Something Beautiful

renewing and emerging

Archive for General

Community Building Offline

George Oates from Flickr has an outstanding article about online community building over at A List Apart. What resonates with me most is the  relevance of Oates’ thoughts for those of us building communities in the offline world. In particular, I wonder what the church might look like if we considered the fact that 95% of what people interact with online is generated by other users, not site administrators. We could hardly say the same thing of religious worship services, Bible studies, etc. Here’s a quick taste of what Oates has to say, I hope it wets your appetite:

People don’t like being told what to do. We like to explore, change things around, and make a place our own. Hefty design challenges await the makers of websites where people feel free to engage; both with the system itself and with each other. Embrace the idea that people will warp and stretch your site in ways you can’t predict—they’ll surprise you with their creativity and make something wonderful with what you provide.
–George Oates

Organic Community

Organic Community: Creating A Place Where People Naturally Connect is the best book on ministry I have read in a while. It’s so good that when I started reading it during the middle of the semester, I couldn’t stop until I was finished. As many of you know, there is NO time for extra reading during seminary/grad school, but I couldn’t not finish this book.

Organic CommunityThis isn’t a book that’s limited to ministers. Joseph R. Myers has written a classic (as Leonard Sweet calls it) and it’s valuable to anyone who leads or works with people on a regular basis. Myers uses 10 word pairings to contrast the implications of two modes of organizing and mobilizing communities. The “Master Plan” model is predicated on top-heavy, position-based authority figures who draw up road maps to future destinations and ask for nothing from their communities but cooperation with the predetermined plan. “Organic Order,” on the other hand, seeks collaboration between community members and values a revolving power structure in which every individual contributes to the evolving story of their community as a whole. For anyone else who considers them self an Organic-style leader, I was surprised to discover the tendencies in myself that derive from the “master-plan” approach.

I really can’t make a hard enough sell for this book. Many of these ideas were not new to me, nor will they be to you, but Myers connects new images and language in a way that makes organic community organizing breathe in a way it never has. I’ll re-read this book every year for the rest of my life.

Church Planting

Some of you might be happy to learn that I’m taking a class on church planting. Ever since I did the Jonah Project people have been telling me to start my own church. My response is always the same, “That’s not for me.” Maybe it is.

Church PlantLeonard Sweet is teaching the class, and many of you know that he’s a BIG name in all this emerging/missional/postmodern church stuff. I’m learning a lot. I thought I knew a lot. I’m learning a lot more than I thought I knew. I wasn’t sure about the class at first. It seemed like the material was just going to be too conservative for me (theologically) and thereby not helpful. I was wrong. Yesterday’s class gave me new language to express some things I’ve been thinking about for a long time. And, it turns out, there’s a lot of other people thinking about this stuff too. I thought they were all just imaginary people who wrote books. Now, I can actually talk to them and shake hands with them. How exciting!

So, starting a church is now on my horizon more than ever before. But still, no promises. Besides, if I ever plant a church, it’ll look very different from what most of the people I know might imagine it would look like.

My life quote

Beer!

 

Thank you Martin Luther for this inspirational quote:

God is at work even while we are drinking beer.

 

Amen.

“O”mazing Grace

My brothers-in-law first alerted me to this ministerial masterpiece last week while Kathleen and I were in NJ on vacation. I won’t say much, except that this guy provides all the impetus there is for being prepared on Sunday mornings. I mean this is just BAD.

The Ninety and Nine

Most anyone who knows me or my work is keenly aware of my thoughts regarding homosexuality and the just and equal treatment of gay, Same-Sex Weddnglesbian, bi-sexual and trans-gendered people in the church and society. I’ve got a very brief article about the subject on the “words” page of this blog.

I was working on a new article for the Journal of Student Ministries when I stumbled upon a moving story/sermon in response to Jesus’ parable in Matthew about the shepherd who leaves the flock to search out a lost sheep. This wonderful response to that parable was written by Rev. Elder Freda Smith, the first women ordained for ministry in the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches. The story appears in the body of a Bible study available at www.freeingthespirit.org. Freeing the Spirit also has a very thorough and insightful Bible Study regarding homosexuality and the Bible. That Bible Study sheds great light on the biblical passages that discuss homosexual intercourse, relationships, etc.

I highly recommend each of these links; you will find many more that might illuminate your search for a more just and equitable relationship with God and humanity.

Harry Potter and the Order of the Flummoxed

I saw the new Harry Potter the day it came out. I was actually surprised to see Order of the Pheonixhow short the line for tickets was. Then, when I got to the ticket counter I saw that every show after 6pm was sold out. I underestimated the mass hysteria surrounding this movie; I wasn’t expecting so many people to show up so many hours in advance for their tickets. Fortunately, it was 3pm and the masses had not chosen the 4pm showing Kat and I were headed to with some friends.

I finished reading The Order of the Phoenix about 2 weeks before the movie came out. Geez! That was a long book. I should say, it wasn’t my favorite of the septology either. The book seemed to drag on. And I feltDaniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter encumbered by details and plot lines that I deemed unnecessary… like Grawp. On the other hand, J.K. Rowling demonstrated her mastery of storytelling with those subtle details that send me to the grocery store actually expecting someone to brandish a wand and levitate my purchases over the laser scanner zooming into a single a paper bag (which must be too small for all this stuff!).

So, the story was fresh in my mind and while I didn’t think this story was the best, I still had a clear vision of what the Ministry of Magic looked like, how Dolores Umbridge Imelda Staunton as Dolores Umbridgecroaked “detention!” very snidely at Harry and how isolated Harry must have felt to carry around the fright of his nightmares and the Daily Prophet’s slander while trying to live a “normal” teenage life. Sitting there, front and center in an auditorium with about 300 other reavenous Potter fans, I expected to watch someone else’s vision of the same story unfold before me in an authentic and entertaining way, as with the other four movies in the series. How disappointed was I, then, to discover that Michael Goldenberg and David Yates apparently read a different book?

Maybe that goes too far. They seemed to have read the beginning, then skipped to the end (hey, it was a long book) and were content to imagine all the details in between forDavid Yates directs Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix themselves. If you hadn’t read the book, I hear you could almost understand everything that was happening in the movie… almost. Having read the book didn’t help a whole lot with the plot holes, but it did make for a more frustrating experience as you watched one of the seven best stories of the modern world mangled and distorted by an otherwise very competent screenwriter and director.

I’ll see the new Harry Potter movie twice more over the next week as Kat and I visit Ralph Fines as Lord Voldemortfamily members in NJ and PA who have read the Order of the Phoenix but haven’t yet seen the movie. I wonder if I’ll have a different experience now that I have come to terms with the dramatic reinterpretation of the story? Maybe if I read Danielle Steele or some other literary dribble for the next week I can lower the bar enough to actually enjoy the story Yates and Goldenberg are trying to tell.

Phase 10 Tournament

If you haven’t played Phase 10, then you’ve got to go directly to Target and pick this game up! It’s like a hybrid of Rummy and Uno. Many Phase 10thanks are due to our friends Daniel and Susan for introducing us to it! We’re hosting a Phase 10 tournament soon, and we’ve been practicing–sharpening our skills. Eventually, we’ll get good enough to take this thing on the road and set up a Phase 10 hussle in every middle school cafeteria in the country! Look out 11 year olds!!

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