DWELL Missional Church of Burlington, Vermont - A Vermont Church Seeking to be missional in all areas of life.DWELL Missional Church of Burlington, Vermont

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Dwell Missional Church Blog Archives

The Blog Archives for Dwell Missional Church in Burlington, VTThe Blog Archives for Dwell Missional Church in Burlington, VT

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    DwellBlog Archives: July 2009

     

    Go Logizomai Yourself

    Posted by: Zach Hoag | July 22, 2009 | Leave a Comment(0)

    Tags: baptism, justification, romans 6

    In lieu of the fact that our audio failed us this week (check out this week's "best of" podccast), I figured I'd post some of the content from Sunday. The overall idea was simple:

    You should all go logizomai yourselves.

    We took a break from our Core Values series, which is basically all about our identity as a church called Dwell, to delve in a little deeper into a more important identity - our identity as followers of Jesus Christ.The fact is, if the kind of mission and multiplication we talked about on 7/12 is gonna happen in our city, we need power; and power comes, in part, when we gather to remember who we are.

    Our text was Romans 6:1-14. And the central pivot point is verse 11: "So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus."

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    The Jesus Dunk

    Posted by: Zach Hoag | July 17, 2009 | Leave a Comment(4)

    Tags: baptism, ethiopian eunuch,, phillip, romans 6

    Baptism is serious business.

    Wait, one more.

    Ok, ok. Those videos are fun - I have to admit it.

    And while it is a serious, deep, and meaningful thing, baptism is fun, too - it is meant to be a joyful thing done out of the joy of knowing Jesus, not some dry ritual done out of religious obligation. (Ok, so I guess it's never a "dry" ritual, but you get my meaning.)

    Dwell will be doing its second-ever Baptism and BBQ Bash at North Beach on Sunday August 30th. And if you are considering entrance into the waters of baptism, maybe this post will help you to better understand the ordinance.

    I have lined up 3 B's to help define baptism for you, and I'll expound on each one. They are Belief, Birth, and Band. I'll explain.

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    Clear Multiplication

    Posted by: Zach Hoag | July 15, 2009 | Leave a Comment(1)

    Tags: core values, multiplication, podcast, sunday message,

    multiply

    This past Sunday we covered our 5th core value: Multiplying by Nature. You can grab the audio here.

    I spoke along with Ryan Guilfoy on the topic of how the kindgdom of God is a multiplying kingdom - and how we, all of us, are integral in that process of the good news spreading throughout our city, our state, our country, the world.

    But one thing that may have been less than clear is how Dwell is going to approach the Sunday gathering, midweek gatherings, and planting new missional churches. So I will give a brief explanation on each of those points.

    The Sunday gathering. If you got the impression on Sunday that our Sunday gathering is not that important, I apologize! That's not how the leadership team sees it, and that's not how you should see it. In fact, the Sunday gathering is and will continue to be the center of Dwell community life. It will also continue to be a central means of mission, as we invite our non-Christian friends to take part in the experience of worship through music, the word, prayer, sharing, and friendship. (In fact, we are working tirelessly to up the missional ante in those services by pushing further into a more intense and relevant music experience as well as involving art and multimedia in new and creative ways.)

    We believe firmly that our Sunday gathering is the most powerful and encouraging gathering that we have ever been a part of - and you should feel the same way! And if you are in covenant with our community, the Sunday gathering is an absolute must. You might say this gathering is who we are. Sunday is when Dwell Missional Church expresses itself in its full glory.

    Midweek gatherings (dwell/ings). We also believe, though, that because the kingdom multiplies and we are all a part of that multiplication, mission and community will spill out beyond the Sunday gathering into everyday life. One way this happens is through dwell/ings - smaller gatherings that happen throughout the week. Right now we have one at the Burlington Emergency Shelter and one at Border's, both on Tuesday nights. These are super cool, laid back, relational times of spiritual encouragement. But these are not independent churches, nor are they our main strategy for planting new missional churches.

    Planting new missional churches. The basic level of multiplication is very personal - it's me and you being missional in everyday life and seeing our friends and neighbors come to know the love of Jesus. It's inviting people to church. It's hanging out and having dinner with folks. It's just being a loving follower of Jesus in every relationship you have. But there is another level of multiplication that happens with groups of people: that is, planting new churches.

    At Dwell we want to be a church-planting church. We desire to see new leaders raised up within the Dwell community to go out and start new churches.

    But we don't see this happening with small groups (dwell/ings) breaking off from Dwell. Instead we see a leader or leaders going out from us to begin a totally new work.

    --

    So if there was any confusion, I hope that makes things clearer. We are hyped about multiplication - and we are also hyped about how our Sunday gathering is the catalyst for that kind of multiplication to take place, first at the personal level, then at the group or church level.

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    Gathering Moments

    Posted by: Zach Hoag | July 11, 2009 | Leave a Comment(0)

    Tags: dwell, free methodist church,, gathering, photos

    Enjoy these photos from one of our recent gatherings. It's so amazing to see what the Lord has done.

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    100% Organic Community

    Posted by: Zach Hoag | July 1, 2009 | Leave a Comment(0)

    Tags: message, organic, podcast,

    organic church vermont

    Teaching week after week is an interesting experience. Don't get me wrong - I love it, and I am so grateful that you guys allow me to do it and that you appreciate the gift that I believe God's given to me (just as he's given many gifts to all of you). But it's interesting because as I prepare each week I'm simply confounded by how much (USDA organic) meat there is in each passage, under each topic.

    And it's honestly so hard not to write out 5 page outlines and teach 3 hour messages.

    This past week we talked over our third core value, Organic in Community, but there was some catch-up to do from the week before - 20 minutes of it, to be exact - about spiritual gifts and the Dwell expression. (You can grab the podcast here.) Backtracking, we took another look at continuationism and why we believe that all of the spiritual gifts continue to be in effect. We laid down a few groundrules about prophecy and tongues at Dwell gatherings (e.g., for prophecy, don't yell or say "thus saith the Lord", and wait your turn during "everybody time"; for tongues, feel free to pray quietly while you worship, or privately in daily life, but don't pray in tongues loudly during gatherings, for others to hear, because peeps may think you're crazy [see 1 Cor. 14]).

    But of course recapping and backtracking cuts down the time for the topic at hand, so I wanted to do a bit of dwellblog follow-up on our third value and flesh out a few ways that we see Dwell as a 100% organic community. The following ingredients are drawn from the definition of "organic" that we arrived at Sunday night: life gives birth to life.

    Organic Ingredient #1: Spiritual life originates in the gospel work of the Spirit
    This is essentially the meaning of the parable of the sower in Lu. 8:4-15 (or "the parable of the organic farmer", as we called it Sunday). At Dwell we recognize that only when  the good news of Jesus' death and resurrection goes forth (Ro. 10:14 f.), and the seed of the gospel word is planted, will new spiritual life happen in an individual heart. The gospel is the message that Jesus' death has paid for all our sin and brokenness, and that Jesus' resurrection has vindicated and justified us before the Judge, so that we now are completely reconciled with the Father. Through this message and because of what Jesus has accomplished, the Spirit works resurrection and transformation in our hearts so that we are born again. We have faith from the heart in Jesus, and a totally restored relationship with God - which means new spiritual life now, and hope of eternal life to come.

    So at Dwell we intend to b a church that is fixated on the gospel message, which is the power of God unto salvation.

    Organic Ingredient #2: Spiritual life flows through relationships
    Jesus' words in Lu. 8 regarding his parents (vv. 16-21) are like a window into his master plan. As he is bringing good news to poor and broken people, he is literally creating a new family, a new community, something that will later be called the church.

    And the way he is doing this is exceptionally clear at the very beginning of chapter 8:

    "Soon afterward he went on through cities and villages, proclaiming and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God. And the twelve were with him, and also some women who had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities: Mary, called Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone out, and Joanna, the wife of Chuza, Herod's household manager, and Susanna, and many others, who provided for them out of their means" (vv. 1-3).

    The gospel work of the Spirit has a context, and that context is relationship. On our Values page, we say that "relationship is the true context for faith"; and we believe that over and against church programs or evangelistic endeavors, relationship is the way that non-Christians receive the gospel and enter the Christian community, and the way that Christians live out the gospel in Christian community. The whole life-giving and life-flowing process can be summed up under one word: discipleship. Discipleship happens when one life engages another life in the pursuit of following Jesus, and the gospel work of the Spirit starts going down.

    Discipleship and relationship are almost one and the same for us; and they are the viral and multiplying context for the gospel work of the Spirit. And it is unto this that we have been called: deep community and deep relationships with other believers, that flow out into missional relationships with non-believers.

    Organic Ingredient #3: Spiritual life makes and multiplies communities
    While we did not see an example of this in our text, per se, it is present there implicitly. Post-resurrection and post-Pentecost people who had been radicalized by the Spirit of Jesus would begin gathering in communities so that the spiritual life would continue to flow. As theologian Scot McKnight says, the formation of a new society of people where there is inclusion and love and justice is God's very plan for establishing his rule and his counter-culture kingdom in the earth. This is the end result of what he calls a "robust gospel."

    But we cannot be small-minded here. This plan of God for building his kingdom is not small - it is massive. And as relationship-obsessed communities (like Dwell) emerge in the name of Jesus, their missional DNA ought to drive them towards spreading out into more communities in more places, until the life of the Spirit of Jesus through the gospel reaches every person and fills the whole earth.

    At Dwell, we have this DNA, and we want to see that organic life of Christ multiplying and spreading from the individual to the relational/communal to the multi-communal levels.

    100% organic. That's how we roll.

    It's VT, after all.

     

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