The Church Without Walls Report was presented to the General Assembly in 2001. The Report is an attempt to look for fresh ways of encouraging and supporting congregations in the twentieth-first century. The Report invites all of us in the Church to think about where we have come from, where we are and where we ought to be heading.
The Church Without Walls does not seek to impose a single, detailed pattern for every congregation. This point is emphasized in the opening summary of the Report’s contents:
‘We place into the hands of God’s people the opportunity to live out our faith, each according to our own uniqueness, made in the image of God. It is our hope and prayer that the Report, together with the many initiatives within the Church at present, will stimulate the Church to face the future in faith and hope’ (9).
The Report begins with the words of Jesus, ‘Follow Me’ (9). Christ calls us to follow Him. He invites us to be changed by Him. He calls us to move forward with Him. Moving forward with Christ and being changed by Him will involve listening to His voice.
Encouraging us to listen to Christ’s voice, the Report recommends congregations’ to ’study, reflect on and live by one Gospel for one year in the first instance, and let Jesus shape the life and structure of the congregation’ (18).
The change which is being called for is spiritual change. This is the change Christ is looking for. The Report emphasizes this point: ‘The heart of reform is the reform of the heart. The first proposal for reform is a call to prayer’ (37).
In one of ‘the many initiatives within the Church at present’, the Board of National Mission has produced a thirty-four page booklet entitled ‘Lord, Help us to Pray!’. With this booklet, as with the eighty pages of the Church Without Walls Report, it is possible to feel overwhelmed – ‘This is all too much for us!’.
Like the Church Without Walls Report, the booklet on prayer recognizes the uniqueness of each congregation: ‘Go at your own pace. You should not imagine that you are expected to implement all, or even most, of the ideas in this booklet. What you will find contained here are simply guidelines and suggestions’ (’Lord, Help us to Pray!’, 16).
Our Presbytery has provided notes to help us in our study of the Church Without Walls Report. The recommendations for Year 1 are chiefly directed towards Kirk Sessions. The recommendations for Year 2 are directed towards congregations. Beginning with the Kirk Session emphasizes the important part elders play within the life of the congregation.
We are to follow Christ. We are to help others to follow Christ.
The first of the issues raised by the Presbytery’s notes concerns the training of the elders for spiritual leadership.
We provided each elder with a copy of the booklet, ‘The Eldership: A Training Manual’. It is a booklet which lays the foundations for following Christ and helping others to follow Him.
By emphasizing ‘The Biblical Basis for the Eldership’ (9), it strikes a similar note to the Church Without Walls Report with its emphasis on listening carefully to what God is saying to us in His Word. Its emphasis on ‘Spiritual Leadership’ (34) is strikingly similar to the Church Without Walls Report’s statement: ‘The heart of reform is the reform of the heart. The first proposal for reform is a call to prayer’ (9).
When we lay the right foundations – ‘We will devote ourselves to prayer and the ministry of the Word’ (Acts 6:4) – we can move forward with God, confident that He will lead us in His perfect way.
We may be very uncertain about how God will lead us forward. If, however, we are serious about following Jesus Christ, we will know the truth of these words from Susan Brown’s booklet, ‘Church Without Walls: Working it out Together’ – ‘People at prayer learn to live within the purposes of God with patient hope’ (27).
We have thought about important matters. Now, we must pray about them. We have spoken about important matters. Now, we must speak to God about them. This is not only a conversation among ourselves. We must bring God into the conversation. We must listen to what He is saying to us. We must speak to Him, seeking His help.
Let’s join together in a final prayer taken from Susan Brown’s booklet, ‘Church Without Walls: Working it out Together’:
‘Lord Jesus Christ, you call us to follow You into the familiar and into the unknown, to places we find easy, and others we find difficult, to follow You tirelessly to the ends of the earth. We need Your strength, Your courage. We need the help of Your Holy Spirit to fill and inspire us, drawing us closer to You, and to one another in You, for Your sake. Father God, You have always gone before Your people, and You go before us. Grant us the courage to follow closely, to walk where You walk and do what You do. May Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven, for the sake of Jesus Christ our Lord’ (7,28).