Get
Morphed
The Multiverse
Everything and
everyone is in movement, and everything
and everyone in movement is morphing.
The Barna
Research Group estimates that 9% of all
Americans are intimately involved with
more than one local church on a regular
basis. Another 30% are less regularly
involved with multiple churches.
Thats one example of religious
morphing.
But morphing has many
non-religious forms as well: economic,
political, biological, social, literary,
even body morphing.
If we could shrink the
Earths population to a village of
100 people, it would look like this:
57 Asians, 21
Europeans, 14 North and South Americans,
and 8 Africans
70 would be non-white
70 would be non-Christian
70 would be unable to read
50 would suffer from malnutrition
80 would live in substandard housing
1 would have a college education
50% of the entire world wealth would in
the hands of 6 people
All 6 people would be citizens of the US
The world is becoming a
single place. It is inherent in the
medium of cyberspace to break down
barriers. Postmodern children are playing
in cyber-neighborhoods and forming
friendships which have nothing to do with
ethnography or ethnicity. Their world is
global, interconnected, 24-7-365, with
new concepts of space and time and
neighborhood. The children of cyberspace
are pioneering a global youth culture
that blurs racial boundaries, a blurring
that Benetton, Nike, Calvin Klein, and others are exploiting
as an exchange of commerce.
In may ways, the armed services (which are based
on rank not race) are doing better than
the church in pioneering a multiracial
society.
The distinctions and
variables of the future are less
political, ideological, or even racial;
they are cultural -- issues of language,
religion, customs, history.
Boundaries are both
collapsing and expanding at the same
time. Our connections are to multiple places: shrinking to
tribal locales and expanding to planetary
boundaries. As the funeral of Princess
Diana make clear to everyone, for the
first time in human history, people are
having global experiences. We are living
in the whole world. But the more we know
the same things and share the same
experiences at the same moment, the more
we experience them differently according
to our particularized customs and
circumstances.
God is the creator of the
cosmos, the ruler of the universe. Yet
God calls you by name, knows the numbers
of hairs on your head, and feels the pain
of every bird that falls.
The motto "Think
Globally, Act Locally" must become
"Think Globally and Locally, Act
Globally and Locally."
If the church cannot come
to terms with the profound changes
wrought by globalization and
intercultural contact of a degree unknown
in all of history, then what right do we
have to claim that word
"church?" Isnt the story
of Pentecost (Acts 2:1-12) not the rolling
back of multiplicity but the ability of
singularity to emerge out of
multiplicity, and the ability of any and
all human languages to communicate the
divine?
"God likes a lot of
things I dont."
Dont do normal: It
is getting harder and harder to slot
people into easy categories. One of the
worst insults you can hurl at postmoderns
is to accuse them of being
"normal." Postmoderns
dont "do normal." They
"do ab-normal." They "do
morph." Postmodern culture has
declared war on bland and normal.
Postmoderns want to be ad-normal. Why
else are our foods showing higher spice
levels?
This is one of the
greatest problems the church -- "the
bland leading the bland" -- is
facing. Too many sermons fall easily into
the broad brackets of the nauseatingly normal.
"Diversity without
unity makes about as much sense as
dishing up flour, sugar, water, eggs,
shortening, and baking-powder on a plate
and calling it a cake." C.
William Pollard
God must love diversity.
God made an infinite variety of it. C.S.
Lewis once said the one prayer God does
not answer is "encore." God
does not like copies.
Now What? Net Notes
1. For a sampling of
world-beat music, visit http://www.globalmusic.com/ and listen for
yourself.
2. Pull up the cover of
the special Fall 1993 issue of Time magazine.
3. ColorTool is a software
program tracking color associations in 32
cultures. The e-mail address of its
creator, Surya Vanka, is
s-vanka1@uiuc.edu.
4. See if you can find
Age, Gender, or Race on the Internet.
5. The Aryan Nation, based
in Hayden Lake, Idaho, contends that it
is committed to "the ongoing work of
Jesus the Christ regathering His people,
calling His people to a state
to
bring in His kingdom." Visit the
Aryan Nations Web site at http://www.nidlink.com/~aryanvic/ and discuss your
findings. How would you witness to a
member of this group?
6. Consult the
Phonological Atlas of North America at http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/home.html.
What are some ethnic
differences in pronunciation that are
peculiar to your area? Should these be
preserved, or would their loss not really
diminish anything?
7. Compare the 1990 and
2000 census forms and the options for
race classification. In 1990 there were
five choices; in 2000 there will be 64
possible racial combinations. The Office
of Management and Budgets Revision
to the Standards for the Classification
of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity
report is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/WH/EOP/OMB/html/fedreg/Ombdir15.html.
For more information on
the new system, see the Census
Bureaus official Web site at http://www.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/race.html.
8. Pick your favorite
Bible verse, then choose one of these
languages: Spanish, Italian, Portuguese,
French, German. Now contact http://babelfish.altavista.digital.com. How long did it
take to translate your favorite Bible
verse into the language of your choice?
9. To render your English
more perfect, you can find help with some
online English experts:
"The Grammar
Doctor" at http://www.one.net/~sparks25/gdoctor.html
"The Grammar Queen" at http://www.grammarqueen.com
"The Grammar Lady" at http://www.grammarlady.com
10. For building bridges
across racial, cultural, and religious
divides, see htttp://www.oudc.org, which
brings together Jewish and
African-American high school students for
intensives and trips.
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