Believing the Church can be more than we know. Dreaming toward all God can do... even through us!

Monday, March 14, 2011

Start Digging!


Exciting news! As of last Tuesday the CityWell has an official commission. In late June my family will move to downtown Durham, NC, where we will begin putting legs to the CityWell dream. We are thrilled and scared out of our minds all at the same time. However, we are convinced that God laid this path before us, and we trust that God will lead us "to the land [he] will show [us]." 

The downtown Durham area is perfect for an experiment in being the church in new ways. Consider these reflections from a MissionInsight demographic analysis of the area within a 5-mile radius of central downtown: 
  • Of the 270,000 people in Durham County, over 168,000 (62%) of them live within a five-mile radius of downtown, and this number is growing.
  • The ethnic/racial diversity of the city is also growing. In 2010 43.6% of the population in the study area was Black, 32.4% White, 16.1% Hispanic/Latino, 3.7% Asian, and 1.6% other.
  • The average age of the study area is 35 years. 11.3% of the population is college students or people new to the professional world. 43.6% of the population represents young families, families and empty nesters under 55 years of age. Less than 20% of the population is over the age of 55.
  • 28% of the households in the study area live on less than $25,000 per year, with 16% of the population living at or under the federal poverty line. 40% of households live on less than $35,000 per year. 35% of the households generate between $35,000 and $75,000 annually. 25% of the households make more than $75,000. The number of higher wage earners is growing steadily and this growth is projected to continue.
  • 41% of the adults in this study area have no college education. 36% have at least a bachelor’s degree, and the remaining 23% have an associate’s degree or some college. The area is growing in number of people with higher educational attainments.

The MissionInsight report reveals the significant racial, ethnic and socio-economic diversity of the downtown Durham area. This diversity must inform the mission of The CityWell, as God is calling us to this city and not merely to one demographic of the city. We must intentionally seek to embody the diversity of the city if we are to be a faithful sign and foretaste of the barrier-destroying Reign of God.


The demographic analysis also reveals that educational attainment in this area is very high, the percentage of people with at least a bachelor’s degree being 17% higher than the nation as a whole. Therefore, mission in this context will require presenting the Gospel in thoughtful, nuanced and intellectually rigorous ways.
 

The population of the downtown area is young, which bears several implications. First, the younger the population the more saturated the worldview with the marks of post-modernism, prominent among which is a deep suspicion and aversion to institutional Christianity. In addition, much of the population in this mission field is biblically illiterate with virtually no understanding of the Gospel. However, being a southern city, there will be some vestiges of Christendom lingering, though this fact is significantly mitigated by the urban ethos and the heavy influence of Duke University in the city’s DNA. These factors suggest that a significant element of The CityWell mission will be helping people unlearn what they think they know about the Gospel and re-think church outside the Christendom box. 

With regards to religious practices in this mission field, there are many people with a deeply entrenched Christendom view of the Church and Christianity. However, more prominent in the religious attitudes of this mission field is the presence of a postmodern preference for an undefined and individual spirituality. These cultural contours will significantly impact the form of The CityWell’s mission, as well as how we contextualize the Gospel. In particular, we will seek to demonstrate that true spirituality is ultimately found in community and must be grounded in God’s revelation in Jesus. This mission will require a generous and affirming posture akin to Paul’s at the Areopagus in Acts 17, recognizing the God-given impulses relative to the imago Dei in all people. This culture calls for tour guide evangelism, in which we point to the ways God is already present and at work in people’s lives and provide an interpretive framework of scripture and biblical theology to direct people to a life-giving relationship with Jesus.

All of these factors call for a new expression of the Church, and I am really excited to see what God will do in our midst as we seek to know and follow Jesus in downtown Durham.

Please pray for us... and then pray some more!

2 comments:

  1. Very cool, Cleve. We're praying for you guys.

    I liked this statement: "In particular, we will seek to demonstrate that true spirituality is ultimately found in community and must be grounded in God’s revelation in Jesus."

    I'm reading a book right now that is speaking to this. I realize you have too much to read right now, but throw this on your Amazon Wish List, and then buy it in a few years: Life in the Trinity, by Donald Fairbairn. He's a Patristics scholar at our school that likes TF Torrance's reading of the Church Fathers. In the book he argues that the interrelationship of the Trinity is the basis of our relationship with the Trinitarian God. His argument for theosis is brilliant (although I'm not sure if it is unique to him or not - I'm a "theosis baby" at this point). I'll leave you in suspense as to what it is.

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  2. John, Chris and I are SOOOOOO excited about this !!!! Praying for all around this - Its a GOD thing.....its gonna work out just fine !!!!! Love you all
    Holly Hall

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