Facebook pixel The Vital Role of the Church: Announcing Good News | Pepperdine Magazine | Spring 2020

色片软件免费

Skip to main content
色片软件免费
pen on paper

The Vital Role of the Church: Announcing Good News

The church is not supposed to be known as certain and immovable, but called and sent.

Sara BartonSara Barton, University Chaplain

You don鈥檛 have to squint to see that the church in North America is encountering changes and challenges. Just to name a few鈥攖hough you probably don鈥檛 need my help with this brainstorm鈥攆aith communities wrestle with decreasing attendance, declining interest in denominational heritage, and intensifying questions about issues like inclusion and the church鈥檚 relationship to political power鈥攐ften all at the same time!

Even before having to confront the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the church grappled with questions about when, where, how, and with whom to meet. After we leave the fearful season we are in now, I cannot help but wonder what new lessons will inform ongoing conversations.

I find it comforting and exhilarating to remember that changes, challenges, and recalibrations in the church are actually nothing new. The role of each generation of faithful Jesus followers has always been and will always be this: to discern in community and through the power of the Holy Spirit how to hold continuity and newness together in the proclamation of good news. This side of heaven, the church is never really finished with that job. Each generation must determine what it means to announce the good news of God鈥檚 reconciling work in its unique time and place.

A student recently asked me, 鈥淐hristians talk about good news a lot. How is it good news that an angry God was satisfied only with his son鈥檚 violent death and wants to send me to hell forever?鈥 I have similar straightforward conversations with many people who convey that they are sure about Christ but not so sure about the church and doctrines that sound like bad news. My students are certainly not the only ones who are wondering whether Christians know what good news is. They are not the only ones who are unsure about whether the message of the church today is good news.

In light of such challenges, a discussion about the vital role of the church is timely. I think Harbor director Mike Cope was on to something when he picked what was supposed to be this year鈥檚 theme, Called and Sent: The Vital Role of the Church. The fact that we had to postpone this year鈥檚 Harbor to 2021 means the theme is as relevant as ever. The church is not supposed to be known as certain and immovable, but called and sent. Especially during crises, our imagination should fuel us like never before. And, like many of you, I see that happening as congregations find new ways to connect with each other and new ways to love neighbors. The boundaries of physical distance have not prohibited spiritual and communal connection, as prayers have made their way through phone lines and Zoom rooms. I can sense the celebration that鈥檚 coming when we are able to gather again. I suspect it will be so life-giving that God鈥檚 people won鈥檛 be able to stop talking about it.

From the moment they realized Jesus was raised from the dead, Jesus鈥 earliest followers were directed, in both Matthew 28 and Mark 16, 鈥淕o. Tell.鈥 They were 鈥渟ent鈥 people (Luke 24). Being sent to cross boundaries appears continually in the book of Acts, when the earliest Christians traveled 鈥渇rom Judea to Samaria to the ends of the earth,鈥 crossing not only borders of cities, countries, and continents, but also boundaries that divide people: language, ethnicity, social class, citizenship, gender, food customs, and more.

This much is clear: crossing new boundaries for the sake of God鈥檚 good news is not for the weak of heart, soul, mind, or body. Despite what persecution they faced, like being thrown to the lions or disowned by their own families, God sustained early followers of Jesus in their calling, as communities discerned how to accomplish their task through the power of the Holy Spirit. Jesus and his early followers modeled that the good news really is so good that it must be announced, not only with words to share but also with bodies to do that good news: serving, loving, witnessing, and caring for the sick, poor, and socially marginalized.

If we are able to take the lessons learned from COVID-19, the church has the opportunity to posture herself not as the owner of good news, but as the 鈥渃alled and sent鈥 proclaimers of God鈥檚 good news. And then, maybe instead of being turned off, our neighbors will tune in鈥攐r, better yet, we will all join in the work together.