2016 is what
has become jokingly known as the year of no baptisms! Of course there were many across the globe
but for the first time in my ministry there was no baptisms in the church I
served. Melt down. I wrote a list of
names I had baptised over the previous 8 years – 50 odd – and as I wrote each
name, I realised that only one was conversion growth. All the others were people with some sort of
church background, be it children of the church, transfer from other Christian
background or people who had come back to Jesus in later life. One conversion in 8 years – blood, sweat and
tears. One! I went on a journey with the
church, how might we become a church that sees third or fourth generation non-Christian
come to faith and become central to our life together. I concluded; it was almost impossible. During this time God began to call me into
missional listening. A calling, born from Paul in Athens, to listen to the
community so intently that when the invitation comes to share the Gospel, I
could do so from a deep place of understanding.
After many miracles this calling became an actual thing and my old
identity as a Baptist minister in a traditional church had died. As I began to listen for what might be next
in my ministry, what might God have planned with the listening project – I had
entered unknowingly into a liminal season, where an old identity had died but a
new one was yet to be born. A liminal
space.
My favourite
illustration of liminality comes from Coldplay (via Steve Aisthorpe). Liminal
space is the space between the two trapezes. You have let go of one and are yet
to grab the second. Liminal space. And
it is not just I that find myself there, but also many in the Western
church. Alan Donaldson spoke
prophetically at Baptist Assembly last year stating ‘something has died, but
something has not yet been born’, liminal space.
Liminal
space is frightening. Loss of identity is uncomfortable. Basic questions no
longer have easy answers – everything feels deconstructed. Funding can be fragile – with no exciting
project to sale. Motivation weakens to
lack of end goal. Attendance is few due to people not knowing what they are
signing up for. False prophets with big dreams promise huge rewards and carry
people away. It is scary in liminal
seasons.
And this
fear can lead us in two different ways. We can follow the Israelites in their
liminality. They have died from their
old lives as slaves but not yet to reach the promised land – a time of liminal
wandering, learning to trust God. As
they spend time in liminality, they cry out for their old identities in Egypt –
there they knew who they were, knew things would be provided, lets go back to
the dead – at least we knew who were and what we were doing. Or we could join the disciples in the
upstairs room. They have been instructed
by Jesus to not do anything, to have a time of liminality where all they do is
pray – as Jesus left them for heaven – to wait until the Holy Spirit comes and
compels them into their new identities.
But they can’t just wait and pray, they need to something new – lets
replace Judas, call lots, call Mateus, and lets just say we do not here about
Mateus again in scripture!
We want to
run back or begin the new. I constantly want
to run back to my church role, where I knew how my week worked, knew I had
money and accommodation, a team to work with.
I constantly want to run forward and plant a church, or exciting mission
project. But the call is to remain in
the liminal. Because it is in the
liminal that God transforms and it is out of the liminal the new is born. In liminal space, Joseph loses his identity
as favourite son and becomes redeemer of his people. Ruth loses her identity as a Moabite and
becomes part of the genealogy of Jesus.
Paul, blinded, loses his role as chief church persecutor and becomes
great church planter. It is in the
liminal we are transformed and the new is then born for us.
So how do we
stay in the liminal if it is so scary and our natural instinct is to run back
or forward. Four thoughts:
1).
Stillness. When you are flying from one trapeze to the other the posture needed
is of absolute stillness – so that you are easy to catch. The same is true with God. Stillness. Living
life like a Swing, the further back into intimacy with God the more able to
join in the mission of God.
2). DNA.
Coldplay as well as talking about trapezes mention that we are a comma not a
full stop. As we spend time looking at
who we are as community, celebrating all God has done, the future is born with
that same DNA but in new creative ways.
3).
Communities of discernment. The most important learning as we missionally
listen was to learn to come to God with empty hands rather than full
hands. Too often we come with our ideas
and plans and ask God to bless them.
Liminal space is admitting we do not have a clue what we are doing and
together as community coming with empty hands asking God to show us the
new.
4). Worship.
Liminal space, like all times, is a time for worship. IT is as we worship that we are transformed
and we get the opportunity to witness to our great God. As we live lives of worship, the invitations
come form our communities, and the new becomes clear.
When we began
missionally listening, we believed that something new was on the horizon. What we have learnt is that it is the liminal
space that transformation takes place and outcomes beyond your imagining come
about supernaturally. May you embrace
liminality (as scary as it is), and may God do beyond your imagining where you
live, and the communities you serve.
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