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I’ve deliberately argued that the local church is a priority for change -it’s where you break the cycle and start heading toward winning the city. But I also want to argue that denominations are of vital importance in the long term/big picture.
My reasons are:
1. (existing) Denominations have already fought the battles about how they believe the church should practice. They have the areas like baptism/liturgy/church governance decided and are therefore free to move forward with things like winning their city.
2. Denominations make sense as a way to co-ordinate resources. Churches can have funds centrally directed to:
- the Bible colleges which train their ministers and lay people
- Churches in areas which don’t generate enough income to pay a minister or run a building
- Care for the poor on a city-wide scale
- Run city-wide campaigns, evangelistic or otherwise
3. Denominations are already usually spread across a city and have property and infrastructure in place
4. Denominations often have historical links into the community and institutions like schools, nursing homes, prisons, hospitals and so on.
Denominations have, for historical reasons, always been a big feature of Adelaide Christianity. There are big churches in all the major ones and likewise there are good biblical churches in each. But there is one thing that denominations don’t tend to exhibit in Adelaide – none act as a consistent brand.*
Maybe stylistically there are some that are consistent, but theologically and purpose-wise they are pretty divided. If someone asked you ‘where’s a good church to go to?’ you couldn’t say ‘go to a baptist church’ or an anglican church. You’d have to be specific and name the particular church in that suburb that you had confidence in. I reckon that is crazy! You ought to be able to say go to the church of this ‘brand’ and know with some confidence that the brand means something. That you can trust it has this general theology and purpose.
Winning a city takes winning pulpits to start with, but winning them in every part of the city in the end. And ideally across a denomination. Denominations have great value for the reasons numbered above, but also for their power to provide a brand.
If a denomination can’t (even almost) entirely come on board after some time then I’d propose going out side the existing ones for a meta-denomination. Naming a movement where any church who is
- like-minded theologically
- has the purpose of winning the city
- wants to pool resources to achieve the kind of things above
- wants to belong to a brand that engenders confidence and is city wide/ubiquitous
Then they might get on board. I think that would be a great step toward winning the city.
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*I don’t know a great deal about pentecostal/aog churches but they may be an exception. Still i’ve said in comments previously I’m really interested in reformed/conservative theology…I think that has the best chance of winning the city.