What does it mean to be Missional ?

The term missional is an adjective that describes the fact that a church totally aligns itself with the missio Dei ( the mission of God). Christ Jesus prayed to the Father, “As You sent Me into the world, I also have sent them into the world,” (John 17.18). This truth reveals that the church is to be missional, on mission, acting as “sent ones” in this world. The church is formed to continue the mission that began in the heart of the Father, was seen in the life of the Son, and is to continue in the Spirit empowered endeavors of the church. The basic premise of the missional church is that “missions” is not an organization or program of a church. Missions constitute the very essence or nature of the church.

This blog will be dedicated to leading all of us who engage in this conversation to find ways to be missional in New Orleans or where God has placed us. I will publish suggestions for missional activites on a regular basis as well as food for thought that is designed to make us become missional. It is my hope that my thoughts and suggestions will serve as a motivation for all of us to be about
missio Dei .


Tuesday, August 16, 2011

St. Joseph Abbey

The Pastor's Class enjoyed a recent visit to St. Joseph's Abbey in Covington. For many it was their first visit. The Abbey is worth the drive to see the art of dom Gregory deWit.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Let's Journal for Lent

OK, you are reading through the Gospel of Mark-What now? Let's keep a simple journal,below is a sample of what yours might look like.

A Simple Journal Process


Date/Time: March 9,2011

Passage: Mark1:1-1


 First Observations/Keywords:   Son of God,messenger, repentance,forgiveness,confessing, proclaimed, water, baptize ,Holy Spirit, tempted

Main idea/meaning:   John the Baptist was introducing Jesus to the world.

I don’t understand/questions: Why was Jesus baptized? What is the relationship between confession and forgiveness?What was the purpose of the temptation of Jesus?

Right now I believe God wants me to: There is a great need to proclaim the forgiveness of Jesus to our communities.

Prayer:  Lord help me to fine the words and the time to tell others who you are in my life and what you can be for them. Let my Lenten quiet times strenghten me for this task.


This is only and sample of what you might want to do. The questions can be used for further study and journaling.

Mark in 40 Days

Here's a good way to have a simple daily time of prayer. The goal is to read and reflect on the gospel of Mark in forty days. I know we are a few days late but it's easy to catch up. Click on the link below and download a copy of the plan.


The Lenten Journey -- Mark in 40 days:

Lent is Here

Lent is about mortality and transformation. We begin the season of Lent on Ash Wednesday with the sign of the cross smeared on our foreheads with ashes as the words are spoken over us, "Dust thou art, and to dust thou wilt return." We begin this season of Lent not only reminded of our death, but also marked for death.


The Lenten journey, with its climax in Holy Week and Good Friday and Easter, is about participating in the death and resurrection of Jesus. Put somewhat abstractly, this means dying to an old identity—the identity conferred by culture, by tradition, by parents, perhaps—and being born into a new identity—an identity centered in the Spirit of God. It means dying to an old way of being, and being born into a new way of being, a way of being centered once again in God.

Put slightly more concretely, this path of death and resurrection, of radical centering in God, may mean for some of us that we need to die to specific things in our lives—perhaps to a behavior or a pattern of behavior that has become destructive or dysfunctional; perhaps to a relationship that has ended or gone bad; perhaps to an unresolved grief that needs to be let go of; perhaps to a career or job that has either been taken from us or that no longer nourishes us; or perhaps even we need to die to a deadness in our lives.

You can even die to deadness, and this dying is also oftentimes a daily rhythm in our lives—that daily occurrence that happens to some of us as we remind ourselves of the reality of God in our relationship to God; that reminder that can take us out of ourselves, lift us out of our confinement, take away our feeling of being burdened and weighed down.

That's the first focal point of a life that takes Jesus seriously: that radical centering in the Spirit of God that is at the very center of the Christian life.

—Dr. Marcus Borg



Let me share with you a few things you can do to observe Lent .

• Give up something you value, to remind you of what Jesus gave up for you.
• Try to live more simply in all areas of your life: watch less TV, walk instead of driving, observe a quiet period each day.
• Go through your closets and give away clothes that are still in good condition, but that you could do without.
• Clean your home and use spring cleaning to reflect on your spiritual renewal.
• Cook and eat a dish that you always avoid, not necessarily because it repels you but because it is “foreign” and you tend to limit yourself to the familiar.
• Listen to some music you normally can’t “get into.” Wonder if it resonates with something in you, and might not be so bad after all.
• Treat yourself to a meal of rice and tea once a week as a physical sign of concern with the real majority, the hungry world.
• Give up movies or forego some favorite sports events.
• Choose simpler, more healthful meals: less meat, no dessert.
• Do without between meal snacks.
• Give up desserts.
• Eliminate wasteful and expensive habits.
• Drink only water with your meals for one week.
• Eliminate snacking and junk food.
• Give up an hour of TV each day for scripture reading, prayer and reflection.
• Clean house and give unneeded items to charity.
• Give up one big meal a week and donate the money saved to help feed the hungry.
• Serve meat half as often as usual.
• Once or twice a week serve a simple meal that consists of soup or salad, bread, and a beverage.

Over the next several weeks I will be publishing some things that I have written as well copied works that will help you observe Lent as a holy and special season of the Christian year. Check back a few times each week and see what's new on the blog. Your comments are always welcomed.