Archives For Verge 2010

Verge Reflections, Day 3

Chris —  February 8, 2010

The Verge Conference ended with a rally.  Local boy John Burke led off by saying “if the formerly unchurched are not leading the church, the church is dying.” Compared to some of the cutting edge thinkers that show up at these conferences, John’s methods may seem a little bit traditional.  However, the fruit, Gateway Church, fits his description perfectly.  All talk of missional-ness doesn’t really matter if you don’t have the fruit.

Jeff Vanderstelt said what should be obvious: do life the way you do normally, just with gospel intentionality.  It’s not that tough.  Hang out with your friends-including those who don’t know Christ.  Dave Gibbons suggested that we walk through crowds slowly, seeing the blessing of God on each person.

Francis Chan ended the conference by marching through each book of the New Testament, showing how pain and persecution are unavoidable when living a missional life.  Having accidentally stumbled into more than one fox holes, I know this to be very true.  I just hope that the people of Christ represented at Verge are ready for the pain, because the world needs us.

Verge Reflections Day 2

Chris —  February 6, 2010

The theme that rose to the forefront of the second day of Verge is just the old Reformation call to be a priesthood of all believers.  The problem is, as Ed Stetzer put it, most Evangelical churches look like pre-Reformation Catholic churches.  All the work is done by a leader with an almost gnostic secret knowledge, otherwise known as “seminary training.”  The answer is to help every Christian understand they are a missionary, and, as Alan Hirsch put it “your baptism is your commission.”

A second theme that rose to the top is developing an awareness of the people and systems around you.  I’ve long been challenged by the question “do you really know any non-Christians?”  But Dave Watson expanded this by asking if we even try to develop strategies for people who don’t live like us.  There are people who work graveyard shift and are up all night, but why aren’t there churches meeting at 4 in the morning?

My favorite presentation was by Hugh Halter of Denver, Colorado.  Hugh is disturbingly honest in person in a way that his book cannot get across.  His concept of a church with simple outwardly focused structure, that is still hard to get in to, sounds more authentic and natural than any Sunday morning show and awkward living room Bible Study I’ve ever taken part.

I’m excited for day three.