Eikon Church - Little Rock, AR

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Archives > May, 2009

eikon: not just a bunch of dudes Posted by Ryan Byrd 05.31.2009 9:31 pm

how’s that for a blog post title??… :)

soon and very soon, i plan on blogging a series of posts that will present our core values and some of the various theologies that are the underpinning in the shaping of this faith community. while i hope to do that in greater detail soon, i stumbled across an article that i thought was worth sharing and worth offering a couple brief thoughts.

one of the things we want to have at the core of our values and dna, so to speak, at eikon is gender equality. quite frankly, we hope that equality across the board is highly valued, but it seems that, in the church, gender equality has historically been a great barrier. to cut straight to the point, we believe that men and women, because they are both made in the image of god, are equal in not only being but also in function. in other words, we believe women can be pastors and teachers and leaders and elders and have full functional equivalence of men.

so, we’re not just a bunch of dudes. :)

not only do we believe it, but over the last several months, as we’ve begun to form the core leadership group for eikon, we’ve intentionally sought out women leaders who will be key decision-makers in our community. the bottom line is that there are just certain experiences and points-of-view that i will never be able to offer being a male. there are certain filters through which i view scripture and how i see god that are simply deficient as compared to a female perspective.

just last night, while having dinner with some new friends/potential leaders at eikon (keeping my fingers crossed…), we had a great conversation about the way we see and perceive god. in this case, our new friend—who is the mother of a 2-yr old child—spoke about growing up thinking god was angry with her and that he didn’t love her because she wasn’t good enough. what struck me was that she talked about how the experience of having a child and being a mother has changed the way she views god. her deep and unconditional love for her child has shown her—if we are truly children of god—that there’s no way god could be angry with her. how could a god characterized by love and grace and sacrifice hate his child? her experience as a woman and a mother has filtered the way she perceives god and certainly, the way in which she leads and make decisions are a product of her unique perspective.

so, without going into too great of detail, i thought i would share those quick thoughts about our position on gender equality. the article that i referenced that spawned this post is from jim wallis’ god’s politics blog with guest blogger mimi haddad. haddad is president of christians for biblical equality, a great organization of “christian men and women who believe that the bible, properly interpreted, teaches the fundamental equality of men and women of all racial and ethnic groups, all economic classes, and all age groups.” you can find more out about CBE here and you can read haddad’s article here.

while the article isn’t a thorough explanation of a biblical view of gender equality, i think it’s a good introduction that can help to stir a dialogue and engage those who are unfamiliar with more egalitarian biblical concepts. for an even more in-depth analysis of biblical gender equality, i highly recommend rebecca merrill groothuis’ good news for women: a biblical picture of gender quality (amazon link). i read this book 5 or 6 years ago and it greatly challenged me and put me on a path of biblical and cultural and relational discovery that has made me much more intentional about these issues and has made me place much more value on women’s vital and necessary roles in communities of faith. (p.s. if you want to get a little sneak peek, i came across this on her website. it’s a fairly significant chunk from the book to get an idea of the trajectory she takes throughout her work.)

we really look forward to the continued shaping of the leadership at eikon with both men and women who want to engage and lead others in the way of jesus—the ultimate example of a life characterized by equality.

in the end, of course, we want to be a community that isn’t just a bunch of dudes. :)



eikon cookout! Posted by Ryan Byrd 05.21.2009 8:52 pm

eikon cookout

after months of planning and organizing, i’m very excited to announce that, on sunday, june 7, eikon will have its first ever public gathering. christen and i will be having a cookout at our house. we have a kind of cool garden type space behind our house, so that should be a good place to hang out, meet some new people and have some burgers and some beers.

let me emphasize that this will not be a worship service or really any kind of “churchy” sort of thing. this will simply be a very laid back cookout. we won’t ask people to fill stuff out. we won’t be doing any kind of speaking or anything. there won’t be any kind of weird “getting to know you” kind of stuff. it will just be a chance to meet a few new people and get a sense of all the other people that have been hearing all the same things as you about eikon church.we’ll kick things off at 5 p.m. and we’ll wrap things up around 8 p.m. for those of you with children under 5, we’ll be offering free child care in our home. to see a map to our house, click here (we’re the house directly next to the empress bed & breakfast). to be more exact, our address is 2118 s. louisiana st in little rock.so, we’re very excited about the cookout, so we definitely hope you come out! this will be the soft launch for the church, so we’ll have much more information in the coming weeks.

on another big note, we’re very close to launch the real deal eikon website. in the next couple days, we’ll have some temporary stuff up on the site, but the fully site should be up and running in the next 2-3 weeks. so, be looking out for more info on that.

alright, mark your calendars for the cookout. if you have questions, feel free to call me (ryan) at 501.551.8118 or shoot me an email at eikon [at] beingryanbyrd [dot] com. see you in a couple weeks!



growing an organic community Posted by Ryan Byrd 05.04.2009 6:31 pm

one of the ways i often describe the shaping of eikon is “organic.” by this, i mean natural growth. growth that isn’t forced or contrived. it’s growth that allows things to grow in ways that aren’t foreign to their environment.

to flesh this out a little more in real life terms, i view organic growth as non-”gimmick” growth. while we certainly plan on using various streams of branding and marketing, we don’t want to turn to gimmicks that misrepresent the church and mislead people. i also use organic to work alongside the idea of being incarnational. in other words, jesus lived with the people he reached, looked like the people he reached, ate with the people he reached and engaged in the culture of the people he reached. of course, all this is in the context of being organic and natural—not in some contrived way. we don’t want to force our way into some kind of foreign culture, but rather, we hope to assimilate in an organic way. additionally, i use the term organic to move away from the idea of program/attraction-driven models that solely rely on big events and impressive displays to attract people. again, we certainly hope to create spaces that draw people in and create opportunities for people to meet and interact, but we want to do this in the context of relationships and generative friendships. there are many, many more ways to define my use of the word organic, but these are a few that help to illustrate the point.

sometimes the word organic is misused or misunderstood by some people to mean “fly by night” or “whatever happens happens” or some other similar derivative. in fact, growing an organic community is a very strategic and thoughtful process that requires a significant amount of work and commitment. julie clawson, self-described “mom, writer, activist, dreamer”, on her blog, one hand clapping, spent a little time thinking about this very issue of organic community. in talking about her and her daughter tending to their organic garden at their home, she stumbles upon some great analogies about growing an organic community. she writes:

…I am spending more and more time pulling the weeds that choke out the life of the food and attempting to do something about the bugs that are eating my food. I don’t want to dump toxins onto the land, but I really don’t want to be sharing my swiss chard with the critters either. So I’m experimenting with organic pesticides. Yesterday I made up a batch that was pretty much a mixture of pureed garlic and habanero peppers. I could barely stand being in the kitchen with the stuff my eyes stung so bad, so I hope the bugs have the same aversion to it. We shall see.

All that to say, organic gardening is work. Growing my own food and doing so in sustainable ways that doesn’t harm the environment or my kids takes works. It reminded me of…how all too often we speak of organic leadership or organization as if it is this nebulous unstructured thing. People who despise brands or hierarchy will suggest organic systems instead. But…organic gardening is hard - it takes a lot of deliberate effort. No organic gardener is going to go in without a plan, without knowing when to plant. They aren’t going to let pests or weeds take over the garden if they care about actually producing food. It’s just that as they go about their work they do so in loving, careful, and considerate fashion without imposing unnatural elements onto the garden. Understanding that work…really helps me understand more the spiritual metaphor of what an organic community should be like.

i think she presents a beautiful metaphor. while i’m not a gardener, i can really appreciate this palpable analogy that really expresses the care and love needed to grow organically. to produce something as natural as possible, it takes diligence and care and an informed plan. we hope to be a similar kind of gardener—as julie describes—at eikon.

one of the beautiful pieces of julie’s story is that she tends to the garden in community. specifically, she and her daughter oversee the garden. we hope to do the same at eikon. i (ryan) don’t want to reign over eikon as some kind of dictatorial gardener, but someone who cares for the growth alongside others. we don’t want to build needless hierarchies or divisive systems, but rather hope to come alongside people as co-laborers and co-sojourners. certainly, we’ll have leaders (which i’ll begin to talk about very soon), but we hope to build the leadership team (as we’ve already been doing for quite some time) in an equally organic way. so, we want you to begin to think about whether or not you think you have a part in this thing called eikon. as we grow organically, we need people to partner with us to help in the work of gardening.



questions for eikon?: follow-up Posted by Ryan Byrd 05.01.2009 2:23 pm

questions for eikon

several weeks ago, i posted an entry in an attempt to offer people an open invitation to ask some of the questions they may have about this thing we’re calling eikon church. in the past several months, more and more great questions have been flowing in and the blog post was an extension of that reality.

in the blogosphere, it’s often difficult to entice people to leave comments. understandably, it “commits” you to an exchange that some people aren’t interested in pursuing. after that particular post, we had a lot of email questions and many more from just personal interactions. one brave soul, though, chose to leave some questions in a comment. :)

so, i thought i would answer these in this public forum (whereas other email/personal questions were answered in the same manner). here goes:

1. Is Eikon in any way inspired by Rick McKinley’s Imago Dei Church in Portland (also home to Donald Miller)?

the simple answer is no. here, though, is a more sufficient response.

i am certainly familiar with imago dei and similarly familiar with rick mckinley (founding pastor of imago dei). further, one of my favorite books of all-time if donald miller’s blue like jazz. so, i am somewhat versed in what they do.the reason i say no, though, is that while i’m familiar with them and like many of the things they do, it wouldn’t be an accurate response to say that i have specifically modeled or been inspired by their community of faith. it’s probably safe to say that we are theologically different from them in various ways (although not any major differences) and probably have some differing theological roots.

by all means, i do consider them to be a great community of faith and would recommend them to friends in the portland area. one of the things i absolutely love about them is their commitment to and emphasis on the arts—visual arts, writing, filmmaking, songwriting, etc. i hope and plan to have a similar emphasis and hope to—much like they do—build networks of artists and writers and filmmakers and craftsmen and the like.

so, while the answer is emphatically no, i certainly like many of the ways they’ve organized their community.

2. Is Eikon actually a church, or more of a community movement toward God?

in some ways, this question is a bit of a catch 22. what i mean by that is that semantics seem to get in the way for many people (although it certainly may not for the person asking these questions). for some, the word church has negative connotations. certainly, i interchange the words church and community of faith often. i think the term community of faith elicits much more fruitful and biblical connotations, but i don’t have a problem with the word church.

with that said, in the broad and most generally connotated sense of the word, yes, eikon is a church. “officially”, it is eikon church. we certainly hope that—much more than just a bunch of people who sit in a building once a week and call it a church—there is a community and network and movement of people throughout little rock that follow and know jesus. i have little interest in creating an organization, but i am driven and called and motivated to engage our surrounding culture with values that reflect jesus.

more to the point, we will have a building where we meet regularly (hopefully more often than just sunday). we will have leaders (which i’ll talk more about very soon). we will have various ministries in which we engage as a community. we will do all the things that are “traditionally” associated with “church.” BUT, we hope to do it an a bit of an alternative manner. we think that we in the american church need to be honest and admit that we have mistakenly prioritized and de-emphasized some things that are central to a community that claims to follow jesus. ultimately, we hope to do church and a be a community in a way that directly reflects jesus and trims away some of the non-essentials.

3. How does Eikon work in light of (or shadow of, as you may prefer) the 1st Century New Testament Church, acts, etc.?

that’s a pretty big question for a blog post answer, but let me see if i can distill that down a little. :)

i think the best place to go is—as you pointed out—the book of acts. specifically, acts 2 sheds some great light on the way the church can and should look.

They committed themselves to the teaching of the apostles, the life together, the common meal, and the prayers.
Everyone around was in awe—all those wonders and signs done through the apostles! And all the believers lived in a wonderful harmony, holding everything in common. They sold whatever they owned and pooled their resources so that each person’s need was met.
They followed a daily discipline of worship in the Temple followed by meals at home, every meal a celebration, exuberant and joyful, as they praised God. People in general liked what they saw. Every day their number grew as God added those who were saved.

here’s what we see:

1) they placed emphasis on learning and theological discovery (committed themselves to the teaching of the apostles),

2) an important part of their community was life “beyond the four walls”, so, in other words, they weren’t completely “church”-focused/obsessed (the life together, the common meal, meals at home),

3) eagerness/willingness to engage in personal sacrifice in order to meet needs (they sold whatever they owned and pooled their resources so that each person’s need was met),

4) spiritual engagement in community was vital (prayers, daily discipline of worship, praised god, celebration) and

5) assuming that these thousands of people described here have different starting points, worldviews and specific values, they were a community that were able to place friendships/mutual understanding above individual differences (all the believers lived in a wonderful harmony).

with all that said, we hope these traits are characteristic of eikon. naturally, we want to engage people in a way that is relevant and meaningful within the context of 21st century sensibilities, but i think the church described here in acts exhibits very broad and overarching characteristics that transcend time (much like most of the scenarios described throughout scripture).

so, whereas our context is, obviously, very different than the 1st century church, i hope that we will be able to learn from and exhibit the characteristics that shaped them.

4. How do you define Emergent?

wow, what a question…

well, i don’t know if i do define emergent. :) if i’ve got to try, though, i generally “define” it much more as a conversation than a “way to do” church or a specific set of theologies. i think one of the beauties of the emergent conversation is that you see so many different expressions of church and faith involved. it transcends age, denomination and, again, specific theologies. that isn’t to say that you don’t see some connective streams and characteristics, but it isn’t confined to simple, limiting definitions.

i sort of think of emergent as the indie music equivalent within the church/theological camps. of course, indie music began by exactly that: independent music. it was bands/artists that weren’t signed to any major label (or any label, for that matter). indie music—in the last 10 years (or maybe more)—has shifted from a strict definition of “bands not signed to a label” into bands that exhibit certain qualities and characteristics. these qualities and characteristics, though, aren’t easily definable categories. it’s more of a feeling and a spirit. quite frankly, i can’t really any verbalize what those specific things are, but i can certainly sense when a band is sort of indie in nature.

for example, i love jenny lewis (and rilo kiley, for that matter) and i would say she is an indie artist, despite the fact that she’s signed to warner bros, a (very) major label (as is rilo kiley). she’s clearly not truly “independent”, but there’s something about her lyrics and the delivery and the way she “does” music that gives off that indie vibe. now, you could certainly argue that she’s not an indie artist, but so it goes with the term “emergent.” who’s emergent and who’s not?

there’s just a spirit and vibe and “energy” that connects people and churches under the umbrella term of “emergent.” so, that may be the absolute most vague and unhelpful “definition”, but that at least shared some of my thoughts. :)

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well, for those who have made it to the end and are not in a vegetative state due to my ramblings, i hope that serves to further the conversation and your ability to understand what this whole thing called eikon is all about. thanks for playing! :)

we’ll be back very, very soon with some exciting information about our first ever collective gathering under the auspices of eikon. it should be a cool time and help to give you a more tangible grasp of what we’re doing. check back soon for details.