Saturday, 8 October 2011

Rebellion

I went to a conference on Friday full of world class speakers on global leadership. There was a guy that really stood out to me called Seth Godin. He spoke about the need to innovate, do be creative, to do something for the first time. Our culture is changing before our eyes, Godin claims we are entering the death of the industrial age. We used to live in an age where the people that owned the means of production controlled the world- the factory owners, the publishers. Today the means of production is the small humble laptop. Until relatively recently, I would have had to get this published for anyone to notice it. But now anyone, anywhere can get their voice heard. Godin claims we are entering the age of the artist, what will get noticed, what will make a difference is those people that are doing things that no one else is doing, not those doing what everyone else is doing.

That is pretty counter cultural, we've become so institutionalized, we're so used to doing what we're told, that it takes a pretty strong will to act against it. The thing is, there is no map anymore. There is no right way of doing things. There is no right way of being unique, of being an artist. It's an open plain field to create the future. I don't know if that excites me or scares me silly.

The  question is, if Godin is right, if we're on the brink of a new revolution- of recreating society, where is the room for the Church? To put it bluntly, the Church needs to adapt or die. Church has reflected the culture for the last two thousand years. Godin describes the Church in recent times of being in the business of "teaching people to fit in so we can ignore them". That has pretty much been the message of society too- buy nike, buy coca cola, be like everybody else. Creativity has been squashed. Everyone has become ordinary.

There is opportunity like no other to stand out. To be heard. To think differently. But it involves risks. It involves thinking outside of the box, being controversial. "Everyone has seen brown cows. If we just make more brown cows, no one will notice it, everyone is making brown cows. We need to make purple cows". As I see it the Church has tried to reinvent itself- it has tried fresh expressions. And sometimes it's paid off, sometimes it's achieved fresh, relevant Church which isn't compromising on the truth. But I still think we're making brown cows- we're taking the model of the "talk, worship song sandwich" and putting it in a pub, putting it around tables, putting it on the beach. Is this the only way to proclaim truth, is this the only way of making purple cows? Surely it can't be.

I was talking to a Church leader at the conference with a dying congregation of 25 eighty year olds, who weren't interested in doing things differently, being radical, being missional. And he was so fustrated about how to make a difference. He also told me about a pancake event he put on when he gave away 400 free pancakes to people in the community. I asked him if any of them came to Church, he told me they hadn't. I wonder, what would it take for his pancake event to be 'Church'. In some ways, it was more Church than his preaching the lectionary and singing 4 hymns to 25 stubborn old ladies- it was missional, it was serving the community. If he kept giving away pancakes every week, and then found some way of sharing truth, whether it was by conversations, by media, or maybe even preaching- he would have himself a thriving Church. But we need to dare to be.

We need to dare to fail with the Church. We need to dare to be challenged. It is pretty obvious that the Church is dying in a lot of places. I think the reason for this is primarily stubbornness. "The world needs to change and not us. We're doing things the 'right' way." The truth is- the Church needs innovators desperately. But no one is going to pick you. Stop waiting to be picked. Step up, pick yourself and dare to do something no one has done. Dare to be radical. There is a new time dawning and it needs new leaders. Are you going to sit back and watch others lead, or are you going to dare to put yourself on the line? 

5 comments:

  1. Always enjoy reading your blogs, and agree with the sentiment here. I joined (with 30 other youngish naive 'charasmaticky' Christians) a 25 old lady church. Their willingness to have us in their family and save their church has been honoured and blessed by God.

    BUT... you can be as radical, daring and innovative as you like, but you won't have a hope of keeping the church from dying with just that. Steve Jobs died this week and Apple will die off at some point (probably within our lifetime).

    What the church has, at its very core, is Jesus Christ - the giver of life. If it has Him then don't worry about whether a church looks traditional, old or unoriginal. It will survive...much longer than our new ideas.

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  2. Thanks tigertim, glad you enjoy my blogs. Thanks for the comment. Always like it when people have something to say.

    I totally agree with what you say about the key being Christ at the heart. I admit that part of me was trying to be a little controversial when I wrote 'innovate or die'- but I think there are Churches out there with Jesus at the core that have lost thousands of people my age and are failing to reach them. We can be radical in our method without having to compromise on our message and our core.

    Our ideas will only really be long lasting and innovative if they come from God I think. But some of the biggest movements in Church history have come from those prepared to challenge the status quo. I wonder if we do need to do this before the Church is left behind a little bit by culture. What do you think?

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  3. Thanks Leon.
    Yeh, that's really good. I think a key to this is in honesty and vulnerability. All to often we've made the gospel- "I was really bad/ unhappy", "Now I'm really good/ happy" and we make the gospel just another self fulfillment program.

    I think we need space to say- sometimes following Jesus is really hard, but he is worth putting trust in. He has the power to transform us, but sometimes that can be difficult.

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  4. Lot of good stuff here Josh,

    You might want to check out some of Phylis Tickle's (yes that is her realy name) writing around 'The Great Emergence'. She basically suggests that Christianity - both church and theology - goes through a radical refocusing every 500 or so years. Think the Reformation in the 1500s, or the Catholic/Eastern Othodox split around 1000AD. Physlis recokons we're in the midst of another refocussing right now.

    One thing I do wonder about is the ability of individuals to step out and be radical. This is a pretty quick way to burn yourself out. Of course even if you do find a workable way to sustain this, what you get can be very personality focuessed religion. Now, getting a church community to be truely radical and innovative - that's the real question.

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