Home: Why Community is Necessary

Anyone who has ever moved to a new place knows that calling somewhere “home” is significant. As a young person who immigrated to New York City from China, I was an urban nomad, and each new neighborhood I lived in—almost always as a minority—shaped my identity.

Moving was part of the narrative of my immigrant family, and a continual reshaping of my identity marked my childhood as I interacted with new and distinct neighborhoods. I experienced the tension of trying to assimilate into those around me when I was outside of my home, only to revert to my Chinese culture at home with my family. Home was always an emotional shifting of gears for me.

Home: Humanity’s Most Visceral Ache

We are all searching for a home; we are all homesick. As Frederick Buechner wrote, “Home represents humanity’s most visceral ache — and our oldest desire.” Each of us is longing for something more, something permanent, something better. We are longing for a sense of place—for a home.

In Genesis, the very beginning of God’s story, one of the first things God provides for Adam and Eve is a home in the Garden of Eden. But because they distrust God’s provision and promise, we experience the Fall—and from that point on, the rest of the narrative is one of a people searching for a home. The people of God are taken from one home into exile, into the wilderness, back to a promised land, and then back into exile. Even the (arguably) most famous parable of the prodigal son is about home. The younger son takes leave, and the father bids him to come home. This deep, spiritual yearning for home is evident throughout scripture.

Since Eden, we’ve never really been home.

In Keeping Place: Reflections on the Meaning of Home, Jen Pollock Michele writes: “It is often supposed that despair is more intellectually credible than hope. According to the unbeliever, the Garden of Eden is just one more example of our great naiveté—the stuff of fairy tales…In other words, fairy tales tell not just good news but true news: death has no final word, evil is vanquished, and justice reigns. This world of make-believe is, in fact, the world we all want.”

God has imprinted on our hearts a yearning for a home where love triumphs. Where good overcome the brokenness around us, we yearn for a community that we can go and to tend to, people to love, and space to feast and share some of our deepest longings. He’s given us a yearning for a place to be ourselves, free from all the world outside of the demands of our homes. 

No matter how extravagant of an escape you plan away for a vacation, after a period of time, we all long for a return to home. That anchor of a place that only our home uniquely offers. A place where we have community. 

We all are tangibly seeking the very thing we all (including God’s people throughout the ages) yearn for in the depths of our spirits: home. This shared ache should move us to either invite others into a space of welcome or we should enter into those spaces that are there for God to transform us because Christ has called us as a people into a community.

For so many in our church, we are spiritually without a community or a home. We live as if we are saved individually, not as a community. 

A central theme which runs throughout the Bible is that God is creating a people who belong to him. Whether in the Old Covenant or the New, the work of God is the calling of a people. He is not merely saving individuals; He is building a new community in which he is the central participant. He is forming a new society out of the ashes of a fallen and rebellious human race. The development of a community lies at the heart of God’s covenant promise “I will be your God and you will be my people.” The church must take the call to be a new community with the utmost seriousness. God gets this across in a number of ways. —Tim Keller

One of the significant moments in the ushering of the ministry of Jesus on earth was his call to his disciples. Jesus welcomed them. He builds community and life together with them. Similarly, when we came to faith, Jesus welcomed us not only in that moment of conversion, but he continued to welcome us as a community. In a community defined by sharing life, to build the most meaningful relationship and friendships in our lives. Not through text messages, emails, or phone calls. But to be intentional and share life. 

We are gathering together and tethering ourselves to the community that God is forming in and through us. That is why the early church met together throughout the week to share life together through prayer, fellowship, study, and missions.  

The practice of hospitality defined the early church because it reflected the welcome of Christ. It was in the gatherings and reflected in the liturgy of worship of the welcoming of people who were identified as outsiders to become insiders and family. It is a household defined by the care they are experiencing together. 

The best testimony to the truth of the gospel is the quality of our life together. Jesus risked his reputation and the credibility of his story by tying them to how his followers live and care for one another in community (John 17:20-23). —Christine Pohl

So as we start a new season of Community Groups gathering together, ask yourself, who do you belong to? What community do you regularly spend time with in proximity? Who do you share life with? As you think of the relationships you have at church, do you feel like this? I am not making a difference in anyone’s life, and no one is making a difference in my life. 

Perhaps some of us need to pause and pray about what God is inviting us to be part of. Not as an individual person and not even as an individual family but rather as a community together walking to reflect this home that becomes a household of faith where we are growing together, seeing God in our midst through our time of fellowship together. 

I think the most transformative stories you hear about what God is doing are through these weekly gatherings. I have personally seen conversions happen where participants were not only struck by the Gospel being taught but how the Gospel was being displayed through the gatherings. I have also been part of groups where people experienced answered prayers that seemed impossible and also held onto each other in moments of despair. Also, I want to be honest and share a word of reality and caution. It is not a perfect community of perfected saints but fellow believers seeking to stagger towards Christ through speaking and living grace and truth into each other's lives. As Abigail Van Buren said, “The church is a hospital for sinners, not a museum for saints.” It is sometimes messy, and we will probably get disappointed, hurt, and offended, but there are resources in the community for reconciliation and restoration It will most likely not be a community that will fulfill all our hopes, but it will be a place where we can point to the what our heart deeply yearns for— homecoming.

But, we too, can have ultimate hope that one day, God will also fulfill our deepest longings for home. Until then, Christ has given us the church to live and long together.

LFCC Conference 2020
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From August 2-8, we will hold our annual Living Faith Conference. This year's conference, themed Uncommon Ground: Coming Together Through the Gospel, will be held online, and we hope that this makes it accessible for your family to join us for a very important time to practice church unity. Please note that this year's conference is free of charge; feel free to invite your friends and colleagues.

LFCC
Why Faith & Work?

A Question and Response Dialogue

The Faith & Work Ministry started 18 months ago. As we enter “season 2” of Faith & Work, we think it is important to ask: “Why do we have a Faith & Work Ministry?”

 

Why do we have a Faith & Work Ministry?

Jesus announces his gospel saying, “Repent, the Kingdom of God is at hand.” The phrase “Kingdom of God” indicates the entire world order is being reclaimed for renewal, including work. The Faith & Work Ministry exists because work is on Jesus’s agenda.


Our church has a lot going on already, why a separate work ministry?

Work in our time is broken. While personal experiences vary, fractures in work are widespread. Work is a poignant personal and cultural need in our time: Christianity has unique resources to offer in response, but most lack equipping & formation in this area: special attention is required.


Why should I participate in what this ministry offers?

Work is an act of worship, ultimately. As David Foster Wallace said:

“In the day-to-day trenches of adult life… there is no such thing as not worshipping. Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship.”

Worshipping Jesus in your work will bring full flourishing. “Pretty much anything else you worship will eat you alive”... in the long run. What worship animates your work? Can we serve two masters? Everyone sees our worship, but it is hard to see in ourselves. This unspoken witness is especially important for parents, whose children will likely imitate them, to their benefit or peril. This ministry helps us direct our worship at work.


That’s direct. It is difficult to know the long-term consequences of our current ways of working. I guess it is a matter of faith. What other barriers to participation do you see?

(1) Busyness, (2) a self-assessment that one currently has a pretty functional approach to work & life, and (3) a desire to forget work and focus on comforts. These challenges are pervasive in the Christian life: in a sense, everyone knows the “answers” here. We’ll merely say, “Come, join us for a few events and ‘taste and see that the LORD is good.’”


I want to go back to something you said earlier. Work in our time is “broken” and “fractured”? Why such strong language?

We see the fractures and breaks everywhere. A few observation will perhaps be helpful:

  1. A 2017 Gallup poll indicated 66 million of the 100 million strong American workforce are not engaged in their daily work. Because work matters, this is alarming.

  2. Increasing financial strain is making work more stressful. This pressure is immense for people with high student debt, but everyone worries about having enough for retirement.

  3. Higher connectivity and longer hours are adding additional stress. To cope, some withdraw. Others just dream of retirement.

  4. Many in revered and crucial professions are saying they would not recommend their children follow them into their field because the work has been distorted beyond repair.

In sum, we feel work in our time and place is a spiritual need the Church must serve.


OK. Some of that resonates. Anything to add from a uniquely Christian perspective?

At one point Christians spoke of seven deadly sins:  lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, and pride. All of us likely agree such sins cause problems in any setting, but don’t they seem almost normalized in our work culture? Idolatry at work is also widespread and accepted.


So, brokenness, fractures, and sin, and work is no exception. I guess I’m also bothered by the hollow feeling my work doesn’t matter, ultimately.

That is a key concern. Across our culture, people want more meaning and purpose in work. No-one wants to be a mere cog. Working merely for money is not noble enough for the human spirit: we desire fruitful, true, and good work. Other spiritual challenges persist as well: we all grieve for friends who feel defined, demeaned, trapped, enslaved, or addicted to their work.


How does a Faith & Work Ministry address these issues?

The Faith & Work Ministry brings the power of the gospel to bear on work. Work’s original goodness and purpose is being restored by Jesus: fractures will be healed, brokenness replaced by wholeness, freedom, and dignity restored. We desire a community animated by the gospel in its work; one humbled and sacrificially bearing the cross. After all the gospel is only for the humble, the weak, the thirsty, the sick, the sinners. Jesus said, “Those who are well, have no need of a physician.” When we maintain our work is “just fine” and doesn’t need the active presence and power of Christ, then we are in danger.  


Is the Faith & Work Ministry primarily about serving individuals?

No. We feel God is moving in our time to renew work itself through the hope and broad justice of the gospel. The Church must participate in his mission. God can bless our city through a renewal of work. The task of the Church is to follow Jesus: he is at work... on work.


The church is almost 2000 years old. Why do you believe God is focussing on work now?

Great question. The timing is mysterious. Work was a concern in the Reformation, but, generally, work hasn’t been a central concern of Christians. “Why now?” is the question. To offer a parallel: Why did God wait until the 18th and 19th centuries to tackle slavery? Why did William Wilberforce and crew awaken to slavery’s evil just then? I think it was a unique combination of cultural developments (slavery had grown into a major economic force) and a re-reading of the Bible in light of their own times.


And you think something similar is happening now?

Yes. Work has changed. Before the Industrial Revolution, 97% of the workforce was connected to food production. Now it is less than 3%. Formerly, most work was done with our hands and we could see its fruits, but not anymore. The Industrial Revolution, the Information Age, and a growing cultural obsession with work and the economy have paradoxically demeaned work and alienated workers. Even greater change is on the horizon. The cultural setting is primed for an inside out reconsideration of work.


That is the cultural shift. What is the new understanding of the Bible?

Two developments over the past 40 years, or so, have made work a core Christian concern:

  1. People are reading the Bible as a single, unified narrative from Genesis to Revelation. This approach reveals work as a central theme from Genesis 1&2 to Revelation 22.

  2. Many are taking the resurrection and the physical, eternal destiny of the New Heavens and the New Earth seriously. This renewed physical world will require work to flourish.

The implications of these new perspectives are just now unfolding in churches and seminaries.


Any last thoughts?

I’m thankful for this discussion. Our call as Christians is twofold: (1) Listen to God speak in his Word and in our circumstances, and (2) to step forward in obedience. When we read the Word, we’re convinced that rediscovering meaning and purpose and combatting brokenness and injustice in work are crucial acts of obedience, a path to freedom and flourishing. We’re humbled by this calling.