Monday, March 24, 2008

Welcome to the Next

Hey everybody! These are indeed exciting times. We have launched our new website, performed the first (to my knowledge) live Bible Study web cast, created Mp3 downloads of those Bible Studies and now we have created this blog. Right now we are set up to potentially be the first virtual church in all of church history. KURIOS has ventured outside of the walls of a church building and at this point in our history we are more virtual than actual. However, this has not distracted from the vision God gave me of a traditional style church with four walls and a pulpit. It has, though, taken the technology and tools of our computer savvy culture to best reach as many people possible with the provocative message of Jesus Christ.

There is some criticism that we are like a body-builder on steroids: overly defined with a small package. But I see the steps we've taken as the skeleton of the body God has created KURIOS to be, not the end result. The vision I have for this church plant is much bigger than me. And so, by using the tools we have at hand, KURIOS is striving to create a new church culture using anything we can to teach sound doctrine and proclaim the life and message of Jesus. There are greater things at stake here than edgy graphics and new evangelism gimmicks: our goal is to see people impacted with the reality of Jesus Christ and be saved from sin and death. As the culture and technologies change we are committed to adapting to better communicate the Gospel. One day the internet will be as obsolete as cassette tapes, but the Gospel will still be relevant. So we will find new mediums to share its message with other people. We will follow Paul's example and become "all things to all men so that by all possible means (we) might save some." (1 Cor 9.22).

The protestant reformers had a saying, semper reformanda (always to be reformed), which articulated the pursuit of truth over tradition. The evangelical and fundamental traditions have ignored the heart behind this conviction, which was not to be corrupted by traditions and religion, but constantly pursue truth even at the expense of institution. Many have turned away from the culture that consumes the people they are hoping to reach with the Gospel, and, as a result, they have become culturally illiterate and irrelevant.

Today, the rebirth of reformation is demonstrated by such movements as the Emergent and Emerging churches. And although these schools of thought are as equally diverse as they are similar, they try to address the same philosophical, spiritual, and cultural issues faced by the church in a post-Christian society. And although KURIOS leans toward the Emerging (theologically conservative) church side of the debate, the reality is that it would be a mistake to swear loyalty to any definition or theologian or successful pastor, no matter how cool the website is. These things are unimportant and can distract from the calling Christians have been given which is to proclaim the Gospel and make disciples out of people who do not know Jesus. This is the big E on the eye chart that most of us have missed. And we are just now repenting and getting back to the basics (hopefully with a little style).

2 comments:

Rogue Wolfe said...

Very nice. Very nice indeed.

Aehric said...

Amen brother! But, while not the main point at all, "edgy graphics" are good too. ;)