St Kentigern's Parish Church

A Church Without Walls

Presbytery of Irvine and Kilmarnock
A resource to help Kirk Sessions, congregations and members to discuss, reflect upon and benefit from the Report of the Special Commission anent Review and Reform

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© 2001
Grant Barclay

A Church Without Walls > Convener's speech

This is the introductory speech given to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in May, 2001 by the Convener of the Special Commission anent Review and Reform, the Rev Peter Neilson. This is also available at http://www.churchofscotland.org.uk


Moderator, this is a time for discernment.

In General Assembly, we gather to discern what God may be saying to us as God's people at this time. The Special Commission on Review and Reform offers one voice among many, praying that together we may discern the call of the Spirit. We see the way ahead as a relational reformation rooted in the grace of God. We see the way ahead as a movement where the people of God walk free to share in the mission of God. We see a church without walls. We see people with Jesus at the centre, travelling where Jesus takes them.

The future begins today
We have discerned the primary purposes of the Church by returning to the Gospels. The core calling of the Church is to follow Jesus as Lord, to share in the mission of Christ and to turn back to God and to neighbour in worship and witness. We call the Church to risk the way of Jesus.

We have described a journey, not a destination. We have focused on starting points for the journey that are accessible to all: following Jesus, being imaginatively local, building Christ-inspired friendships and releasing the gifts of God's people to the call of the Kingdom. If any Christian or any congregation takes any of these first steps of faith and obedience, a new Church will emerge in 20 years time that only God can create. No futuristic vision. God's future begins with today's obedience.

We have addressed the structures of the mind rather than organisation and procedures. In this we follow Jesus' way when he called for new wineskins for the new wine - challenging mindsets that could not see the Kingdom way. Old mindsets in new structures multiply old problems. Mindsets are renewed only through relationships with God and each other that go deeper and wider than our safety zones.

We have decided to entrust the process of change to the Spirit of God and the people of God. We may have been expected to introduce a managed process of change led by consultants and experts in organisational change. We decided against that. Every follower of Jesus here today is responsible before God for the church of God. We have no other plan.

Picture this . . .
But we do have a vision that wraps around two key words: "local and relational." Picture communities of Christian people wrestling with the call of Jesus Christ, helping each other live out the Gospel story in daily life. Picture local communities of faith where all generations find a home. Picture a new generation set free to create new churches from the ground up.

Forget the petty worship wars and the systems that suck our energy. Picture a crowd of people with Jesus at the centre, following where Jesus takes them. Picture Jesus introducing us to the people in the community he would call friends - and see the Church without walls gather round. Picture rich and poor in just relationships, with local church and global Church as partners in a movement of alternative globalisation.

Times have changed. Our 19th-century model of mission was simple: one minister in one building in one parish. Throughout the 20th century that model has creaked and groaned as congregations have united, ministers have become fewer and life has become less settled. And yet, the old mindset lives on as the assumed norm, chastising us as we struggle to make it work. It is time to let it go.

Picture our society: push-button, quick-click, multiple-choice lifestyles with designer identities. People meet in cafes and clubs, in markets and shopping malls. Patterns of belonging and believing are more fluid. "A Church without walls" meets people where they are and accompanies them as friends - like Jesus on the Emmaus Road: listening to the dreams and disillusionment, gently setting this dislocated life in the redeeming story of suffering and resurrection, and sharing the hospitality of a supper table where Christ makes his surprise appearance.

In this society we picture a simpler Church of fellow travellers, "strugglers anonymous" in a bruising world. This is a Church of hospitality and where the word of God is given a chance to burn in the hearts of those who are unlikely to sit in a pew to hear it. This is a Church for the adventurers who rise to the challenge of a world renewed in righteousness by God and for God as creation is healed.

Such a church will have learned the art of Christian friendship: so committed to the other that we let go our cherished ways for the sake of strangers who might become friends - our friends and the friends of Jesus; and so transparently honest about God that we give away what we have come to know of God's love in every way we can. Friendship is the starting point for discipleship. Discipleship is the basis of leadership.

The supporting and equipping of such a church will take many types of people: pastors helping others to care, youth workers helping young people find their voice, evangelists taking us to the borderlands of faith and doubt, communicators who are at home with the website and the mixing desk, teachers who can open Scripture to life and life to scripture, artists who touch places others cannot reach, contemplatives and intercessors who teach us to pray.

In a word, teamwork. It will take a community of leaders to build a community of God's people who will offer a sign of God's healing community in a fractured world.

The shape of things to come
But how will this happen?

We have seen a new shape for the Church. We have seen a Church that is "upside down". We have affirmed the local church as the centre of gravity for our nation-wide Church - the centre of gravity which pulls to itself a new regionalised support system as presbyterian interdependency is refocused to serve the local agenda; and a centre of gravity which draws to itself resources of people and money so that local vision and local initiative is funded and fuelled to point the way to the future.

The primary focus of this report is about the regeneration of local communities of faith by the grace of God in Jesus Christ.

The Committee on Presbytery Boundaries will describe the detail of the process of regionalisation and the consultation that will be involved. That process may take four to five years and with it will come a redefining of the role of the central administration. To anticipate the creative options of that vital process would be premature and so our comments on central administration are restricted to a few questions and some comments to carry forward.

We are embarking upon a staged process of evolution. While the longer process of structural change is underway we recommend a Parish and Community Development Fund as one possible way of fast-tracking some centrally held resources to fund local initiatives.

In the longer term, we ask for a review of our financial strategy. Inherited budgets are allocated to the current agendas of existing boards and committees, but these do not represent the emerging priorities for the emerging church. That budgeting task was beyond the competence of the Special Commission, and is remitted to the Assembly Council through the Co-ordinating Forum, where there is already a declared will to engage with this vital, but demanding, task.

In the midst of all this, we call the Church to pause - to pray and learn to live more consciously with God. The heart of reform is the reform of the heart. We recommend a Sabbath rest for the people of God. Just picture this - in Lent 2002 and 2003 a fast from church activities to allow time for prayerful retreat and deepening friendships.

We call for an investment of time in relationships with churches around us. This is where mindsets are changed as we learn to be open to people beyond our walls. Trust is developed over time. We travel together into a future shaped by God the Trinity.

Discerning and deciding
Moderator, this is a time for discernment.

Discernment begins with knowing our own hearts in the presence of God. The commission looked into our own hearts and saw two barriers to change - the barriers of fear and power. We ask the General Assembly to search their hearts as we engage in this conversation and debate, to discern where we may be limited by fear, or seduced by power.

We are at a critical moment in the life of the Church. We discern a mood for change. That mood can turn into a movement if a critical mass of people make the critical choices to follow where the Spirit is leading.

We discern Jesus walking on the stormy water, inviting us to step out of the boat and join him.

We discern the purpose, the shape and the process of continuing reform of the Church in the call of the Risen Christ:

"Follow me."