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Off the Agenda: Conversations for Building Church Leaders

February 4, 2008

Pushing the Comfort Zones of Small Groups

Why today’s small groups need to move beyond a traditional Bible study

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As part of my work with www.BuildingSmallGroups.com, I recently had the privilege of interviewing Alan Hirsch on the subject of his book The Forgotten Ways.

If you’re not familiar with that book, it’s basically a call for the church—both universal and individual—to return to the missional/movement ethos that drove its rapid growth and impact during the Early Church, and that is currently doing the same through the house-church movement in China.

In the book, Hirsch writes about six principles of missional movements that he identified throughout the course of his research. One of them really piqued my interest: embracing the idea of communitas instead of what we traditionally call community. If you’re not familiar with the term, communitas are basically a type of community that develops out of a shared ordeal or challenge—they’re what turn friends into comrades. Think of a house church that meets in secret to avoid persecution, for example.

I was curious how that principle could possibly be applied to middle-class America, so I asked him. Click below to hear what he has to say--to me, it sounds like pretty good advice:


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Sam O’Neal is managing editor of the Discipleship Team at Christianity Today International, where he works primarily with small-groups resources. He is a contributor to Leadership journal, Ignite Your Faith, and Christianity Today.

Posted by Matt Branaugh at 7:00 AM on February 4, 2008 | Comments (0) | Trackbacks (0)

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