The organic church has been a frequent topic of discussion on this blog. And Leadership journal has featured articles and interviews from Alan Hirsch, Neil Cole, and Frank Viola. Like us, Mark Galli has an appreciation for the efforts and perspective of this movement. But what happens when the organic church starts to wilt? Galli, senior managing editor of Christianity Today, wrote the following article to encourage and caution the movement. The full text can be read on CT’s website. Along with responses from Neil Cole and Frank Viola.
I love the work that Neil Cole is doing—and Alan Hirsch (The Forgotten Ways), Bob Roberts (Transformation: How Glocal Churches Transform Lives and the World), Frank Viola (Finding Organic Church), and many, many others.
In one form or another, they are champions of “organic church.” The term is fluid, but it contains at least three ingredients: Frustration with the-church-as-we-know-it, a focus on people (vs. programs) and mission (vs. institutional maintenance), and a vision to transform the world.
As Neil Cole put it in his book Organic Church, “It is not enough to fill our churches; we must transform our world.” He puts it similarly in his latest effort, Church 3.0. The book is ostensibly about how to shift from program-driven and clergy-led institutions to churches that are “relational, simple, intimate, and viral.” Still, says Cole, “Changing the church is not the idea of this book … . The only reason to shift from Church 2.0 to Church 3.0 is to change the world.”
I love the passion. And the prophetic word to institutionalism (believe me, I know the evils of institutionalism: I’m an Anglican!). And the vision to make Christ’s love and grace known to the four corners of the planet.
What I worry about is the coming crash of organic church.
And after that, I worry about the energetic men and women at the forefront of the movement. Will they become embittered and abandon the church, and maybe their God?
On not kidding ourselves
That the organic church movement will crash, I have no doubt. Every renewal movement in church history has either derailed immediately or produced temporary renewal at the expense of long-term unintended consequences.
Continue reading Mark Galli’s article on Christianity Today’s site.
Read Neil Cole and Frank Viola’s responses to Mark Galli’s article.