The Guide contains how-to-do-it advice on starting, developing and sustaining fresh expressions of church based on shared experiences.
More about The Guide
The Guide contains how-to-do-it advice on starting, developing and sustaining fresh expressions of church based on shared experiences.
More about The Guide
This page contains the following:
A fresh expressions journey

An example, which also illustrates how real-life fresh expressions tend to be more messy than our four main circles might imply, is provided by American Neil Cole (in Organic Church, Jossey-Bass, 2005). Cole has been involved in planting hundreds of cell churches in just a few years.
He describes how a small
team might, for example, throw a barbecue for a block of apartments and
strike up friendships with some of those who turn up (loving and
serving).
As part of these friendships, team members share their faith. If someone becomes interested, the team might suggest that the person invites friends and family to his or her apartment to hear more. Those who are interested come back the next week and a small group begins to form (building community).
The group explores the Christian faith (exploring discipleship). As members come into faith, they are encouraged to be church where they are, in the apartment (church taking shape).
In this example, the four circles overlap closely - so much so that the second and third circles (building community and exploring discipleship) become virtually one. Even so, the underlying dynamic of 'A fresh expressions journey' remains: loving and listening, building community, exploring discipleship and becoming church.
In some
situations, 'loving and serving' may include church plants that use
lively worship and relevant apologetics to reach people who do not
currently attend church. These plants will be authentic fresh
expressions if they arise within a network of loving relationships, if
the missional team has discerned that worship and apologetics are the
best way of serving the people it is called to serve, and if the
worship and apologetics take a culturally appropriate form.
'Building
community' can take many forms – from a mums and toddlers group in
which members make good friends, to a spirituality evening class
attending a film together, to an all-age event in which food plays an
important part. Community may centre on gathering together or be more
dispersed (such as friendships nurtured through the week). It can be
mainly face-to-face, online or both.Moving to 'exploring discipleship' involves holistic evangelism. We are aware that 'evangelism' has unhelpful connotations for some people, yet it is vital to the process of developing a fresh expression. In human terms, it is what moves people through the circles.
It can be done at any time during 'loving and serving' and 'building community' – and indeed earlier, during the listening process. It may involve one or more of the following elements:
Acts of
kindness. If people are to see Jesus, they need to see
his heart of love. This is best shown in acts of kindness. A lads and
dads football team might support a family with a disabled son on their
housing estate. A book club with a spiritual dimension might provide
financial support for a school library in Uganda.
Many people long to be associated with something good. They struggle in their everyday lives to be as good as they want to be. Belonging to a group that has an altruistic dimension may help them achieve some of the goodness they aspire to. As their hearts are warmed by this experience, they may become more committed to the group and more open to exploring what it means to follow Christ.
Missional worship is our phrase for what Ann Morisy calls 'apt liturgy'. It is designed for people who have little faith or are confused about faith. It provides opportunities for individuals to encounter God, heighten their spiritual awareness and encourage them to explore Jesus.
For instance,
leaders of a luncheon club might put candles on the tables after the
plates have been cleared away, play some Christian music, invite
someone to read a few verses from the Bible, allow time for silent
prayer and ask someone else to read a couple of written prayers - all
lasting about 20 minutes. Guests could leave straight after lunch if
they wished or stay behind for this simple act of worship.
Some church-run cafés have adjacent quiet rooms, perhaps with lighted candles, where individuals can pray and reflect silently. A prayer board played a key role in encouraging ethnic women to talk about spiritual questions.
As church begins to take shape, missional worship can evolve into a fuller expression of Christian worship.
The experience of healing can play an important part in opening individuals to God. In a culture that strongly values experience, healing can give people an experience of God.
Healing may come through the love of Christian friends, through the prayer of Christians (in their personal devotions or corporate worship), through healing services or through other kinds of prayer ministry. Not raising unrealistic expectations is clearly important.
Or there could
be enough people to form an explorers' group. The group might use an
adapted version of a published course such as Essence, Christianity
Explored, Alpha or Emmaus. Or it might use home-grown material. Or it
might follow the example of one person who invited her friends to
explore spirituality: 'Jesus is known as one of the world's greatest
spiritual teachers. Why don't we look at the stories he told and see if
we agree with them?'
As cells
form, sometimes they will cluster together in monthly or occasional
meetings. Some will strengthen the spiritual life of the original group
from which they sprang so that the group becomes more like church. A
luncheon club, for example, might incorporate communion from time to
time. An Alpha cell might take responsibility for future Alpha courses,
designed for people in the wider group.A flourishing fresh expression will show fruit in lots of ways. One will be to reproduce itself – to do it again. Reproduction is a vital part of what it means to be church.
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