| Eight patterns of missional faithfulness
Pattern 1, Missional Vocation. The congregation is discovering together
the missional vocation of the community. It is beginning to redefine
"success" and "vitality" in terms of faithfulness
to God's calling and sending. It is seeking to discern God's specific
missional vocation ("charisms" - gifts) for the entire
community and for all of its members.
Pattern 2, Biblical Formation and Discipleship. The missional
church is a community in which all members are involved in learning
what it means to be disciples of Jesus. The bible is normative in
this church's life. Biblical formation and discipling are essential
for the congregation.
Pattern 3, Taking Risks as a Contrast Community. The missional
church is learning to take risks for the sake of the gospel. It
understands itself as different from the world because of its participation
in the life, death and resurrection of its Lord. It is raising questions,
often threatening ones, about the church's cultural captivity, and
it is grappling with the ethical and structural implications of
its missional vocation. It is learning to deal with internal and
external resistance.
Pattern 4, Practices That Demonstrate God's Intent for the World.
The pattern of the church's life as community is a demonstration
of what God intends for the life of the whole world. The practices
of the church embody mutual care, reconciliation, loving accountability,
and hospitality. A missional church is indicated by how Christians
behave toward one another.
Pattern 5, Worship as Public Witness. Worship is the central
act by which the community celebrates with joy and thanksgiving
both God's presence and God's promised future. Flowing out of its
worship, the community has a vital public witness.
Pattern 6, Dependence on the Holy Spirit. The missional
community confesses its dependence upon the Holy Spirit, shown in
particular in its practices of corporate prayer.
Pattern 7, Pointing Toward the Reign of God. The missional
church understands its calling as witness to the gospel of the in-breaking
reign of God, and strives to be an instrument, agent, and sign of
that reign. As it makes its witness through its identity, activity,
and communication, it is keenly aware of the provisional character
of all that it is and does. It points towards the reign of God that
God will certainly bring about, but knows that its own response
is incomplete, and that its own conversion is a continuing necessity.
Pattern 8, Missional Authority. The Holy Spirit gives the
missional church a community a community of persons who, in a variety
of ways and with a diversity of functional roles and titles, together
practice the missional authority that cultivates within the community
the discernment of missional vocation and is intentional about the
practices that embed that vocation in the community's life.
Source: "Treasure in Clay Jars - Patterns in Missional Faithfulness"
from the Gospel and Our Culture Network (Eerdmans, 2004):
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