Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Why Plant? Why Now? Why Lexington?

Why?
Why Plant? Why Now? Why Lexington?

Why plant another church?  Honestly, this question has plagued me each time I’ve considered church planting.  Aren’t there enough churches in America?  It seems that what we need are not more churches but more Christians filling out the churches that we already have. 

But that’s just the trouble isn’t it?  Studies show people aren’t filling out churches.
Americans, in turns out, are no longer interested in going to church.

But just below the surface, God is doing an incredible work.  Businessmen worship beside the homeless at a park in Modesto, CA, leather clad bikers are studying the book of Matthew in Virginia Beach, and youth in the South Bronx are learning to lead like Jesus.  In the 21st century God’s Spirit is moving in new and remarkable ways to bring the message of God’s love to the most unlikely of places. 

It would appear that God, too, has grown tired of being stuck in a church.

So should we be concerned that church attendance is down?  I think the answer is “yes, we should,” but maybe not for the reasons that one might expect. Perhaps our problem is not that people are rejecting the Christian faith. Perhaps our problem is that we’ve simply failed to provide a compelling example of what our faith looks like in action. 

That’s the reason we need new churches, not to replace the old but to include such an example, to add another voice to the conversation.

Lexington, Kentucky is in need of just such a voice.  We live in unpredictable and turbulent times, not just in Kentucky but all across our nation.  And of all times to be the Church in America, we in the Brethren in Christ have something unique, something profound, and something important to say to our culture and to the church in the United States.

In fact, the BIC, with its unique blend of Anabaptist, Pietist, and Wesleyan traditions, has a perspective that the church needs in our current day.

We value community in an age of transiency, personal experience in an era of virtual reality, and life transformation in a world struggling with disillusionment.   I can think of no other church that holds these values in such balanced tension.  But there’s something even more timely that the BIC has to share.  In a time of racial tension, extremist politics, and a breakdown of public civility, we seek to follow Jesus in the way of peace and reconciliation. 

The world needs this message; Lexington needs this message.

It’s not that there aren’t churches in our area that value peace and seek to follow Christ, but there are no other churches with roots that run as deeply into these areas, with a theology of peace and reconciliation that has been so thoroughly refined by prayer and practice as the Brethren in Christ.

But it’s not just Lexington that stands to gain from such a church in our area. 

We in the BIC need Lexington.

If the Brethren in Christ is to thrive in the 21st century we must be dedicated to expansive growth and devoted to cultivating fresh expressions of our Core Values.  We need a church that not only plants new churches but also grows and develops new leaders, leaders with a clear vision of who we are and how we may contribute to God’s kingdom on earth as it is in heaven. 

We need a church-planter incubator.

With our proximity to Asbury Theological Seminary and all the resources available here we have the opportunity to grow just such a project.  We have the opportunity to grow leaders who will discover new ways of sharing our time-honored traditions and values and who can effectively bring these to the world around us.  We need leaders with a vision so big that, unless God intervenes, we would have no hope of seeing them come to life.  The good news is that we have such a God.  A church committed to raising up new leaders in a “post-Christian world” is a church with unswerving confidence in the God of audacious vision.

And that leads me to the final and greatest reason for why we should plant a church in Lexington:  Because it’s exact what God is calling us to do.

Now I’m not suggesting that God appeared to me or anyone else in a vision, pointed a flaming finger at a map and said, “Go ye, therefore, to the city of horses.”  Nothing quite so dramatic.  But I am suggesting that God’s vision, God’s heart, God’s love is so great that we would be fools to try to contain it.  The love and grace that we’ve received in the Brethren in Christ compels us to share it with the world around us. 

We simply must grow.  God’s love demands it, God’s grace compels it, God’s vision inspires it, and our hearts cannot help but to respond “yes.”

It is for all these reasons, but especially the last that we propose that the Brethren in Christ plant a church in the Greater Lexington Area with close ties to Asbury Theological Seminary for the purpose of reaching the lost and raising up the next generation of leaders and church planters for the BIC.

In His Peace,


Luke and Christian Embree

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

The Next Thing

Dear Friends,
We can’t believe that it’s been nearly four years since we uprooted our lives in Pennsylvania to attend seminary in Kentucky.  So much has happened and yet it still feels like only yesterday that we were packing our U-Haul and hitting the road.  Now, as we approach the next chapter of our lives, we’re faced with the question “What next?”  Well, we’re happy to announce that we have direction for the next stage of our life and we’re pleased to share it with you!
The Great Lakes Conference of the Brethren in Christ has asked us to lead a church plant, here, in the greater Lexington area. We’ve prayed long and hard about this opportunity (with many of you) and are happy to announce we have accepted this charge.  God works in mysterious ways; when we moved here we were pretty certain about two things: We were not staying in Kentucky and we were not called to be church planters. But as you know, God has a way transforming our certainties into examples of his goodness, grace, and glory.  In the words of a dear friend, “we may not be called to be church planters but we are called to plant this church.”
While we are in the beginning stages of the work, we believe that we have a vision of what this church is called to become. Over the next few years we will be planting a “church-planting-church”, that is a church that will be cultivating, fostering, and planting future Brethren in Christ churches.  
But even more, we are developing a “church planter” incubator.  In cooperation with Asbury Theological Seminary, we intend to create internships for others in the Brethren in Christ who feel called to plant in their own conferences and communities.  These internships would provide hands-on training that is coupled with excellent classroom instruction from some of the world’s leading experts in 21st century church planting.  
Most importantly, though, we intend to become a church that serves the needs and lives of the people in Lexington, Kentucky.  We are calling this new community “Plowshares.”
Why Plowshares?  Because we believe that at this time in our nation, we need a fresh vision of God’s radical peace and a reminder that the day is coming when we will “beat our swords into plowshares” and walk in his ways (Micah 4:2-5).  It is a constant reminder that we are ministers of reconciliation, ambassadors of God’s peace in a broken, divided, and hurting world.
Plowshares, though, has another meaning for us.  In keeping with the farming metaphor, we remember Christ’s injunction that “the fields are ripe for harvest, it is now the time for reaping.”  The city of Lexington currently reports that 47.8% of its population is “religiously unaffiliated”.   Further, Lexington is projected to grow significantly over the next 10 years.  As the population grows, so too will this incredible need.  Plowshares will be a church that is focused on sharing the message of God’s peace and reconciliation with the “unchurched” and “dechurched” people of our city.
            Finally, we believe that some of you, reading this today, have been feeling a similar call to engage the world for Christ in this type of ministry.  We would like to invite you to join us in this work. As we’ve prayed, we recognize that this church plant is not a “Luke and Christina” thing – it is a God thing; it is a BIC thing, and it is a Church thing. We can’t do it alone and we believe God is calling others to join us.  There are three ways that you may get involved:
1.     Prayer:  Please join us in prayer as we seek to share the story of God’s Redemption with the city of Lexington.
2.     Give:  God is calling some of you to support this mission financially.  We are a 501c3 organization and welcome you to partner with us financially to support this important work.
3.     Come and See:  In the Gospel of John we read about two disciples who felt drawn to join Jesus in his ministry.  When asked where he was staying Jesus responded, “come and see.”  If God is stirring your heart to step out in faith and join this new work he is doing in Lexington, we’d like to invite you to “come and see.”  We’d like to pray with you, share with you more about God’s work here, and discuss how you might be able to get involved on the ground. 

We’d love to discuss these items or any other with you in more detail.  You are welcome and encouraged to contact us anytime.  Luke can be reached at luke.embree@gmail.com and Christina at christina.embree@gmail.com. If you’ve got our phone numbers, feel free to call! And keep an eye out for Luke’s blog launching later this spring or check out Christina’s blog at www.refocusministry.org.
Can you tell we are excited?  We hope that you are too!  We look forward to hearing from you and we will keep you updated as we move forward to “the next thing.”

In His Love,

Luke, Christina, Hannah, Naomi and Caleb