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A Vision For Christian Servanthood
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Note: When this paper was presented to the combined leadership and staff of Xenos (about 400 people) in the fall of 1993, it immediately precipitated a division in the church. Xenos, already suffering division two months earlier, could not agree on the direction of the church. Finally, the elders called on Senior Pastor Dennis McCallum to articulate what he saw as the correct vision for Xenos. Particularly important issues at the time included the place of leadership in the church (Xenos has historically been very loose, almost anarchical in its polity) and how to view leaders and workers who have been "wounded" at the hands of fellow Christians. After revising the paper with the elders, McCallum presented it. A month later, the leaders voted by an 85-percent majority to confirm the elders' direction. In all, over 1,300 people left Xenos during this period, reducing the church from just under 4,000 to just over 2,500. Because most of those leaving went to other evangelical churches more in accord with their own views, Xenos leaders today feel both those leaving and Xenos are better off, because we are more cohesive in our direction and philosophy of ministry.
Our vision for advancing in the cause of Christ today should still, as it has in the past, center around the formation, nature and composition of our work force. Xenos has always been viewed as a church with an extraordinary work force. However, today the values which have brought us this far are not as clear as they should be, and a general sense of confusion has settled over the church. Today, we have to decide whether we want a work force that is divided, demoralized and immature, or a work force whose way of life reflects godly values and the effectiveness that comes with those values. Our future success as a house-church planting movement depends on these values.
At the heart of our vision today is our work force. We believe the Lord would have our church set about the task of building up a godly work force which can do his bidding. This work force is not the same as our leadership, but it should include all our leaders. In addition, there are those who are Christian modelsexamples of mature and righteous living, perhaps without the gifting or suitability for leadership. These people may be involved in prayer ministries, healing ministries or service. They live the same values we want modeled by the leaders and have gained maturity and experience in serving God. Therefore, they should be considered a part of our committed force of servants of the Lord.
An authentic servant force of the right sort is a potent tool in the hands of the Lord. Whether winning the lost, serving the poor, planting churches or doing foreign mission work, nothing will accomplish these aspects of our mission more than a godly and mature work force. The consensus of the church also arises from this work force, and all sense of vision and unity emanate from this group. Committed servants draw motivation and edification from being with like-minded people. When we are "intent on the same purpose and united in spirit," we experience fellowship that is nourishing and refreshing. The mission of Xenos is well known. We now need the quality work force to carry it out. As Watchman Nee says in The Normal Christian Worker, "It's not the method but the man that matters."
Today the elders are setting out to establish a Servant Team made up of those who will take upon themselves the burden of following the Lord at the highest level. These are Christians from all ministries who understand what God wants, and who have denied self to accomplish his will.
Behind the servant team is the central leadership of the church - The upper leadership of our church is the elders and the upper-level staff. Our leadership needs to be strongconfident that they are obeying God's will for our church, and unapologetic for their direction. Confusion and lack of certainty or agreement are not signs of humility. Jesus was never confused or uncertain, but he was humble. We should put away any notion that decisive, strong leadership is arrogant leadership, because the church will be crippled by such postmodern notions. The central leadership and staff should seek to support the Servant Team as they pursue their ministries. They should also join with existing Servant Team members to facilitate the raising up of new Servant Team members.
At the same time, the central leadership should provide for and manage programs that provide specialized ministries, such as children's ministries, missions or ministry to the poor. They will not be concerned in the first place with the size of our church, but with establishing our work force, upgrading the quality of the work force and providing a good environment for growth to those who want it.
Stated succinctly, this is how we see God's vision for our church:
"Xenos should set out to build a highly trained, sophisticated, caring, leadable, cohesive, committed, and flexible force of Christian servants all operating for the right motives most of the time-- namely, serving the Lord and doing his will."
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This is how we understand the development of our work force in more detail. By examining the vision statement above, you can see key phrases and terms defined below:
However, when it comes to church policies and rules relating to how ministry is done we will call for leadability, with or without dissent. Dissent also must be within legitimate bounds. (See below.) The Servant Team also has the opportunity to affirm or replace each elder every three years by vote. The principle of rebellion is the principle of Satan. We cannot do God's work using Satan's principle.
Commitment in this context also includes commitment to our particular church, and the mission and vision of our church community. Our commitment to God can be lived out in any local church, but it is important that mature servants of God find one church where they can give themselves to God and others. In the case of those in our Servant Team, the church of choice is Xenos Fellowship.
Giving of ourselves should include not only time and energy, but also financial support of this church's general fund, the building fund (when applicable) and our missions (IICor. 8:7). This is important, first because the worker believes in the cause of our church, and second as a role model for others to follow. For our Servant Team, the terms for qualification for the Fiscal Support Team would be the very least level we could accept as a reasonable commitment. Most of us should be well above these levels. Of course, there are provisions for those with special financial situations to be accepted into the Fiscal Support Team even though they are unable to give at a normal level.
Commitment also means servants in our force are committed to the direction and vision of this church as a whole, and not just to their particular role in it (1Cor. 12:14; Rom. 12:10). This sometimes implies the willingness to let one's own ministry decrease that the Lord might increase (Jn. 3:30). Self-effacement and humility include the willingness to sacrifice our ministry position for the overall good. In sports, the coach has the right to put players on the bench or on the field at a given time, and to make these decisions without being attacked by the players. Likewise, we need to accept constraints at times, often for reasons we so not fully understand.
Commitment to our mission includes the idea of regular attendance and prayerful concern for meetings like the Central Teachings and other fellowship-wide meetings where participation lends power and edification to everyone there. Serious workers should show up at such events every time they are able.
Commitment to this church carries the connotation of loyalty. Forming earthly loyalties is not wrong, especially when we believe the people to whom we are loyal are engaged in serving the Lord. Of course, any such loyalty is never unconditional. Still, we can be loyal even when we don't agree on every point, and in fact, especially when we don't agree on every point. When we agree on every point, we don't need any loyalty because nothing challenges our involvement. Only when disagreements surface are we confronted with the need for loyalty. If we are unable to deliver such loyalty, it suggests we have a problem with the leadership so serious it could interfere with our ability to play an effective role as part of the team. When we have serious reservations with the leadership or others on the team, we need to be proactive in resolving those problems.
We are here to serve God. As such, we can't claim we need to be schmoozed with every change, and have our feathers smoothed at every step. These claims may apply to some extent, to the new and immature believers, but cannot be claimed for leaders or other models of Christian living who make up the Servant Team. A servant who needs to be schmoozed over bumps in the road cannot be trusted at any but the lowest level of responsibility. Such people are dependent on higher human leadership for their stability. God wants those to serve him who will move forward whether there is human affirmation or not.
Godly servants of the Lord need the toughness that only comes from denying one's self and picking up our cross to follow Christ. Such servants of the Lord have to be prepared to suffer dreadfully at times, and insufficient encouragement would be one of the least of these trials.
Servants of the Lord know what other people do or don't do is not the reason for their spiritual state. Those who attribute their own quitting, defection or personal sin to the actions of others are revealing wrong motives for ministry. We cannot accept such a verdict. Each of us has been let down by leaders and colleagues and we will be let down again. But this is never an excuse for turning aside from the path the Lord has for us.
We cannot agree that others made us fall from the Lord's way, or that we can only get up from our fallen state when these others do x, y or z to repair the damage. If we have diverged from God's way, we are the only ones to blame, and we must rise up to serve the Lord and stop viewing our ministry horizontally and sociologically.
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No church can be any better than its work force. We will be able to accomplish important things for the Lord if we have consensus at the level of our work force. I can see the following themes as likely practical outworking of our vision:
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To this end, we have drafted a servant covenant, first for leaders, and then for other mature Christian workers. The standards for participants will reflect the understanding of normative mature servanthood as described in this paper.
We should note that Nehemiah produced a written covenant for the leaders in his day, and things like giving were included in detail (Neh. 9:38- 11:2). This was especially appropriate at a time when the people of God were facing a crisis of vision and direction. We realize that many will not desire to join us in this covenant at this time. However, it is important that we make this option available to those who share our conviction, so we can expressly affirm our common vision for our church.
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