The Big Question by Cam Roxburgh

2010 April 9
by LeadersVillage

Continuing our journey of featuring speakers from the Skill, Strategy and Story Event featuring Bill Hybels is Cam Roxburgh. Having planted a church in Vancouver, BC, he now pastors Southside Community Church, as well as leads Forge Canada and Church Planting Canada.

I landed in time for the face-off for the men’s Olympic Gold Medal Hockey Game. Being in the States during the game had its downsides, but it was fun to gloat. That evening, I went to Mosaic (Erwin McManus’s community) and they lamented their USA team’s loss. No sympathy here.

After 9 days without checking e-mail, my inbox was full of stories of God at work across Canada; Vancouver churches using the Olympics to reach their neighbourhoods, Alberta churches wanting to become more missional, Manitoba Christians gearing up for hosting the 2011 National Church Planting Congress, and those in Ontario, excited about developing a Canadian tour on urban community development.

There were questions also. How do we find ways to work together? How do we measure faithfulness? How do we train leaders for missional engagement? But the biggest question, hit me while attending Mosaic. How do we gather in a way to produce missionaries and not consumers? To be clear, I enjoyed myself. Everything was top notch. The crowd was expectant, the band fantastic, the dancers spectacular and the ethos was magnetic. I love listening to Erwin, and his wife Kim was even better. It’s not hard to see why Mosaic is so popular.

But one question plagued me. Can we gather for worship in the same way and hope to produce missionaries instead of consumers?

I used to attend Willow Creek Community Church. Their heart for non-Christians is huge. But the “seeker-targeted” services smelled of performance and eventually their “Reveal” material admitted they had not produced the disciples they had wanted to. At Mosaic, I felt like I’d been to a show. I wondered if the end result would be any different. I walked in, was greeted, sat down and didn’t need to do anything else. Do we produce consumers by the way we gather to worship… no matter how well we do it?

Leviticus 1 is about burnt offerings. God knew that as His people entered the promised-land they would be seduced by the worship of the foreign God’s. God gave clear instructions how to worship so that others would be drawn to Him. He was precise. Thorough. Inclusive, demanding and expectant. But above all, He was missional for He wanted His people to be a blessing to all nations.

The biggest lesson is that worship was about what they brought, and not just about what they received or consumed. It cost them a lot. What would our gatherings look like if we oriented them around bringing and giving, and not around performance and receiving?

In my church, we did not take an offering, thinking it would make for a safe place for unbelievers. When I went to a friend’s church and saw people come down the aisle to place their offering in a basket, I caught a glimpse into what it was to teach people that we come to give. This has led to constantly asking the question…

What are we doing that is inadvertently producing consumers, instead of producing missionaries?”

Ruthlessly work to sort out the answers to this most important question.

Cam planted a church in the inner city of Burnaby, BC. After seeing its neighbourhood transformed, Southside Community Church has grown to four congregations in four neighbourhoods. Out of this, Cam has developed the Forge Canada Missional Training Network which helps churches and leaders across the country to become missional and see neighbourhood transformation in their neighbourhoods, and multiply into new neighbourhoods. Cam has also serves as the National Director of Church Planting Canada.

Cam has the privilege of speaking internationally at conferences and schools. He has also consulted with a number of churches and denominations, and served on committees for the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada. His great passion remains for Christ working in a local community of followers of Jesus to see neighbourhood transformation.

Cam has been married to for 21 years. He and his wife have four children and live in Surrey, BC.

2 Responses leave one →
  1. Pat permalink
    April 13, 2010

    Good post!

  2. Juan permalink
    April 13, 2010

    agreed

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