it not?
  • What did you learn about Pentecostal communities in this chapter? What example or perspective stood out for you? Why?
  • In what ways does the author say that Pentecostal communities of faith sometimes live within a bubble, insulated from other Christian communities?
  • One critique of Pentecostalism is that it focuses on experience but is lacking in good theology, and even disdains academic theology. What is true about this critique? How is this changing?
  • What can be gained by “recognizing and affirming the spirit-filled gifts of the global Pentecostal world”?
  • What more do you want to learn or do based on reading this chapter of the book?

 

Previous post can be found here:

Challenge One: Revitalizing Withering Congregations

Challenge Two: Embracing the Color of the Future

Challenge Three: Seeing through Non-Western Eyes

Challenge Four: Perceiving the World as Sacred

For more on this, please support the author and buy his book at Amazon or Fortress Press. I do not receive any compensation for this summary.

Tech-Wise Family: 1&2. Choosing Character & Shaping Space

The three key decisions of a tech-wise family is wether:

  1. We develop wisdom and courage together as family.
  2. We want to create more than we consume.
  3. We are designed for a rhythm of work and rest.

1. Choosing Character

1. We develop wisdom and courage together as a family.

We need to understand what makes technology so different from any previous human invention. We also need to understand what family is for, which is something radically ancient and in grave danger of being forgotten.

What is Family for?

I want to suggest a pretty radical idea about what family is for. Family is about the forming of persons. Family shapes us in countless ways. Family helps form us into persons who have acquired wisdom and courage.

“A fool takes no pleasure in understanding, but only in expressing personal opinion” – Proverbs 18:2 -which also sounds a lot like social media.

All the really important things we do as families involve developing wisdom. You can’t search for wisdom -at least, not online. And it’s as rare and precious as ever- maybe, given how complex our lives have become, rarer and more precious than before.

The Faithful, Scary Thing to Do

We need the conviction and character to act. And that is what courage is about. And even though it’s incredibly hard simply to know what we should do, it’s even harder to actually act on what we know we should do.

The way of wisdom has been clear: stay committed, stay faithful, stay hopeful.

We need people who love us -who are unreservedly and unconditionally committed to us, our flourishing, and our growth no matter what we do, and who are so committed to us that they won’t let us stay the way we are.

Family, for almost all of us, is the setting where we are known and cared for in the fullest and longest-lasting sense.

The First Family

It’s only recently, and in a small corner of the world, that “family” has primarily meant a father, a mother, and their biological children living together in a “single-family” home. According to the US Census Bureau it describes less than 20 percent of US households as of 2012.

“…whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother” Matthew 12:48-50. The first family for everyone who wants wisdom and courage in the way of Jesus is the church. The church is the place we learn to become the persons we were meant to be.

But if the church is to be our first family, it cannot just be a friendly, weekly gathering. The first Christians met in homes, and those homes were not single-family dwellings but Greaco-Roman “households” that often included several generations as well as uncles and aunts, clients, and indentured servants of the “paterfamilias”. The church too was a household -a gathering of related and unrelated persons all bound together by grace and the pursuit of holiness. It is important to notice that the first Christians had a multi-generational church, a church for the whole family together, not separated by different age groups. 

If our families are to be all that they are meant to be -schools of wisdom and courage- they will have to become more like the church, households where we are actively formed into something more than our culture would ask us to be. And if our churches are to be all they are meant to be, they will have to become more like family -household-like contexts of daily life where we are all nurtured and developed into the persons we are meant to be and can become.

We’ve always needed community wider than the solitary, nuclear family to thrive, and we surely need it now.

Hollow Fruit

Without a doubt, compared to human beings just one century ago, we are more globally connected, better informed about many aspects of the world, in certain respects more productive, and -thanks to GPS and Google Maps- certainly less lost. But are we more patient, kind, forgiving, fearless, committed, creative than they were? And if we are, how much credit should technology receive?

In countless ways our lives are easier than our grandparents’. But in what really matters -for example, wisdom and courage- it seems very hard to argue that our lives are overall better.

Does technology make me the kind of human being who could contribute something of lasting value to my family, my neighbors, my society, and our broken world?

Technology is good at serving human beings. It does almost nothing to actually form human beings.

Anything that offers easy everywhere does nothing (well, almost nothing) to actually form human capacities.

In the most intimate setting of the household, where the deepest human work of our lives is meant to take place, technology distracts and displaces us far too ofter, undermining the real work of becoming persons of wisdom and courage.

Will this help me become less foolish and more wise? Will this help me become less fearful and more courageous?

We will have to teach our children, from early on, that we are not here as parents to make their lives easier but to make them better. We will tell them -and show them- that noting matters more to our family than creating a home where all of us can be known, loved, and called to grow. 

2. Shaping Space

WE WANT TO CREATE MORE THAN WE CONSUME. SO WE FILL THE CENTER OF OUR HOME WITH THINGS THAT REWARD SKILL AND ACTIVE ENGAGEMENT.

 

Fill the center of your life together –the literal center, the heart of your home, the place where you spend the most time together- with the things that reward creativity, relationship, and engagement. Push technology and cheap thrills to the edges; move deeper and more lasting things to the core.

Homes still need a center, and the best things to put in the center of our homes are engaging things –things that require attention, reward skill, and draw us together the way the hearth once did.

Priceless Things

If you do only one thing in response to this blog series, I urge you to make it this: Find the room where your family spends the most time and ruthlessly eliminate the things that ask little of you and develop little in you. Move the TV to a less central location –and ideally a less comfortable one. And begin filling the space that is left over with opportunities for creativity and skill, beauty and risk.

This is the central nudge of the tech-wise life: to make the place where we spend the most time the place where easy everywhere is hardest to find. This simple nudge, all by itself, is a powerful antidote to consumer culture, the way of life that finds satisfaction mostly in enjoying what other people have made.

A single pencil can produce more “colors” of gray and black than the most high-tech screen can reproduce.

For a child’s creative development, the inexpensive, deep, organic thing is far better than the expensive, broad, electronic thing.

In the center, put the things that both adults and children will find endlessly engaging, demanding, and delightful.

The Tech-Wise Family

Over the next few weeks we are going to be discussing a few technology tips on Tuesdays. I recently read The Tech-Wise Family by Andy Crouch and thought it well suited for the modern family. It can be a daily guide to navigate our world that has become enmeshed with technology.

Here are some introductory remarks on the proper place of technology.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us bond with the real people we have been given to love.

Technology is in its proper place when it starts great conversations.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us take care of the fragile bodies we inhabit.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us acquire skill and mastery of domains that are the glory of human culture.

Technology is in its proper place when it helps us cultivate awe for the created world we are part of and responsible for stewarding.

Technology is in its proper place only when we use it with intention and care.

A new approach to technology

A new or better approach to technology involves radically recommitting ourselves to what family is about – what real life is about. Our homes aren’t meant to be just refueling stations, places where we and our devices rest briefly, top up our charge, and then go back to frantic activity. They are meant to be places where the very best of life happens.

We are continually being nudges by our devices toward a set of choices. The question is whether those choices are leading us to the life we actually want. I want a life of conversation and friendship, not distraction and entertainment; but every day, many times a day I’m nudged in the wrong direction. One key part of the art of living faithfully with technology is setting up better nudges for ourselves.

Nudges will never, on their own, build the wisdom and courage we need -partly because we often can’t control our environment, not matter how much we’d like to. We need to change something inside of us as well: to develop the strength to make good choices even when everything around us is nudging, or pushing, us in the wrong direction. And for that we need disciplines.

Spiritual disciplines

The central disciplines of the spiritual life, as taught by generations of Christian saints, have stayed the same for twenty centuries: solitude, silence, fasting.

The discipline of Sabbath, for example, doesn’t just help us take one day a week to enjoy deep and restorative rest; it helps us make choices the rest of the week to avoid anxiety and pride. The most powerful choices we will make in our lives are not about specific decisions but about patterns of life.

Because technology is devoted primarily to making our lives easier, it discourages us from disciplines.

So here’s the plan

The first and deepest is to choose character -to make the mission of our family, for children and adults alike, the cultivation of wisdom and courage.

The second is to shape space -to make choices about the place where we live that put the development of character and creativity at the heart of our home.

And the third is to structure time -to build rhythms into our lives, on a daily, weekly, and annual basis, that make it possible for us to get to know one another, God, and our world in deeper and deeper ways.

 

Tech-Wise Family: 1&2. Choosing Character & Shaping Space

Tech-Wise Family: 3&4. Structuring Time & Waking and Sleeping

Tech Wise Family: 5&6. Learning and Working & The Good News about Boredom

Tech Wise Family: 7&8. The Deep End of the (Car) Pool & Naked and Unashamed

Tech Wise Family: 9&10. Why Singing Matters & In Sickness and in Health