A new director. A new agency. A newāand surprisingāname.
Synod 2017, the general assembly of the Christian Reformed Church, approved the authorizing language to make the new mission agency official, ending a process of combining what were historically two separate agencies, CRC World Missions and CRC Home Missions. The shift, two years in coming, brings to a close the histories of two of the longest-standing agencies of the CRC. World Missions, in particular, has been in existence for 137 years.
The was received enthusiastically.
But what to call it? In the end, it was the name that occasioned most of the discussion.
Amy Schenkel of Home Missions and Joel Huyser of World Missions presented some of the reasons for bringing the two agencies together. Huyser said that we live in a new world in which people we thought we would meet on the mission field have come to live next door to us. āThe joining of Home Missions and World Missions is not first of all a structural change,ā he said. āItās about facing the challenge and also the opportunities of this new world.ā
Schenkel said that there is a one in four chance that the person living next door has no church experience at all. Churches, she said, are feeling disconnected. āEven though what weāre doing on Sunday is good . . . we need to learn missionary habits that help us to love our communities.ā
In order to meet the challenges of doing mission in this new context, Home Missions and World Missions were brought together into a single agency. But it couldnāt continue to be called the āNew Missions Agency.ā
The name that emerged from the combined boardsā new mission agency boardāafter a lengthy branding discussionāwas, well, surprising to many: Resonate Global Mission. A double tagline is added: āEngaging people, embracing Christ. A ministry of the Christian Reformed Church.ā
The co-chairs of the temporary board for the new missions agency, Joy Engelsman and Carel Geleynse, walked the synod through the process of selecting the name. The board wanted the name to characterize an agency that would be ācourageous, resourceful, and innovative.ā They wanted the name to be metaphorical, more like Apple than, say, General Motors. They wanted it to be the sort of name that led people to ask about it rather than a name that was explicit about what it named. They wanted it to translate well into other languages. They wanted it to be a name that would work in societies that are not open to the gospel. And they wanted it to have, well, resonance.
John Dykhuis, Classis Red Mesa, struck what was to become a theme in the subsequent discussion. He said that his first thought on hearing the new name was, āWhat were they thinking?ā But as he considered it and heard the reasoning behind it, he came to favor the name.
Debra Mead, Classis Holland, extended the metaphor of resonance. She said that her son had recently cast a bronze bell. Bronze, she noted, is made of copper and tin. It is stronger than the two elements individually, and makes a strong and clear bell. To her, this process resembles the two mission agencies being brought together stronger and clearer. She ended her analogy with the appeal, āLet the gospel resonate in the world.ā
Paul De Weerd, Classis Huron quoted a dictionary that defined āresonateā as āto produce a deep clear sound that goes on for a long time.ā Daryl Meijer, Classis Chatham, was also of a mind to probe the word for its metaphorical possibilities. He said that āresonateā picks up on the deep meaning of an older word, ācatechism.ā At the heart of ācatechismā in the Greek is āecho.ā He said, āAs Christās word goes out, people resonate.ā
Not everyone was taken with the name. Mark Vande Zande, Classis Heartland, expressed his concern that Christ was nowhere in the name and that āChristian Reformedā appears only in the tagline: āIf we put CRC in the tagline, we are losing our identity.ā
Don Draayer, Classis Lake Superior, said, āGod sometimes has a sense of humor,ā noting that he was about to disagree with VandeZande. āLet the name settle in,ā he said. āIf it doesnāt āresonate,ā we can change it.ā
Joelle Wilhelm, a young adult representative expressed also enthusiasm for the name after initial misgivings: āI was not for this when I first heard. [But now] I love the name. Iām confident that this name will be a fantastic one.ā She added, āWe have to stop being afraid of change.ā
Synod 2017 was not afraid to affirm the new name, voting strongly in favor of it.
See also
Synod 2017 is meeting at Trinity Christian College in Palos Heights, Ill., from June 9-15. For continuous coverage while synod is in session, download the Banner app on your mobile device or follow The Banner Magazine on or on Twitter. You can find more tweeting by following hashtag . News stories will be posted at several times daily. For CRC Communications releases and the webcast, please visit . Unless noted otherwise, all photographs are by Karen Huttenga.
About the Author
Clayton Libolt was the long time pastor of River Terrace Church in East Lansing, Mich. Since his retirement, he has served in a variety of interim positions. He is presently serving as the interim senior pastor of Sonlight Community CRC in Lynden, Wash.