Communities of Grace vs. Communities of Performance
By Tim Chester
I was recently asked to speak on communities of grace. So I got to thinking: What is the opposite of a community of grace? And I came to the conclusion that it's a community of performance. Communities of performance may talk a lot about grace, but they value performance—Christians who have it all figured out, churches that run smoothly, meetings that are accomplished. And so they communicate that what matters is that you perform well.
So is your community a community of performance or a community of grace? Try these diagnostic tests:
Communities of Performance
- The leaders appear to have it all figured out
- The community appears respectable
- Meetings must be a polished performance
- Failure is devastating, because identity is found in ministry
- Actions are driven by duty
- Conflict is suppressed or ignored
- The focus is on orthodox behavior (letting people think they have it all figured out)
- The leaders are vulnerable
- The community is messy
- Meetings are just one part of community life
- Failure is disappointing but not devastating, because identity is found in Christ
- Actions are driven by joy
- Conflict is addressed in the open
- The focus is on the affections of the heart (with a strong view of sin and grace)
3 comments:
So is Regeneration a community of performance or a community of grace? I think we are doing well in some aspects of being a community of grace. In particular, I think our Sunday evening service does well at being a gathering of the community more than a polished performance, just one aspect of our life together in community. I pray that we continue to always seek to be a community of grace, rallied around the gospel!
P.S. Have you read Total Church by Chester and Timmis yet? I have restrained myself from getting it, but from what I've read about the book, it looks to be quite good.
I am still thinking over Tim Chester's diagnostic tests that he lists. I would like to think that Regeneration is more a community of grace (but doesn't everybody?). I think the take-home for me is to be continually applying these tests in self-evaluation of our community.
Tim Chester followed up with two more articles on this subject. They are also good:
How Communities of Performance Impede MissionCreating Communities of Grace
Apparently I still need some practice at using HTML in the comments section :-)
Oh well, the links still work at least.
Oh, and no, I have not read Total Church.
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