Thursday 26 March 2009

Wednesday 25 March 2009

What organizations and leaders claim they do

(The Merchant Mindset )
Value initiative and enterprise
Accept dissent as a way to improve things
Act honestly and respect contracts
Avoid force in favor of voluntary agreements
Stay open to new ideas
Collaborate easily with others
Seek open competition
Reward efficiency, thrift and industriousness
Stay optimistic
Use incentives linked to specific outcomes


What many of them actually do
(The Guardian Mindset)
Value discipline and obedience
Require loyalty and extract vengeance
Accept deception for the sake of getting the job done
Reject trade-offs and use force to gain desired ends
Value tradition
Protect exclusivity and treat strangers with suspicion
Seek opportunities to display personal prowess
Be ostentatious and protect honor
Be fatalistic
Dispense largess and patronage

Emerging is ...

A FANTASTIC PIECE FROM JONNY BAKER'S BLOG

Christian communities that emerge out of very particular cultural contexts where the traditional church is basically irrelevant. These cultural contexts are more often than not urban, youngish, and post-modern.

Emerging church is not a worship style. I know emerging churches that do traditional liturgy with jazz (Mercy Seat), who use electronica (Church of the Beloved), who are a capella Gregorian chant (House for All Sinners and Saints), and who do nothing but old-time Southern gospel (House of Mercy).

So, when traditional churches in the suburbs are wanting to attract young people (with all the good intentions in the world) and they ape some kind of worship style they read about in a Zondervan book by starting an “emerging” worship service, it’s a bit … ironic.

There is nothing ideal about these communities. Yes, we need more generational diversity. And yes, we have the same number of issues and problems as other churches. All I know is that about 95% of the people who come to my church were not actually going to any church at all when they joined us.
Okay, now before you leave me angry responses let me say that this is not saying there is something wrong with the traditional church. Traditional church is often a faithful expression of Christian community. But people in my scene would have to culturally commute from who they are to who the traditional church is.

Tuesday 24 March 2009

Efforts at change

(from an Intro to a Alan Hirsch article. Worthy of thought!)

One of the foremost signs of present-day society is the presence of increasingly complex systems that permeate just about every aspect of our lives. The admiration we feel in contemplating the wonders of new technologies is tinged by an increasing sense of uneasiness, if not outright discomfort. Though these complex systems are hailed for their growing sophistication, there is a increasing recognition that they have also ushered in a social, commercial, and organizational environment that is almost unrecognizable from the perspective of standard church leadership theory and practice.
Although we often hear about successful attempts to revitalize existing churches, the overall track record is very poor. Ministers report again and again that their efforts at organizational change did not yield the promised results. Instead of managing new, revitalized, organizations, they ended up managing the unwanted side effects of their efforts. At first glance, this situation seems paradoxical. When we observe our natural environment, we see continuous change, adaptation, and creativity; yet our

Monday 16 March 2009

Little fish, little pond

(And it came to pass by me ..)
Many of us spend time and energy trying to convince ourselves, and others, that we are big fish in small ponds or even bigger fish in larger ponds. The reality is we are little fish in little ponds, spending our lives with no idea what may be beyond our immediate experience or long-held beliefs. Most often, we are unable to even consider the possibility of there being another ‘reality’ (pond) out there.
Why don’t you venture out to see if there is a larger pond? Maybe because you feel content, secure and in control in your little pond (or you think you are)? Maybe you’re obsessed with trying to make your pond work for you and are intimidated by the unknown? Maybe you tell yourself you have no interest in exploring anything beyond what you know already?
I suspect most people fall into reason number two: they fear the unknown and feelings of separation from what gives them a (mostly false) sense of security. In their small ponds, they try to create a life of order and control, all the while experiencing stress, anxiety and insecurity.
Why not try a different pond?
What would it be like to venture into a different pond? To give up the need to be in control and swim outside the safe boundaries of the familiar?
What if you were to leave behind your life preservers—ego, beliefs, preconceptions and habitual judgments—and swim into a new pond with an open mind and an open heart? Could you trust that you won’t drown or lose your way?
The deal is this. You can’t think your way into a new pond. You have to let go and dive in. You have to take the risk.
Would you try?
Would you be willing to experience a new pond to find greater well being, fresh possibilities and a new sense of groundedness? If so, the first step is to explore your little pond, taking stock of your habits, beliefs, addictions and self-limiting thoughts. What are you, a little fish in this little pond, attached to and obsessive about? What drives you to want the sense of control and security you try to get from staying with what you know?
Once you uncover what drives you, and choose to let go of your ego needs to control and possess, you are on your way to transforming into a trusting fish that is ready to swim into another pond; a pond where your sense of identity can come from a deeper place, not just your limited mind and ego.
Could you swim with your eyes open?
In this new pond, you’ll need to swim with greater consciousness, always alert and awake. You will need to accept your vulnerability and stay away from self-destructive beliefs, illusions and fantasies. You will need to
trust and let go of dogmatic thoughts and beliefs. You will need to be open to change; to reconsider re-prioritizing your goals so they truly support your balance and well-being (not just your ego).
Moving to a new pond means allowing your ‘neutral mind’ to stay clear from being muddied by worry, goals, judgments, invidious comparisons and constant chatter. This new pond of clear water is still, peaceful and relaxed. You can be open to new experiences. You can be mentally and emotionally at peace, just so long as you keep it free from mud and scum.
Consider this. There is no bigger pond, no better pond—just one pond, where we can all swim in the stillness of the moment, free from the hustle and bustle and nagging of our ego-driven concerns. All it takes is to let yourself go there.