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Reflection on a book by Lyle Schaller called Discontinuity
and Hope. It's all about radical change and the path to the future
especially as it relates to the church.
It offers some food for thought...some that really challenge our
previous ways of thinking...some that we might not agree with...some
that will just blow the mind...anyway, I want to take this opportunity
to share a few thoughts I've
gleamed from the book to this point. Schaller
talks about moving from Survival to Choices.
If one thinks back to the choices of 40 years ago to the choices
of today, just think about how things in this list have changed...many
many more choices: occupations; place of residence; friendship circles;
level of educational attainment; postage stamps; channels of
communication with distant friends and relatives; type of motor vehicle;
coffee; music; meals; parenthood; when and where to gather for the
corporate worship of God; attire; hobbies; footwear; indoor temperature
during the hot summer; health-care services; soft drinks; cheeses;
motels; restaurants; television channels; garden tools; etc. There
has been a shift from a survival culture to a consumer-driven culture. This not only effects the day-to-day life we live but the
Christian church and Christian ministry. This
shift in the context for doing ministry from a culture focused on
survival goals to a consumer-driven culture that overflows with choices
also offers worshiping communities a range of choices.
Here are seven: 1)
Reject this consumer-driven culture as ideologically incompatible
with the Christian faith and build the future of this congregation with
people born before 1930 who grew up in a world that offered most people
two choices - take it or leave it. 2)
Reject this demand for choices, draw the geographical area served
by this congregation with a twenty- to forty-mile radius, and focus on
the one-half to one percent of the population who affirm that the
limited array of choices offered by this congregation represents a
relevant, fulfilling, and adequate response to all the personal and
religious needs of that small slice of the total population.
(These are the congregations that are still constructing the
1,000- to 3,000-seat worship centers.) 3)
Reject this demand for choices and be satisfied to be a small
congregation that reaches and serves the people who place intimacy,
community, connections, caring, predictability, simplicity, and
continuity with the past far above choices in their list of values.
(This is the alternative chosen by well over one-half of all
congregations in American Protestantism today and by approximately
one-sixth of all churchgoers.) 4)
Expand that range of attractive choices offered by this
congregation as a central component of a larger strategy to reach (a)
younger generations and/or (b) a broader slice of the population. 5)
Define consumerism as a passing fad and plan to outlive it. Assume that the next big economic depression will recreate
the value system of the 1930s, which included sacrifice, the importance
of survival goals, institutional loyalties, and respect for individuals
in offices of authority. 6)
Redefine the role of pastor and/or program staff member from a
person who does ministry to one who challenges, enlists, trains, places,
nurtures, and supports teams of lay volunteers who create and staff new
ministries in response to emerging new needs. 7)
Rejoice in the fact that your congregation is blessed with the
discretionary resources and the leadership required to offer people a
choice from among three or four or five or six different worship
experiences every weekend plus an exciting array of choices in learning,
in discipling, in fellowship, in doing ministry, and in enriching one's own personal spiritual pilgrimage.
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