Meet the Parish Collective

My friends Paul Sparks, Dwight Freisen and Tim Soerens have been busy cultivating a new community of practitioners called the Parish Collective.

Parish Collective (PC) will be hosting a series of events (hosted conversations, presentations, community building opportunities) coming in the month of June. Stay tuned for more info.

More about PC :

Parish Collective: We are a growing collective of churches, missional groups, faith-based orgs, and community development associations which are rooted in the neighborhood and linked across cities.

In the fall of 2008 a vision emerged from a handful of neighborhood-focused missional churches to unite for the holistic renewal of their city while continuing to grow and multiply locally rooted church expressions.

The Parish Collective is essentially a church network.

For networks to exist two simple realities must be present: nodes and links. The nodes of this network are the individual neighborhood churches and the links are created in both individual and corporate relationship. Each parish church will commit to holding together four common elements that may dramatically change in expression depending on context. These four elements could be imagined as the four walls of a building.

They are:

  • Mission
  • Christian Spirituality
  • Relationship
  • Definable Place

::Benefits of the Parish Collective:

  • Celebrating, encouraging, and supporting one another through shared Kingdom stories from all over Seattle
  • Creating an incubator for new church starts and church planters.
  • Providing a space for friends/sojourners (no church, de-churched, and church alumni) who are interested in neighborhood churches to participate in a more structured and “church-like” setting.
  • Leveraging the collective network to address industries, systems, and issues in need of renewal in Seattle.

Feb. 7th – Justice at the Table Workshop

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Come to our second “The Revolution Starts at Home” event, Justice at the Table! We will explore together the intricate connections between our faith and the food we eat. We will challenge ourselves and each other to bring our eating and buying practices more in line with our beliefs and draft a “Justice at the Table Plan” to help us implement the changes we hope to make.

Registration is required. Register online.
Event Details:

* Date – February 7th, 2009

* Where – Mustard Seed House, 510 NE 81st Street Seattle, WA 98115 (upper floor, back entrance)

* Time – 9am – 3pm

* Food – Coffee, Tea, and a vegetarian lunch is included. Please bring any snack with you that you wish to share.

* Children – Due to our limited space and small staff, we are unable to offer childcare at this event. You are welcome however to bring children 2 and under with you if you feel they’d do well in a room of chatting adults.

* Cost – $40 individual/$35 groups of 2 or more (if cost is prohibitive please contact mail@msainfo.org for scholarship information)

Hosted by Mustard Seed Associates and The Mustard Seed House

Snapping the strings – chains of oppression re-visited

Whenever a movement happens and whites happen to dominate it, that means purposeful, intentional exclusion of others — every time! It couldn’t be that minorities simply weren’t interested, could it? No! We know that those racist bigots — erm, I mean our brothers and sisters in Christ — are out there, burning crosses in their bedrooms, don’t we? Your bigotry disgusts me. Get on your knees and repent.

The previous was a comment recently left on my blog in response to my post in God’s Politics about White Privilege and/in New Monasticism.

It is comments like this that remind me exactly why it is so important that as followers of Jesus, we move beyond the sugarcoated juvenile issues and ask the tough questions. But even more important is that we challenge the framework in which we ask those questions. In this particular case I was intentional in framing the issue of race and new monasticism within the framework of White Privilege. This was not done in an accusatory way, but as a way to expose a given pattern that otherwise would not be contested. The equation of use of the concept of white privilege with bigotry is typical way in which to force silence, by intent of inflicting social fear. The reality of this comment and others not as violent, is no other than an intent to censor those who dare critique the unconsidered assumptions and patterns that inform the way those in power experience and interpret life. This response is not a surprising one. This is not the first time such crude accusation have been made when I’ve brought up the questions of privilege. Same and worst accusation have been imputed to other sisters and brother whom have dared to challenge the given scripts.

If the church is to be a real place of radical hospitality and transformative relationships, it needs to deal with the social constructs in which it inhabit. The social expression of the church and individual Christians does not happen outside the artificial modes of thinking about the actuality of power and privilege.  We will do more damage than good if we keep addressing the issues of faith and social justice without questioning the given frameworks of racism, patriarchy, hetero/sexism, classism and elitism. It is by pushing further passed the strings and paradigm by which the church function that we as followers of Jesus can be honestly bring a healing alternative and prophetic voice. It is by rendering visible these chains of affliction that we can move from hollow cosmetic corrections and into real salvation and transformation. Given that we are blind to our own complicity and that we have the tendency to describe things to our advantage, we need the voice of the other for a broader expression of God’s goodness and liberation .

Communities and movements undertaking the revolutionary work of reconciliation and radical change must allow for a space of serious critique and non-conformity if we are to truly move beyond the systems of pain and oppression we oppose. This space for dissent and challenge is needed if we are to build up true relationships of oneness and growth.

Film Faith and Justice 2008, Seattle

I’ve been invited to participate again in the Film, Faith and Justice Festival. Last year I moderated a panel discussion on immigration issues. This is the 3rd festival that The Other Journal puts together. Each one of them have been provocative and challenging.

Some of the issues that will be address this year will be poverty, patriotism and faith, the myth of redemptive violence, and violent constructions of race.  The speakers for this year are:

  • Chris Heuertz of Word Made Flesh
  • Eugene McCarraher of Villanova University
  • Rita Brock who is the Co-Director of Faith Voices for the Common Good
  • J. Kameron Carter of Duke Divinity School

I highly recommend this event. Hope to see you there. Follow the link below for more info about the films and presenters.

The Other Journal at Mars Hill Graduate School :: Film Faith and Justice 2008
Film, Faith, and Justice is a forum exploring the relationship between theology and social justice.

As host to the Traveling Human Rights Watch Film Festival, this forum utilizes film, keynote lectures, and discussion panels to engage modern issues of faith and social justice critical to countering modern exploitation and injustice.