I live in the Northwest. It’s known for coffee and microbreweries,
for political independence and for keeping some of its cities (think
Portland) “weird.” It has been described as one of the most unchurched
regions in America.
My wife and I were called by God to move from Orange County,
California, to Bend, Oregon, to plant a church—which we did in 2006. We
desired to start and nurture a new church culture rather than simply
inherit an old one. And we chose the name Antioch because the ancient
church there was likewise committed to reimagining the good news of
God’s kingdom in response to the Lord’s prompting.
The New Testament city of Antioch was on the trade crossroads of the
Mediterranean; it was densely populated and ethnically diverse. It was
the church at Antioch that first broke the mold of sharing the news of
Christ’s redemptive death and life-giving resurrection to Jewish people
only. At Antioch, they realized that the Holy Spirit was working in new
ways to reach the Gentile culture in which they found themselves, and so
they began to target and reach out to those outside the traditional
ethnic and religious structures of Judaism. By the time Paul arrived to
shepherd this fledgling community, he found himself in the position of
needing to shape a radically new kind of church culture that blended
together men and women from very different backgrounds and experiences.
But in addition to being ambassadors of God’s reconciliation to their
own diverse neighbors, the believers in Antioch were also the “sending
church” of most of the missionary endeavors described throughout the
book of Acts. It was largely through this church that the early
Christians began to fulfill the Lord’s charge (recorded in Acts 1:8) to
take the good news to the ends of the earth.
We began to ask ourselves early in our church’s life, “Might God use
us in a similar way?” We dared to believe that perhaps God could use us
to carry his message and to shape culture in and beyond the small city
of Bend, Oregon. We felt the need to avoid copying any other church, and
to instead discover and lean in to the Holy Spirit’s particular plans
for the time and place in which he had uniquely placed us.
We expected that this would require flexibility, creativity,
imagination and innovation. It has, but along the way we came to realize
that creativity is found in each of us, as part of the “image of God”
in which we were created.
A Bit More of Our Story
Early on, Antioch was entrusted with a local Bible college and, in
the fall of 2008, the Kilns College was born with a mission to change
the world one student at a time. The vision was not simply to provide
vocational Christian education, but to birth an innovative school that
married a classical approach to education with a missions and social
justice focus.
Through the college we hosted two successful citywide apologetic
conferences. We brought in leading apologists from around the country,
and together we offered a powerful defense of the reliability of the
Gospel accounts of Jesus’ life, the historicity of the resurrection, the
reconciliation of science, and the Bible and Christianity’s uniqueness
in explaining reality and human experience.
During that season, the Lord convicted us that contemporary
evangelicals had been failing to articulate—for at least most of the
last hundred years—one of his essential attributes: his concern for
justice. So rather than planning another general apologetics conference,
we gathered a variety of Christian scholars, teachers, pastors and
leaders, nongovernmental organizations, field workers and laypeople from
every walk of life for a conversation about the theology and practice
of social justice.
In February 2011 we partnered with World Relief to host the Justice
Conference in Bend. We were awed and humbled by the response. In 2012,
the Lord greatly multiplied the number of attendees and the overall
impact as we moved the conference to Portland, Oregon. The Justice
Conference has now become a worldwide conference with events in
Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Chicago, Hong Kong, Melbourne, and upcoming
in New Zealand, Holland and South Africa. It was the first evangelical
conference to bring attention to justice through the lens of theology.
We found ourselves on a God-ordained journey to help change the
conversation surrounding the issue of social justice in the evangelical
church. And again, it required imagination and innovation. Our
experiences reaffirmed for us the importance of creativity both in the
message of reconciliation and in the currency and vocabulary of cultural
transformation.
Why the Church Needs Creativity Today
Genesis 1:27 says, “So God created mankind in his own image, in the
image of God he created them; male and female he created them.”
God creates. And he created us to be—like him—creative. Therefore,
when people say, “I don’t have a creative bone in my body,” it is not
only untrue; it is a denial of the image of God in us. Please understand
this: Whereas artistic ability is a talent that some possess,
creativity is part of what it means to be human.
Creativity is about responding to God’s image and call, and through
that response exerting a creative influence and leadership that the
world desperately needs. I believe that creativity is for all of us, and
I think it’s one of the tools God has given us to carry out his
purposes for the world. God made us creative so that we could navigate
threats and challenges, laying hold of the possibilities around us.
Have you ever counseled a friend? Taught a child to search for animal
shapes in the clouds above? Cultivated a garden? Named a dog? All of
those things are creative acts, reflecting the creative image of our
Creator.
Creators Versus Copiers
I believe there are two kinds of people in the world: those who
create and those who
copy.
Those who use their creativity blaze trails, take risks and try new
ways. They ask, “Why not?” They innovate. They respond to challenges,
not with fear, but with imagination.
They lead.
Those who settle for copying seem to believe that the only way
forward is to find someone to emulate, to seek only proven strategies or
doors that have already been opened. Copying collapses possibility. It
doesn’t dream. Copying doesn’t lean into imagination or creativity. It
defaults to pragmatism.
The distinction between those who would create and those who would
copy is no small thing. I truly believe there is a wealth of untapped
creative energy available to people if we could break the chains of the
copier mentality, find courage in our creative identities and unleash
the power of imagination.
Think about it: Every apocalyptic movie that wants to show humanity
as enslaved paints people as robotically following and copying. They
don’t think for themselves. They don’t dream or imagine. They are
lifeless masses trapped in a posture of automatic mindless behavior. The
hero in these futuristic movies is the one person who breaks the mold
and awakens people once more to their humanity—to their
creativity!
Much of creativity can’t be separated from copying at the action
level. Of course there’s nothing new under the sun. But there is a
significant difference in the respective mindsets of a creator and a
copier. Copiers don’t use the creativity within to engage what’s around
them. Creators, by contrast, explore their God-given creativity with
eyes of possibility on how they can shape culture and glorify God.
Redemptive Creativity
Creativity alone is not sufficient for those who follow Christ. Our
creativity, like God’s, must be aiming at the proper target. We need
redemptive creativity—creativity whose goal is not just success, but
freedom; and not just for ourselves, but for others and for the good of
creation as a whole.
A fundamental part of Genesis 1:27—that God created men and women in
his relational image—is that our similar creative capacity can be used
to glorify God as we pursue justice and human flourishing within our
relationships. In new covenant terms, our participation with Christ in
his mission of reconciling all things to himself will require our
following the leading of the Holy Spirit and using the creativity with
which he endowed us.
Justice is at the very heart of God’s character and at the core of
what he desires from his people. Jesus’ own mission statement
incorporates healing and social justice, and he said that his followers
would be recognized by their feeding the hungry, clothing the poor,
welcoming the immigrant and visiting the sick and the prisoner. While
we evangelicals have sometimes made the good news all about an
otherworldly heaven, Jesus’s own gospel was of the in-breaking of God’s
kingdom on earth. Paul’s understanding was that Christ’s redeeming
work applied to all of
this creation, and that his
followers—those saved by grace—would be ambassadors of reconciliation,
doing the works of justice to which he calls them.
With every word, decision or action, we each change the world—for
better or worse. And in a world whose brokenness and injustices are more
varied and insidious than at any time in history, those who would heed
Christ’s call to be his agents of reconciliation will need all the
wisdom and creativity at their disposal. My experience over the past
several years is that the Lord of creation is not just calling his
people to this redemptive role but has also equipped us with the
necessary skills and imagination.
Creativity, Culture and Reconciliation
Today’s influencers simply can’t succeed without appreciating the
role of creativity. We might not all be artists, but we live in a
creatively charged world. As Madeleine L’Engle put it, “Unless we are
creators, we are not fully alive.”
Life is found in recognizing creativity as a part of humanity, and
embracing creativity is about leaning in to our identity as children of a
creative God.
Your church or ministry—with a creativity mindset—has the ability and
the God-given creative gifts to shape culture, rather than merely
reacting to it. By faith, you have the power to conquer fear-based
thinking and join in Christ’s redemptive work, where often the last will
be first and the foolish things of the world are chosen to shame the
wise.
Have you been caught in a rut? Are you in need of a reset? Do you
hunger for being a more dynamic part of the move of God’s Spirit?
Take heart. Have faith. Remember you
are creative. Begin to
intentionally incorporate creativity into your systems and processes.
Take some risks. Dream again. Pray that God might grow your imagination.
And begin reminding the people with you in ministry that they are
creative beings made in the image of a creative God. Through creativity,
we might find ourselves better equipped to shape culture and bring
about the reconciliation for which we are Christ’s appointed
ambassadors.