HOUSE CHURCH ARTICLES
NURTURING A NEW GENERATION OF 'PAULINE' & 'PETRINE' APOSTLES
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NURTURING A NEW GENERATION OF 'PAULINE' & 'PETRINE' APOSTLES
- by Dick Scoggins (of Fellowship of Church Planters) - used with permission
Dick Scoggins is a founder of the Fellowship
of Church Planters (Rhode Island, USA) and has served as a trainer for Frontiers.
He is the author, with George Patterson, of Church Multiplication Guide (William
Carey Library).
"My early thinking on apostleship was shaped by Watchman Nee, who made
a distinction between the Church and the Work two distinct entities
with distinct spheres. The Church is called to subdue the land, bringing the
full weight of the gospel to bear on every segment and aspect of society.
The Work is the apostolic work taking the Kingdom of God
to where the Church does not yet exist. The work of the apostolic community
has always been to establish the Church where it does not exist and in such
a way that the Church will reproduce locally and subdue the land.
Perhaps the best recent definition of an apostle I have read is by Jack Deere
in his book Surprised by the Power of the Spirit. Deere states that apostleship
is a calling, not a gift nor an especially gifted or powerful person. I strongly
agree. I do not think that an apostle is such a person, or someone who gives
oversight to large churches or groups of churches. (The latter more closely
resemble bishops, such as those of the 2nd and 3rd centuries.)
The primary meaning of apostle is an authorised sent one or messenger.
Apostles are mobile, dynamic groups of emissaries of the Kingdom. They are
called to minister as bands or groups at the very least in twos, as
Jesus taught (cf. Acts 13:3,4; 14:4,14; 15:39-41), and sometimes with helpers
(cf. Acts 13:5). Apostles have functioned in communities or networks of communities
(for example, Pauls networks of teams on his second and third journeys
as well as during his imprisonment).
The key mark of apostleship is not a big personality, but rather big suffering
(cf. 1 Cor. 4:9-13). When Paul is forced to defend his apostleship, he first
cites his suffering (2 Cor. 12:7-10) before his signs and wonders (vs. 11,12).
He wears his suffering as the badge of his apostleship and only acknowledges
his signs and wonders when forced to do so.
Pauline Apostleship
Pauline apostleship is exercised by pioneering, mobile communities who start
local communities of the Kingdom where they do not exist. They are dynamic,
mobile communities, not solo personalities nor bishops who remain over
churches. It seems there were many apostles (some true, some false) wandering
around in the first century so many that Paul bumped into a lot of
them and took care to go to Spain to ensure that he was building on new ground.
Petrine Apostleship
A second form of apostleship what I would call Petrine apostleship
is portrayed in the New Testament. Until recently my work and thinking
have focused primarily on Pauline apostles who usually cross cultures to proclaim
and reveal the Kingdom of God. My work with Frontiers has been exclusively
in this realm. But I personally have also been engaged in starting house churches
in the West, specifically in Rhode Island (USA) and England, and I have also
started a number of church-planting teams which have been effective at starting
networks of house churches in the West. If I had been pressed as to whether
these Western teams were apostolic, until recently I would have replied in
the negative or at least been uncertain.
But recently I was coaching a team in Switzerland who pressed me on whether
there exists a Peter-type apostle. I replied that we do not see much of Peter
in the New Testament, so I could not comment on whether or not the model exists
or not. But I was unhappy with my own reply, and so I went back to search
the Scriptures.
What I realized was that the Petrine model is much more prevalent than I had
imagined. If we read Galatians 2:8-10 as portraying two types of apostleship,
then we see some compelling ramifications. In this passage Paul states that
Peter recognised his (and Barnabas) calling as apostles to the Gentiles,
while Paul and Barnabas recognize Peters (and James and Johns)
apostleship to the circumcised (Jews).
So we see that there is an apostolic ministry to the unreached (the Pauline),
but there is also an apostolic ministry to the existing people of God (the
Petrine). For me the clincher was that Jesus is, of course, the forerunner
of both (our high priest and apostle, Hebrews 3:1) but the bulk of His apostleship
was to Israel. This means that nearly ½ of the New Testament is about
the Petrine type apostleship. So what does Petrine apostleship look like,
and why is it important today?
Needed Today New Apostles and New Ways of Doing
Church
Jesus declared that the Kingdom of God was to be torn from the nation of Israel
and given to another people who would bear its fruit (Mt. 21:43). Within a
generation the Temple would be destroyed, and the nation of Israel would cease
to exist. But God is patient and compassionate: He desired to retain a remnant
from Israel who would glorify His name. So God sent Jesus to call out that
remnant who would follow Him in new forms of community that would follow the
destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple. Jesus appointed (Pauline) apostles
to the Gentiles and (Petrine) apostles to the Jews that a remnant might bring
glory to His name. The Kingdom of God would need new forms and traditions
within the era that was to come.
I believe we are seeing a similar pattern today. Western Christendom is in
a key transition, perhaps undergoing as large a cultural shift as occurred
during the Reformation (when I think that last great era of Petrine apostles
brought the Church out of medieval forms and into modern forms). The world
is changing, and the Western forms of church, birthed very much according
to modernity, are not keeping up. I believe that the world has changed so
much that simply adapting existing church structures will not enable appropriate
expressions of the Kingdom to come forth for new generations.
What is needed is a whole new way of doing church (and I think
we actually need to drop the word, but that is for a different article). New
types of communities of the Kingdom need to be envisioned and created to be
Good News in a new era. I believe that apostles are the creative agents sent
by God to bring about radical, creative forms of the Kingdom. Pauline apostles
will seek forms appropriate and indigenous to the new cultures they are bringing
the Kingdom to, not merely exporting Western church culture, as has often
been the case.
But apostolic ministry is now needed in the West as well. If the Western church
is not going to die out, then we will require new expressions of Kingdom communities.
I think this will require a recovery of Petrine apostles creative pioneers
who will explore Kingdom communities appropriate to our post-modern world.
These apostolic families will blaze the trail to new kinds of communities
and structures suitable to high-powered, mobile, and technological society,
as well as communities for the poor and disenfranchised who will largely miss
out on the very things that power the new world.
These pioneers are not called to make further adaptations to faltering models,
but rather, like Jesus, Peter, James and John, call Gods people to move
on from old formulations in a journey to the new. Such a journey will be every
bit as radical and terrifying as it must have been for those early Jewish
believers who watched the destruction of their nation and traditions. Todays
Petrine apostles will bear the same primary mark of apostleship persecution
for their ministry is bound to be misunderstood (at best) by existing
churches.
What is needed today is an explosion of apostolic ministry. God is calling
Pauline apostles to bring the Kingdom to nations without an indigenous, cultural
expression of the Kingdom of God in local communities. God is calling a new
generation of Petrine apostles to forge new communities in the West (and where
Western churches have become the normative expression of the Kingdom in other
cultures). It is my hope that these Petrine apostles can bring the Western
church into a new era of fruitfulness where Kingdom communities reflect the
glory of the Living God and impart faith, hope and love to those in darkness."
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