I am reading, finally, Joseph Myers book, "Organic Community: Creating a place where people naturally connect". I have been drawn to these ideas for some time and now, with my aforementioned new call, am hoping to explore them in a church that is wondering if there is more than being a "programmatic" church. The answer is yes. I will jot some thoughts as I move through the book and invite, as always, your comments.
I have been in a programmatic congregation for the past eight years. This is not a critique of that congregation but merely my thinking on if that is truly what a church is meant to be... is it the only way... and is it the best way?
Myers is pushing back, as I have been, against the current method of doing church which is to import business practices into church life without asking any deep or thoughtful questions about it. Full is good, busy is good, bottom line means more than the quality of discipleship. People become cogs in someone else's machine rather than sharing a sense of true belonging.
Is there a way to shift the thinking of those who are called to ministry to become environmentalists rather than programmers... in other words, instead of burning time, energy, talent, and good-will by ceaselessly creating more and bigger and faster and on and on programs, how can we begin nurturing environments where community can spontaneously emerge? Myers points out that to do so we must hand over our desire for control, our look for a check-list of "how" and our presumptions that we know best... as a church leader I can tell you that that is a huge task in itself.
Technorati Tags: Joseph R. Myers, organic community

As a lay person I say "whooo hooo!"
Love. It.
Sheesh PC, I am going to have to sleep less to keep up with your reading lists. ;)
Posted by: Rachel | January 28, 2009 at 03:12 PM
How is it that every time you mentioned reading my blog you never mentioned YOU WRITE ONE, TOO!?!?!? Had to find my way here from Nadia's blog, you twerp!
Oh, and thanks for the addition to the reading list. Community is so much of what we do here - program doesn't happen without community in campus ministry. Might be a trip to Borders in my future...
Posted by: Scott | January 29, 2009 at 02:45 PM
I am about to order this book right now - sounds like it can help me with some of the thinking I've been doing about my new context - a "pastoral" sized congregation that wants to become a "program" church. Hmmmm....
Posted by: Lindean | February 03, 2009 at 05:16 PM
Great read with practical possibilities for any faith community. I've been thinking about it in terms of emergent and mission start contexts... thanks for adding it to your reading list.
Posted by: vicarbill | March 02, 2009 at 11:04 AM