Get
Deconverted
De-Everything
What
prevents the church from being future-fit is less
its installed base of industrial plants and
factory-model facilities, but its installed base
of obsolete thinking and low-grade, even bad
information.

One
of our greatest challenges is how to come to
terms with what we dont know, and the too
many things we know that arent true.
Because the church has failed to be both a
learning organism and an unlearning organism, our
intellectual capital is steadily depreciating. We
stand now at the bottom of the information food
chain. We live now in the Digital Dark Ages.
As
we seek to live and minister in the Information Age, the quantity of
information has never been greater, but its
quality has become problematic.
What does it profit a
postmodern,
if he/she gains an Information Age,
and loses quality information?
Lets
talk about the quality of global connectedness,
the quality of inner consciousness, the quality
of commitment to Christ, etc.
A
herbicide kills because it is a hormone that
gives the plant bad information. It tells the
plant to grow faster than its capacity to absorb
nutrients allows. It literally grows itself to
death because its information base is wrong. For
the church to do ministry any longer out of the
information base of "re" words and
"growth" concepts may be toxic to the
body of Christ.
"Re-naissance,"
"Reformation," "Re-volution:"
The modern era was structured around
"re" words. The doors of the postmodern
era are being opened up to new experiences and
expressions by "de" words:
"decoherent histories,"
"decolonization," "deinvent."
As
a seminary leader, I am living through what some
are calling organized religions "Second Great Depression," an era of
institutional decline and degradation.
Establishment religion now looks back
nostalgically at a wonderful past and looks
forward anxiously at a frightening future. No one
need be told about the massive membership losses
of the old mainstream Protestants in the past 25
years. The problem is even deeper than the
statistics reveal. Just because numbers of
churches arent withering away does not
prove that it is sacred needs rather than secular
needs that are being met by these churches. There
still remain secular, civil reasons for going to
church. In some locations going to church still
brings secular rewards.
As
a historian of American religion and culture, I
am privileged to live in one of the greatest
spiritual awakenings in American history, a time
some are calling Americas "Fifth Great Awakening."
What
irony that in the midst of a spiritual heat wave
in the culture, in the church its a deep
freeze.
Top
10 De-Words for a Postmodern Reformation Church:
Deconstruction
Dematerialization
Decentralization - the
difference between creating a church which
reaches out to the world, and creating mature
believers who team together to reach out to the
world
Deconversion
Dealignment
De-Moralization
Democratization
Deprivatization
Dedifferentiation
Demassification
Small
inputs/massive consequences:
Set
aside 15 minutes a day to read a book.
Youll read two dozen books in a year!
That
increases your lifetime reading by 1,000 books;
five times what you read in college.
In
a world of bits-bites-bots, you can be small and
global at the same time. Small things can have
big effects.
"Give
up your good Christian life and follow
Christ." Garrison Keilor
The
future promises to even be more democratic
the Net is the most democratizing medium ever
invented.
All
boundaries of space and time are coming down or
blurring thanks to telecommunications and the
microchip. The Economist magazine devoted a
special issue to The Death of Distance.
The key to ministry in this Next
Reformation is intellectual capital in general,
and innovation and creativity in particular. In the new world one
thing is certain: What works today wont
work tomorrow. The most successful corporations
in the world today werent even a glint in
some gurus eye 20 years ago. In 5-7 years,
50% of the job definitions that we see in the
classified ads wont exist.
There
is no way to "manage" such a world. Over-managed
corporations, like over-managed churches mired in
old paradigms, are teetering and toppling all
over the landscape. The need to prepare for
ongoing adaptive change makes innovation and creativity the key survival skills
in navigating the chaotic world of the 21st
century.
How
embarrassing that the institution that worships
the Creator is so often bankrupt of creativity.
Where ought the worlds most creative space to
be if not the church?
Learn
to Triangulate. "Magic Eye" art is the first low-tech
vestibule to virtual reality available to mass
culture. The methodology for "Magic
Eye" seeing is precisely the methodology of
doing creative ministry in a postmodern world. If
one masters these three steps, a whole new world
of meaning and understanding opens before
ones eyes. The choice of ministry is this:
deep vision or shallow perception.
Lose
Focus (fuzzy is good)
Lose
the "M" word.
Lose
Control (relax; look through the picture, not at
it. Peer into the distance.)
If
you pass through these three stages, your
perception changes. What appeared at first glance
to be a flat, bland surface of random dots
suddenly becomes a 3-dimensional universe and
ministry. The key to navigating
postmodernitys choppy, crazy waters is not
to seek some balance or "safe middle
ground, but to ride the waves and bridge
the opposites, especially where they converge in
reconciliation and illumination.
These
are the best of times for ministry.
These
are the worst of times for ministry.
We
must live the two together.
Through
the power of the Logos, we can do it.
The Lords Prayer: 65 words.
Gettysburg Address: 286 words.
10 Commandments: 179 words.
Now
What? Net Notes
1. Visit the Simple
Living Journal Web site. If you are not sure
how to find it, consider creating an
intergenerational activity in your home,
congregation, or Sunday school to learn more
about the Internet. When you have found the site,
pick an article, perhaps Marilyn Mayers
"What Simple Living Means in Our
Homes." What do you think of her six ideas
for domestic simplicity? Would you consider
preaching a sermon or giving a lecture on her
suggestions about Sabbath keeping?
2. Try typing
the word "niche" into Yahoo or another
Internet search engine. How many hits did you
get? Was your churchs or ministrys
web site one of them? Do you think it should be?
3. Take a
virtual field trip, including a tour of the White
House, The Smithsonian Institution, World
Surfari, Odyssey in Egypt, the underwater world
of the "Lost in a Forgotten Sea," or
the San Francisco Zoo.
http://members.aol.com/RedheadFox/trips.html.
4. For the truly
adventurous postmodern tour-ons, how about a
virtual field trip with multiple computers? To
set up a virtual tour with up to 11 travelers,
see the chat program called Virtual Places. When
your fellow travelers join the tour, you enter a
URL and all the computers on the tour open that
Web site. You can download a copy of Virtual
Places at
http://www.vplaces.com/index.html.
5. To explore
some more "de" words, and what they
mean, we can list these online, with definitions,
and then have the reader visit some Web sites
that illuminate what they mean. Here are the ones
I would pick:
DegenerationSince
addictions lap hungrily around societies under
siege, postmodern culture ramps quickly downward
and is obsessed with downward slopes socially,
culturally, and morally. When the extreme cases
become the common ones, there is no more dramatic
evidence of enormous social, economic, and
political dislocations taking place in the
culture. It is not just faith in "the
American Way of Life"individualism,
optimism, nationalism, idealism,that is
degenerating all around us. Even the American Way
of Life itself is degenerating. No wonder
Berkeley political sociologist Ken Jowitt calls
our era the New World Disorder. The more choices
there are to make, the less common ground there
is to share.
DeonticsAn
ethical system in which the logic of moral
obligations determines right and wrong, not by
ethical guidelines ("Sermon on the
Mount") or ethereal guides (the Holy
Spirit), but by virtue syllogisms.
DeideologyDisillusionment
with ideology of any kindcommunism or
socialism or materialism or whatever. We live in
a time of hyper-reality and lost referents.
Events become pseudo-events; fictions become
fact; imagination, reality. It is a culture of
surfaces and appearances, as exemplified by the Batman
genre of movies, with their equally violent
good-bad characters and their shadowy world of
anarchic playfulness and comic pastiche.
DemystificationScience,
like everything else, has undergone a process of
stripping away its authority until it is seen as
just another artificial or imagined construction
of reality. No one can see the world
"pure." Leszek Kolakowski says,
"Every sentence we utter presupposes the
entire history of culture of which the language
we use is an aspect
. spoken of, the world
is never naked."
DeterritorializationExpressed
most powerfully in Guattaris notion of the
effects of a rupture in cultural theory between
signified and signifier, leaving the relationship
between the two in a constant state of flux.
DeculturationFrench
cultural critic Tzvetan Todorovs phrase to
describe the new phenomenon whereby the world is
producing a generation that has no stake in the
preservation of the society in which it finds
itself. Indeed, the pervasive intellectual
posture is one of ironical detachment, with irony
the "muslin of the mind" through which
one strains all of life. After deculturation
comes disintegration comes disorder.
DeclensionSince
the early 70s, depressions have descended
on USAmerica's major social institutions. In
higher education, a great depression fell in the
70s and 80s, characterized by a
shortage of internal resources (research grants,
doctoral fellowships), a dearth of jobs
(especially chairs for senior faculty and
entry-level teaching jobs for graduate students),
an erosion of public resources for higher
education (with federal funds and state
legislative apportionments as a proportion of
institutional revenue continuing a downward slide
that began in the early 80s), and a
fragmented undergraduate curriculum.
6. Experiment
with some online stereograms. You can find some
at http://www.magiceye.com/index.htm.
Also see http://www.vision3d.com/ and
http://www.mit.edu/people/changkai/stereogram/stereogram0.ht.
Perhaps the most fun is at the 3D riDDLE home
page, where you solve a puzzle hidden in a
stereogram. See http://cvs.anu.edu.au/andy/rid/riddle.html.
7. For an
experience of a variety of online scholarly
journals, including one in particular on Postmodern
Culture, visit http://muse.jhu.edu/muse.html.
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