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  • Mark 8:34 am on March 23, 2010 Permalink | Reply
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    Layers of Christian Community: Macro 

    “Let there be light…” God’s first words created an explosion of relationship – Light is essentially frequencies connecting particles that link together in pure, blinding energy.

    When God created the world, he chose to be in relationship with that world, God’s light reaching and connecting and networking every thing he created to the farthest reaches of the cosmos.  This is God’s “Great Connection.”  Each connection in God’s creation to this day is another explosion of energy – the more links you live in, the more you live in light.

    “Let there be links…” (Gen 1:1-3)

    Unfortunately, it is stereotypical for the average house church (the Meso Layer) to stop at the Meso Layer.  It’s a wonderful thing for a simple church to experience God’s family life, but asserting their autonomy effectively keeps them in the dark, away from the links of light. Isolation brings death, whereas inter-connectivity brings life.

    This blog post is an exploration of the resilience of an interconnected family of faith in a city or region – the Macro Layer.

    Something to ponder:  There is no example of a “house church” in the New Testament – but there are plenty of church networks! (Romans 16, Acts 16:25-40, Revelation 1:4, just to name a few…)  Beyond the household gatherings, the earliest church also clearly enjoyed worship, fellowship and mission with an extended network of believers.

    Teaching, prayer and shared meals at the Meso Layer was the daily experience of First Century disciples – but it was also common for Christians to gather for prayers in the temple courts, to proclaim Christ in the Hall of Solomon, receive teaching from church leaders, and share in Communion at regional gatherings! (Acts 2:42-46)

    This “gather-scatter” concept grew mainly out of the “prayer houses” and synagogues of the Jews during their exile from Israel several hundred years before Jesus.  The Jews of course, hoped their Messiah would reestablish an earthly home for Jews, to call them home from exile and create a centralized place of worship and government (like in “the good ole’ days” of King David).  However, Jesus called (and calls) his followers to venture out as “voluntary exiles,” seeking citizenship of no earthly nation, but of a heavenly Kingdom – yet connected like illegal immigrants here on earth.  That’s gotta be a downer for your average Zionist!

    Liquid Church

    The Macro Layer takes seriously the liquid form of Christian Community – it does not have physical structures or an exoskeleton holding its size back – like water, it is contained only by its dynamic, inter-dependent correlation of relationships.  The Macro Layer is the engagement of relationships beyond the family level – it is the local “extended family” that reaches from “eternity to here.”

    In our paradigm of the Onion, the church takes on a “living system,” organic nature.  Systems Theory seems to say that every organism is part of a larger, interconnected network.  And even my very notion of self is not determined by myself alone, but by the web in which I’ve been woven.  In this way, the church is more like an afghan than a building – it is knitted together, fully flexible, not easily broken.

    Yeah, but what does it look like???

    Of course, liquid is best enjoyed in a glass, not spilling all over the table – and similarly, liquid church at the Macro Layer contains internal structures to give focus to the regional church – funneling into infinite nodes of connectivity:

    The important piece is not necessarily HOW you connect, or the structure of the nodes, but the process going on between them (the WINE is more important than the WINESKIN).

    Fractals Rock

    Fractals are everywhere.  From the largest of galaxies to the smallest snowflake, fractals are the code of the universe.

    Every living thing or dynamic system takes a fractal form.  Fractals are based on simple mathematical equations that contain unending diversity.  The patterns are determined by a simple rule in a series of repetitions that feed back on itself new information. Starting with a simple building block (a human cell, a coordinates in a computer) these repetitions unleash a creative potential for infinite complexity.

    The genetic code of a seed gives the crucial information needed for the fractal equation found in cell multiplication to help catalyze the growth of a tree.  The DNA of this seed will grow an oak tree, and not a dogwood or a squirrel.  There are boundaries for fractals, and yet, when watching the process, it can only be described as beautifully chaotic.

    The Church is built on the trillion cells of local churches and Christians scattered throughout time and space.  The Church then, is the Fractal of Jesus Christ in the world. Self-similar, yet wildly diverse – each point of light on a fractal is connected to every other point of light throughout the system.

    This is a blog series on the Layers of Christian Community – the Onion of the Church.  The onion is a beautiful example of a fractal – layers upon layers of “similar difference.”

    A Tribe to Belong To

    It is interesting that as we explore the levels of the Onion, we are learning that each of these layers are also core desires of all humanity.  Everyone desires a personal connection with the Divine; everyone desires one or two others who get them through thick and thin;  those who have come from broken families still desire an expression of familyand we all desire to be a part of a dynamic tribe.

    A tribe is a group of people, connected to one another, and to a shared story. This postmodern age has brought an explosion of tribes, covens, meetups, making each of us part of multiple tribes.  Our embrace of the tribe is our rejection of the factory — the place of passive production and impersonal sausage-making.

    JESUS’ TRIBE:::>> So far in this series, we’ve explored Jesus’ community – here’s what we’ve found: (Mono) Jesus was “one with the Father,” (Micro) and his heart-to-hearts were with his core team of Peter, James, and John.  (Meso) Jesus’ 12 disciples were his daily community – his family-on-a-mission.  But who was Jesus’ “Macro Layer of Church?”

    Jesus taught and fed the crowds, that much is sure – but beyond the masses, Jesus specifically cast vision and trained 72 disciples.  (Luke 10)  This was Jesus’ TRIBE.  The people who were following “the Way,” sent into every town and village in the area to declare the Good News of the Kingdom.  Through this Kingdom Tribe, Jesus was forging a sneeze of relationships right across the Empire that remained connected to each other through Love and through a dangerous Story – that God’s Kingdom was near!

    Tribal development comes through a linking through a common story, and living into that story together to make dramatic change.  From the contemporary Tea Party Movement or Obama’s Grassroots Campaign, from Geronimo’s Apache Tribe harassing and impeding the Spanish conquistadors, to the First Century Church decrying Cesar as a mere man, and a murdered, resurrected Jesus as King of Kings and Lord of Lords… the tribe is consistently the  social layer for monumental change.

    The Tribe you choose to join is of utmost importance.

    The social media sites like  Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube make a veritable Youniverse that puts you right at the center of your own “social-black-hole.”  You can now be the leader of your own private Tribe. Recent studies have even said that Facebook and mobile computing has brought about the demise of the church.  Now that we have our own network – we no longer need to be a part of God’s local Tribes.

    From the beginning, humans have had to choose between being king of their own dark kingdom, or a citizen in God’s Kingdom of Light.  It is either “My Kingdom Come” or “Thy Kingdom Come.” And choosing God’s Kingdom means we choose to be connected to God’s Tribe – a inter-connected network that is glocal in influence.

    A Family Reunion

    These network gatherings and other nodes of connectivity will feel more like a family reunion than a United Nations Summit. It is essential for Christians to remember that they are primarily citizens of the same universal Kingdom of God, rather than constituents of individual house churches.

    Certainly, there is leadership, but unlike a hierarchy (static leading from the top down) and more like a v-formation flock of birds – sharing and rotating the front position to go farther together.  Maybe each month the Macro Layer (say, 10 house churches) meet together for worship, and each month, a different community organizes the event and leads worship in their way.  This promotes diversity in the Body of Christ, and a reminder that God is creating a Family from every tongue, tribe, and nation. (Rev 7:9)

    A bohemian, post-modern group might choose to fill a rented club with ambient music and allow God’s presence to surround the worshippers as they pray or participate with God in apophatic practices and incense.  Another group might bring a recent convert to give his/her testimony to the rest of the network.  The important principle to be communicated at every monthly network gathering is a theme of unity in diversity. Each church that plans worship should put the needs and interests of other groups they are in relationship with above their own desires to control the experience.

    Home-brewed Leadership

    Regular local leadership gatherings allow those involved to pass along insights and resources to other organic church leaders in the network.  It serves as a bridge between leaders and a limitless array of links to resources and fresh connections.  A “home-brewed seminary,” of sorts. This never ending journey of learning and serving other communities is an “opt-in” learning community of practitioners – no one in the church network Macro Layer is excluded from leadership gatherings, but only those who are interested in developing Meso Layers seem to stick around!

    Monthly leadership gatherings bring cohesion and training to each house church leader – part book club, part coaching session, part training in various pastoral tools (like conflict management, or church multiplication…etc).

    —-

    As best as I can, I’ve tried to describe the “congregation” as a Macro Layer – not as a building or institution, but as an organism or movement.  Through a lifestyle of worship and fellowship with a dozen or so house churches, the Macro Layer can offer Christians a sense that “they are not alone” in this family of God.  Through God’s grace, these communities will slowly transform into an ecumenical Body of Christ in your city.  The underground church network is one such Macro Layer beginning to emerge in our context here in Chicago.  Much like a Fractal, it displays the DNA of Jesus, and yet the possibilities in the fractal of Christ are limitless!

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    • Rusty Wimberly 11:57 am on November 23, 2010 Permalink

      you said…”no example of a house church in the New Testament”. You even reference Romans 16…but in Romans 16:5 Paul says to “Greet also the church that meets at their house..” 1 Cor. 16:19 “Aquila and Priscilla greet you warmly in the LORD, and so does the church that meets at their house…” Col. 4:15 “Give my greetings to the brothers at Laodicea, and to Nympha and the church in her house…”

      although I appreciate the value of being a part of relational church networks, I think it’s quite clear from Scripture that the main gathering of God’s people in a local context was done within houses. What I DO find hard to see in the New Testament is the church assembling formally in public places such as coffee shops, public parks or restaurants. In these places they seemed to hold evangelistic meetings of public preaching, deliverance and prayer, but it seems to me the normal church meeting was exclusive to believers only with the occasional unbeliever or ungifted person present.

    • Mark 12:16 pm on November 23, 2010 Permalink

      Rusty – Maybe I put too strong a point on it. My intention was not to say that there was no example of a house church in the New Testament – it would be hard to argue such an obvious point! But my point was that there was no example of a house church that did not exist within in a larger church network.

      By house church network – I DON’T mean what we are seeing emerging today – with names and brands…essentially a mega-church OF small groups, rather than with small groups. While that is how I understand the Underground Church Network of which I am a part, I don’t think that’s exactly how the MACRO layer works in the New Testament.

      The MACRO Layer to me is the web of Christ-centered social relationships that exist beyond the local house church. They are all the churches that meet in Rome, and I point out Romans 16 to display that there were multiple house churches that all seemed to know each other spread across the city. They weren’t in isolation – they were connected.

      I’d say the major threat to the health of the house church movement in America is that we are unwilling to trust ourselves to a network of house churches. My hope is that folks can live into the MACRO layer – connecting to 8-12 house churches they consider their “extended family” – that’s what we’d like the Underground to be. We’re praying about that….

      Keep pushing me here. I like it!

    • Rusty Wimberly 12:30 pm on November 23, 2010 Permalink

      thanks for clarifying…i didn’t think that was what you meant, but wanted to make sure. I’m with you on churches being connected to each other for sure. That is our goal and purpose as well. Large task ahead, but a dream in God’s heart.

  • Mark 8:57 am on March 14, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Life Sciences,   

    Thy Kingdom Connected makes a case for the church in a world where Facebook has replaced the primary commons for people to connect.

    Studies everywhere are bemoaning Generation Y’s unprecedented exodus from not just the church, but of Christianity. They posit that kids these days are just fed up with the church’s hypocrisy, its close-mindedness, boring worship events, and the like. The truth is – that the church has been like that for generations! That may be their explicit reason for leaving church, but if church has always been just as mind-numbing, why is it that this generation in particular is dropping like flies?

    With this question in mind, consider the unprecedented use of smart phones, Web 2.0 technology and social media. Think about it – the very thing that people “went to church” for in past generations now is at your finger tips! Facebook is “My Kingdom, Connected.” My photos, my status, my events, my ‘friends’…”

    And yet Dwight J. Friesen prepares us with new metaphors and language to connect us to a different kind of Kingdom. He plays in other fields of study, from biology, physics, mechanics, ecology…even knitting…and teases out rumors of God’s networked-Kingdom.

    Missiologists and church planters could use new vocabulary to describe the fresh vision of God’s people in today’s world – and while Friesen’s language at times leaves you wondering if “there was a single English word in that last sentence…” he seems to invite his readers to explore a new landscape of metaphor and paradigm for living as a networked ecology of Christ.

    I am an organic church advocate and practitioner, helping facilitate a network of faith communities meeting in homes, coffee shops, and other places life happens… I found great encouragement in Thy Kingdom Connected and found myself setting aside some of the metaphors and descriptors as a means of under-girding our theology and ecclesiology here in Chicago.

    So often in theology and in church planting we pick apart models, theories, Scriptures, and just about everything else…leaving the issue just about as lifeless as a dissected frog in biology class. But Friesen takes a page from the “Science of Life” – asking the question, “What would it take to develop a theological vision that enhances life?” At the core of life-centered theology is one that cultivates life in context, rather than picks it apart – seeing theology and ecclesiology as inherently relational and therefore, not approachable as an “it” — as would have been done in the typical modern worldview — but as a “we” – and a dynamic, open-ended and even divine “We” at that. We are in the petri dish, we are in the linked network we are ourselves exploring.

    In Friesen’s understanding of leadership, we are to engage our community the way Google engages its users. No one goes to Google for its own sake – it is a springboard to resources and information. Leaders too are a linking catalyst…a hub to the resources to the very best that God has to offer. This is more than the leader having a big library – this is cultivating a culture (ecology) of a organic, spiritual system, fully connected as an “all-channel network” — meaning giving not only your resources but pointing to each other as resources to access for strengthening the links of a church network. This is the nature of leadership – influencing the people-system for catalytic transformation.

    I disagreed with Friesen’s approach (if not his content) regarding the Christ-Commons and Christ-Clusters. He seemed to say that Christ-Commons were regularly scheduled events whereas Clusters were serendipitous fly-by-night collections of Christians. I agree that there are both kinds of “groupings” in the Church – the folks walking to Emmaus on Easter may be to him what is known as a “Christ-Cluster” – which is fine – but to call that “the soul of the church” is a little much if you ask me. Spontaneous engagements with community and the Spirit is simply a natural overflow of family life together – which can happen in a regularly scheduled event or in an impromptu worship night at a friend’s house. People grow from both “quality and quantity” time together and with the Spirit.

    Our network in Christ extends beyond our little crew that meets in my living room – it is more than our network of organic churches in Chicago. It is broader than the global church in our day, and reaches further back than Pentecost and beyond the 2nd Coming of Christ. It is the Church Universal – it is the Bride to Be. Entangled in the Network of God, who was, is, and is to come.

    Thy, not My, Kingdom Connected!

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  • Mark 9:34 am on December 21, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Wikipedia,   

    YouVersion – a 2.0 spiritual resource 

    Its amazing how things change, and how at the same time, things so much the same.

    Looking into how our culture works, I’m watching people at the check-out get replaced by automated voices and “self-checkout” lanes.  Haiku’s of the past are today’s Tweets.  We are at once more isolated and yet more connected than ever before.  We are scatter-brained, multi-tasking, over-worked and stressed out, yet we have created Wikipedia, the largest repository of human knowledge IN HISTORY.

    The same is true for spiritual formation. I am passionate about Christ-centered transformation in a person’s life – including my own – and yet I remain very firmly planted in our world’s changing world.  What of worth can come from using the tools of Facebook, Wikipedia, Twitter, and the like for the purposes of spiritual formation and discipleship?  How can we center on Christ through these tools?  I’ve written before on “Eschatechnology” and using technology as an extension of our resources in pursuing Christ.  Paul did it with the new Roman roads, mailing systems and parchment writing.  Moses did it with stone-tablets.  Martin Luther did it with the Gutenberg Printing Press.  More on that here.

    YouVersion is quickly finding itself among the coveted list of spiritual resources for the digital age.  They’ve just released a new version of their Bible reader online and on many of the smart phones.  Now you can choose or customize any number of reading plans, picking from dozens of translations of the text.  You can make contributions and comments right alongside the learned theologians (a la Wikipedia).  You can join groups, add friends, (like Facebook) and engage live presentations (at a worship service, for instance) with audience response, note-taking, and group-share.

    I’m still imagining what this might look like in our church network.  Maybe friends in an LTG become friends on Youversion and share insights into the text they’re reading for that week.  Maybe new disciples can read through the “Outreach New Testament” reading plan – designed for people just looking into the Christian faith or brand new to following Jesus. Maybe tweeting a verse that hit you while you were reading and beginning a conversation on Twitter with others.

    Certainly this tool is not for everyone – but it gives fresh life to those who are inclined like I am toward infusing their faith into a 21st Century world.

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    • Josh Frank 12:07 pm on December 21, 2009 Permalink

      There’s an interesting conference in CA coming up in March:
      Theology After Google

      More on that here:
      http://transformingtheology.org/calendar/theology-after-google

      Good thoughts as usual, Mark!

    • Mark 12:19 pm on December 21, 2009 Permalink

      Josh – cool! Where do you hear about such awesome conferences? I’m guessing that I’ll be “attending” via Twitter. :)

    • Josh Frank 12:26 pm on December 21, 2009 Permalink

      Most of them are through the emerging circles I still follow, folks like Adam Walker-Cleaveland and, to a lesser extent, Tony Jones.

      While California in March (Chicago’s extra month of winter??) sounds great, I’ll likely be following along online, too.

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