Communitas

Community. We all want it. Some of us want it so much that we’ll chase from church to church, person to person, trying to find it.
But community for community’s sake is flawed. In the end it actually kills us. If we pursue community for the sake of having a community for ourselves, we’re really just pursuing an idol that we hope will take care of our us.
But instead, I want to suggest we search for communitas*. For most of us, communitas is a strange word, but it describes the very essence of community that is formed among a group of peers when they go through a dangerous or disorienting experience.
That’s a lot of jargon for something we all know: When you go through something difficult with a group of people, the experience changes you. And it doesn’t just change you, but every person in the group is linked more tightly because of what they’ve experienced.
Think of the WWII or Vientam vets who haven’t seen their fellow soldiers in decades. Yet you put those same guys in a room and give them a little space and it seems as if only minutes had passed since the last time they were together. It’s the same way with guys who have been part of a stable and healthy recovery group or those friends that went with you on that missions trip that one time.
In each scenario, a group of people find themselves in a risky or unknown situation and work through it. You all learn to depend on each other, compensate for each others’ weaknesses, and know each others’ strengths. You bond with each other because you’ve been through some things together. It’s communitas, and it beats community every single time.
The problem with church is that it can look a lot more like a book club than a mission trip. There’s no risky venture attempted with a group of people. Many churches lack the faith of leap. And so they can have as many potlucks and Bible studies as they want to, but community never forms.
I’ve watched house churches struggle with this as well. They’ve pursued perfecting their community before they try to reach out to the lost. They really wanted to be united and built up to the place where they feel they can go on mission together. They pursued community and missed communitas.
But I’ve also seen house churches catch the Lord’s heart for the lost in a way that compels them to take the gospel to dangerous places. These people probably are just as young and immature, but they leap together, putting their trust in Jesus to fill in the gaps. Do things always go perfectly? Rarely. But communitas–the true spirit of community–gets formed in those house churches and a lost world gets reached in the process.
There is a world out there looking for community. They’ll do anything they can to get it. Jesus promised us that if we tried to keep/save our lives we would lose them, but if we laid down our lives for His sake and the sake of the Gospel, we would find it. I believe if we seek community for its own sake we will never find it. But if we lay down our lives and do the dangerous work of bringing Jesus’ message to those who are far from Him, we will find community in deep and rich ways we never thought possible.
So don’t look for community, look for communitas.
Photo Credit: Kfir Brigade Soldiers Practice Urban Warfare by Israel Defense Force
* I am again indebted to Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch for their profound book on this subject: The Faith of Leap (affiliate link).
The Faith of Leap

Stagnancy can kill your walk with Jesus.
We can get to a place where we know the love of the Father, understand the sacrifice of the Jesus on the cross, encounter the Spirit, know the word, and have confidence that we’re really saved and stop. And while all these things are essential, if they fail to touch the trust you showed when you first threw yourself at Jesus and asked Him to save you, your spiritual life can grow cold.
The cure for this stagnancy is to regain “the faith of leap.”* This is the kind of faith that causes us to stick out our neck and live on the daring adventure that Christ calls us to. It’s not safe, but it’s the kind of faith that God called Abraham to when he told him to “Leave your native country, your relatives, and your father’s family, and go to the land that I will show you,” (Genesis 12:1). It’s this kind of faith that takes risks that culminates in Romans 4:22: “And because of Abraham’s faith, God counted him as righteous.“
Two friends are modeling this for me really well right now.
One is a mentor with a long history in his job. He took a buyout from his company that was closing down and at the leading of the Lord, he got a college education and moved to a state he had never lived in. Two or so years later, he’s still waiting on the provision of the Lord, but he never waivers in his faith. In fact, you’d never know he was jobless by talking to him. In that place having heard from the Lord and but not yet knowing where the Lord’s answer will come from, he’s living out the faith of leap.
Another friend of mine went and got some training in North Carolina about planting churches. He loved it and came back and shared some of the content of the training with me. As we talked, he looked at me and said “I need you to intentionally stretch me. Can we get together every so often and have you challenge me to stretch myself?” Since that time I’ve watched my friend get out of his comfort zone repeatedly. He’s started hosting gatherings, he’s started reaching out to lost people, he’s started to challenge people where they need to be challenged. Every time I see him look at something outside of his old comfort zone that the Lord is asking him to do and say yes to it, he’s living out the faith of leap.
None of this makes either of these two guys super spiritual. In fact, at first glance, you might be tempted to think there is nothing remarkable about either of these guys. But they are learning to meet Jesus in the leap. And because of that, they are becoming more and more remarkable in a way that only a few living close to them can see.
Can I ask? Can I probe just a little? Are you living out the faith of leap? When was the last time you did something in your Christian walk that you weren’t sure was going to work out, but you were sure God was leading you into? If it’s been a while, go back and ask the Father for the faith of leap. I’m sure He’s willing to talk.
*Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch wrote a phenomenal book called The Faith of Leap (affiliate link). The premise of the book is that there is a kind of faith and community that can only be regained by tackling risky tasks for the glory of God. I would encourage you to read the book, but the title alone communicates volumes.
Developing a Missional Identity

One of the most misunderstood and undervalued truths of following Jesus is the importance of understanding our identity in Christ. When you repented of your sin and believed in Jesus, you weren’t just forgiven, you were given a new identity that completely replaces how you saw yourself and how the world labeled you. This shift that happens at the moment of our surrender is so incredibly powerful that many of us spend the rest of our lives trying to fully comprehend it.
Son. Sheep. Bride. Brother. Many times these identities are studied within the body. We emphasize the idea that these are identities that exist because we are “in Christ.” They’re not based on what we do. They’re real because Jesus invaded our life.
The truth is, when we begin to see ourselves as one of these identities, we begin to live differently. How we believe God sees us and how we see ourselves is fundamental in changing how we live. If we believe we are delighted in by God as a Father delights in His son or daughter, it will increase the amount of joy we walk in as the people of God. Knowing and believing our God-given identity has the power to flip the script that we’ve been reading over our lives. It’s powerful.
Missional Identity
God spends so much time in Scripture telling us who we are that there are multiple identities he gives us. Each one of these identities can be received without working for them but have a corresponding reality to walk out. For example, God calls us His sons. And for us that means that we are loved by God and have become part of His family. To be an accepted son of God that is loved by Him is life transforming. But when we accept and begin to walk in that reality it changes us. Well-matured sonship means growing up and becoming fathers ourselves. We get to live as loved mature sons who walk in the authority and inheritance of our Father.
So while there are many of identities out there for us to get our hearts and heads around, one of the identities that we focus on very little is the missional identity God gives us. Paul says this:
Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.
-2 Corinthians 5:17-20
Notice a couple of things:
- This isn’t the identity of only the Paul and his apostolic team, though they surely operated out of this reality to a great degree. This missional identity starts as an outgrowth of being in Christ. It’s part of the “new” that has come. If Christ has reconciled us to Himself, then He has also given us the ministry of reconciliation.
- This whole identity centers around knowing that we have been completely reconciled to God. Let that sink in for a moment, because I fear many of us don’t operate out of this identity because we feel we are only partially reconciled to Him. You aren’t just a struggling sinner that God has mercifully let in to sit in the back of the room. You are God’s beloved child who He’s made the righteousness of God in Christ. Jesus has not counted our past trespasses against us and He has entrusted to us the message of God’s reconciling act in Jesus.
- Therefore we are ambassadors for Christ and God makes His appeal through us. This missional identity is one of ambassadorship. We are constantly speaking on behalf of God to lost and dying humanity for them to be reconciled to God through Christ. Believing by faith that this is who we are will open up power and effectiveness for us as we step out.
Many of us miss out on more effectiveness in the realm of sharing our faith and walking in the power of the Holy Spirit because we don’t believe we are truly God’s ambassadors. I know this is an area I’ve personally struggled with. But I’m seeing again in my life and the life of our churches here, the more we believe this reality is true, the more we walk it out in our daily lives.
Just like any of our other identities, we need to ask the Holy Spirit to renew our mind and fill it with the truth we see in God’s word. As our minds are renewed and we accept this identity and role that God gives us, we will mature in it. Not everyone will be a missionary, apostle, or evangelist, but all of us can participate in the service of being a voice for the world to be reconciled to God in Christ.
Do you believe you are Christ’s ambassador? If not, what’s stopping you?