Theological Journal – September 29 REENEWING THE COVENANT: CHURCHES AND THE BUILDING OF LOCAL RELATIONSHIPS: THE MISSIONAL NETWORK
Describing the shape of a new era helps us find our own way of responding and acting in our local setting. We believe that the concept and practice of covenant will be important in the relationships that we seek to build locally so we offer you this letter, a follow-up to The Plague and the Parish:
Dear Friends in Christ, fellow
travellers in these challenging times, we are wanting to follow up with you
after so many of you responded to the publication of The Plague
and the Parish. It was written just as the Covid-19 pandemic entered our
worlds, in part, as a call for our churches to bring their vocation in
Christ to the re- weaving of a torn social fabric. Since then the consequences
of the pandemic have intensified. Uncertain, anxious times will continue for
months to come, presenting us all with the challenge of caring for one another
and reimagining how to live faithfully. The pandemic has elicited a number of
immediate responses. Our energy has been on understanding and managing this new
reality and its impact on our social life, from isolation, to unemployment, to
death. We’re living with overwhelming questions about how we live as a society
amidst the possibility of economic collapse and a growing sense that other
human beings are now a threat. We are wrestling with the inadequacy of our institutions
at national, regional and local levels.
A FAILED STORY AND LOSS OF CIVIC
LIFE
Over these months our reactions
have ranged from confusion and fear, to anxiety, anger, and exhaustion. Now,
almost six months on, the overwhelming mood has become one of grief. This grief
is certainly about mourning, isolation, and the fear of economic insecurity.
Those of us in Christian leadership also have a sense that much of our
formation and training has not prepared us for this moment. Yet there is a
deeper level to this grief that is hard to put into words.
We find ourselves in a space
where the primary stories for addressing our situation are being given to us
either by science (trust the science and we will find a vaccine) or by
government (our legislators will find the funds to keep us afloat until the
vaccine is found). While these stories are important, they cannot touch what is
a much more profound sense that our collective hope has been reduced to crisis
management, and that this is insufficient to sustain us. We are seeing the
failure of a culture which has infected our way of living, and that is a
culture which is based on contract.
This grief is a malady of the
soul. It consists of two elements.
First, the presence of a story
that is no longer working. Implicit in The Plague and the Parish is a
critique of what the modern story has done to our civic space, to our parishes,
and to the congregations that dwell in these spaces. The story of the modern
West is about a society built around transactional exchanges, managed by
contract, determined by globalized economics. The results are increasingly
clear – the evisceration of civic life, the thinning out of local forms of a
common life that would enable communities to work out their challenges with one
another, and social isolation, even between people who live in the same
neighbourhood.
This overarching story has been
shaped around the idea of “progress” and by the belief in radical individualism
as the dominant operating system. In this context, our churches have complied
with an unofficial social contract, and have continued to make “socially
useful” contributions, but their influence has drained away. Our distinctive
calling as witness to the sacred and as a faithful neighbour has diminished.
This has left many church leaders confused about their place in society and
even in their identity as leaders.
The second element is the absence
of alternatives to this failed story. The dominance of this ideology has
resulted in a loss of memory that things could be any other way. The result is
the emptying out of civic life, the unravelling of our social systems and our
confusion as followers of Christ in how to respond.
FROM CONTRACT TO COVENANT: A
FIRST STEP TOWARDS THE NEW CHAPTER
We are convinced that there is
another story. There is within the memory of the church a story of being a
people who do not need to be shaped by social contract, consumerism and
individualism. Our vocation is rooted in the reality of Christ living in us
and, therefore, by God’s relationship with us. We know that apart from him we
can do nothing. Covenant, not contract, is at the heart of our vocational
calling. Our vocation is not to be useful but transformative.
The Christian story breathes an
alternative imagination expressed in the embodied Christ and through the
language of covenant. This is an alien word for most of us. Simply put, as
followers of Jesus, we know that human beings are not to be defined primarily
by function or transaction, but by our inherent God-given dignity, and by relationships
that are characterised by trust and mutual flourishing.
Covenant in Scripture has an
expansive meaning which can have a transformational effect on our
relationships, our churches and our civic communities. It is about God’s
unconditional promise to us in Christ. It speaks to the ties that bind us
together in ways that lead to the remaking of social life. It re-weaves the
bonds of trust between generations and interests. It requires a commitment to
love one another, and an accountability earthed in the place where we live – in
biblical terms, the land itself is treated as a covenantal partner – and in our
local institutions. Through our Scripture, we learn that our institutions are
to be formed and judged on the basis of this covenant rather than on contract
or economics. They are to be durable and faithful across generations.
Historically, we can see that in their origin and intention, church, parish,
trusts and endowments, the common law, Parliament and our liberties come from
this covenantal understanding of Christian life.
CHURCHES IN COVENANT WITH
NEIGHBOURS
To heal the malady of our
collective soul we need a bigger story. The transition to the new chapter ought
to be led by churches but so far we have been largely absent from the field.
Internal interests, such as financial imperatives, closures, social distancing
and the shifting of worship online may seem to be requirements of survival but
they obscure our ability to remember who we are called to be.
The emerging racial tensions of
recent months also increase the risk that we fail to confront the implications
of a culture that is fundamentally geared to dehumanising human beings. People
look to churches to offer some resistance and to stand for human relationships
in an increasingly inhumane world. We must point to a way forward that
transcends division and brings healing.
A renewal of covenant as an
essential part of our Christian narrative is a primary way our churches can
write the new chapter. To do that we need to begin in the local, the parish,
the neighbourhood. This will require us to be physically present, in
relationship with people and with place.
It will involve congregations
discerning how they might covenant with neighbours and other local institutions
in their parish or locality in order to generate a renewed civic life. On a
very practical level, a place to begin would involve taking on practices of
commitment and love. Practices rooted in our bond with Christ, which make us
available and vulnerable through relational engagement alongside the people in
our communities.
There is no avoiding one-to-one
conversation as the central practice.
As the economic fallout of the
pandemic thunders on, as redundancy and eviction notices are handed out, the
need for this new story becomes more acute. Our civic immune systems have been
weakened by contract and they need strengthening by covenant. This is
relational work.
A first step towards developing a
covenantal culture in our local communities might be that we, as congregations,
focus our vocation toward building local relationships. This means getting to
know our neighbours in one-to- one conversations. It means loving friendships
of reciprocity, being a good neighbour willing to stand in solidarity when it
counts.
This is the shift from contract
to covenant. Our humble churches diminished, but fulfilling an authentically
Christ-centred, civic role alongside neighbouring local institutions, building
a common good between different interests.
This would be one of the ways of
living into the prayer “Your kingdom come”.
If you feel things don’t need to
be as they are, you are right. If you can see that this contract culture is
affecting the life of your church, your neighbourhood and your country, you are
right. The threads of civic life cannot be re-woven based on contract. In the
life of the Spirit, we are social beings, created and wonderfully made to live
in relationship. As this pandemic proceeds, grief becomes more pronounced and
the need for a bigger, more substantive story grows. Christian communities can
become embedded in the local, in a life of covenant relationship. This is the
nature of the radical renewal to which God is drawing us.
http://journalofmissionalpractice.com/renewing-the-covenant/
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