Below is an excellent quote from Howard Snyder that helps us to distinguish between church and kingdom. We have started to learn the difference at Southside…
Basically kingdom ministry is the goal and and church becomes the fruit, or receptacle, of kingdom ministry. What is kingdom ministry? One of the most basic of definitions is: speaking the words and doing the works of Jesus. Jesus spoke truth at all times, and His words emanated from a heart filled with of deep compassion, empathy, and unconditional love. The works of Jesus include loving, serving, feeding, prayer for healing, washing feet, speaking the truth in love, a sensitivity to the heart of the Father, etc. Someone has humorously stated that, “Jesus came to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.”
Here’s what Paul told the Corinthians:
“For what have I to do with judging outsiders? Do you not judge those who are within the church?” 1 Corinthians 5:12
Our goal and motivation with outsiders is to speak and act in such a way as to point them to a loving Creator God who is alive and available for an intimate relationship. (Who wouldn’t want that!?!?) Notice there is judgement for those of us inside the church. The Greek word is krinō and it basically means “to call into question” (see also Acts 23:6, 24:21). There is accountability for our actions as members of God’s Church.
Kingdom is a gospel word — along with grace and cross. It’s when we hold these three gospel words in appropriate tension that we engage the appropriate biblical expression of the Gospel (e.g. kingdom and grace without the cross will lead us into pluralistic liberalism, kingdom and cross without grace will lead us into moralistic legalism).
With all this in mind consider Snyder’s words:
“The church gets in trouble whenever it thinks it is in the church business rather than the kingdom business. In the church business, people are concerned with church activities, religious behavior in spiritual things. In the kingdom business, people are concerned with kingdom activities, all human behavior and everything God has made, visible and invisible. Kingdom people see human affairs as saturated with scriptural meaning and kingdom significance. Kingdom people seek first the kingdom of God and its justice; church people often put church work above concerns of justice, mercy and truth. Church people think about how to get people into the church; Kingdom people think about how to get the church into the world. Church people worry that the world might change the church; Kingdom people work to see the church change the world… If the church has one great need, it is this: to be set free for the kingdom of God, to be liberated from itself as it has become in order to be itself as God intends.”[1]
Southside: Lets “go ye…” to Manchester.
If you haven’t already, grab one of those Missional Prayer Guides in the foyer and fill it out (it’s pretty self-explanatory), place it in your Bible, and pull it out a few times a week to pray acquaintances, friends, and family across the page (right to left). And don’t forget to use a pencil…
[1] Howard A. Snyder. Liberating the Church, The Ecology of Church and Kingdom, Inter-Varsity Press 1983:11.