Many people in America approach “church” as a community of convenience. The Bible, however, holds out a very different concept of church, a community of grace. The community of convenience stands in the way of a community of grace. Consider some of the differences:
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Community of Grace |
Community of Convenience |
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Community of Convenience
The community of convenience assumes perfection. It confuses the church with a product or service, demanding perfect customer service from the community. This person approaches “church” as something that exists to service their personal, familial, and spiritual needs, not as a community love and serve. The COC begins with consumerism and expects to be served. It believes that the church exists for their spiritual, relational convenience. People who approach church as a COC get upset, angry, and gripe when they don’t get their spiritual or personal needs serviced. When conflict emerges the COC simply withdraws or moves on. If the spiritual customer doesn’t receive his service, get his needs met, or get the precise theological package they are looking for, they criticize the leadership, complain to others about the community, and often move down the street to another church to get their needs serviced. No wonder people aren’t “going to church.”
Community of Grace
A community of grace, however, assumes imperfection. It understands that the church is people, people who are broken, imperfect, sinful, people who will complain and hurt one another. A COG begins with forbearance, “bearing with one another in love.” It is others-oriented. It puts up with others that are different, embraces inconvenience. When conflict arises, the COG responds very differently. The COG doesn’t remain at a place of forbearance but moves to forgiveness. The COG doesn’t hold grudges but extends genuine forgiveness towards those who have hurt them.
The COG is characterized by love and grace, but the COC is characterized by selfishness and consumerism. The Church is not a community of conveniences. It does not exist for you to get served. The church is a community of grace that exists to serve one another, to bear with one another, to forgive one another, to love one another! The church is not a perfect product or service with a money back guarantee; it is a community of imperfect people clinging to a perfect Christ who are being perfected by grace.




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February 9, 2009 at 6:08 pm
on communities of grace or convenience
[...] Jonathan Dodson clearly discusses some of the differences between communities of grace and communities of convenience. What kind of community are you involved in and how are you cultivating a community of grace? You can read the whole thing on Jonathan’s blog. [...]
February 9, 2009 at 10:42 pm
Community of Grace vs. Community of Convenience « Ramblings On. . .
[...] 9, 2009 in Uncategorized This post from Jonathon Dodson Rocks. Read it. No Comments Leave a Commenttrackback addressThere was an error with your comment, please try [...]
February 11, 2009 at 2:55 pm
Coffee Break « fresh expressions…
[...] Interesting post by Jonathan Dodson on Communities of Grace vs Communities of Convenience [...]
February 24, 2009 at 10:43 pm
» Another great link: Communities of Conve … Downtown KC “Loop”
[...] sides…having it spelled out helps us aim for grace and avoid typical Western Church mistakes. http://churchplantingnovice.wordpress.com/2009/02/09/community-of-convenience-vs-community-of-grace/ [...]
March 30, 2009 at 7:37 pm
deTheos » Blog Archive » Happy tensions: Grace + Temptation
[...] third comes to mind too: "Community: Convenience vs. Grace" by church planter/pastor Jonathan [...]