Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts

Etch A Sketch Church, iPad World Part 3


At a recent meeting of folks from all over the country, the vast majority of which were over age 50 and a good number over 60, I noticed that many of us opened iPads as the meeting began. Great lamentation, confused whimpers and desperate cries for help arose around the room as the screens came to life:
"How do I save a document?" "I know I downloaded the files, but I can't find them!" "Why does the screen keep changing direction?" "Ach! My notes just disappeared!" "How do I zoom in on that chart?" "Where the heck do I find the wi-fi settings?" "For Pete's sake! I should have brought my old laptop."

The masses among them had a strong craving; and the church folk also wept again, and said, “If only we had our Etch A Sketch! We remember the fish we used to draw so simply, the houses, the trains, the stick people; but now our fingers are confused, and there is nothing at all but this iPad to look at.” [Numbers11:4-6, paraphrased, of course]

Change is difficult. When we know we need it, when we like things the way they are, when we thought we wanted it, when we know we don't want it, when it (whatever "it" is) just doesn't work anymore…in nearly every circumstance, change is difficult. This is as true for congregations and synods as it is for individuals and families.
Change is difficult because we can see that there is goodness in the way things are, or because life is comfortable and familiar and walking into the fog of an uncertain future is frightening, or adopting new habits can be exhausting and discouraging, or because __________________________ (fill in the blank with your own murmuring lament).
            This sort of lament can also arise from a sense of loss and grief. This is natural. It’s appropriate, even necessary, as we learn to let go of what has been good and helpful for us in the past in order to welcome what will be meaningful, faithful and good now and into the future.
We need to create spaces in our life together where we can share the struggle, the pain, the loss involved with being reborn as a 21st Century church. Psalms, like Psalm 89, when read, discussed and prayed together can help create the desperately needed space among us where we can let loose our lament: “Lord, where is your steadfast love of old?”
The good news is that right there, in such gatherings, as with mourning Mary in the garden that first Easter morning, the risen Jesus will meet us in our murmuring to comfort us with his promising presence and lead us into new life [John 20:11-18].

O God, you have called your servants to ventures of which we cannot see the ending, by paths as yet untrodden, through perils unknown. Give us faith to go out with good courage, not knowing where we go, but only that your hand is leading us and your love supporting us; through Jesus Christ our Lord. [Evangelical Lutheran Worship, “Morning Prayer”]


Itsy bitsy disclaimer: The Etch A Sketch metaphor, in tandem with the iPad metaphor, is intended to be a way to engage imagination around what it means to be the people of God in our current context. I am aware of the unfortunate way in which "Etch A Sketch" was used briefly in media coverage of the presidential political campaign. I intend no political reference whatsoever by the use of this image in the context of this conversation. If the image itself proves less than useful, I trust that folks will use whatever images and metaphors are more helpful for them to continue to engage the very important conversation about how God's people can most faithfully, creatively and effectively participate in God's mission in the world today. In fact, please share those images and metaphors here!

Etch A Sketch Church, Part Two


Are we an Etch A Sketch church in an iPad World?

I am grateful for the creative and energetic ways folks have engaged this question, both online and in person. Every person who responded so far has done so with a “Yes.” Some form of lament or critique has accompanied some of those yeses. Other folks have expressed at least some affirmation for an Etch A Sketch church. Everyone has agreed, however, that to simply be an Etch A Sketch church in an iPad world does not make room for the fullness of the gospel to be known and lived in our current North American context.
Here are some of the fascinating contrasts, insights, and metaphoric reflections that have emerged so far from this conversation:
Etch A Sketch Church

relates primarily to itself and its own inner system
limited capacity to communicate and amuse
nostalgic
one function
reductive
incarnational
focused attention

iPad World

 intimately and mutually connected to diverse and far-flung “others”
wide-ranging and ever-expanding ability to communicate and amuse
future-focused
multi-functional
expansive
digital/virtual
easily distracted

What do you think? Do these insights ring true with you in the context of your local mission center or congregation? And, if we are, indeed, an Etch A Sketch church in an iPad world, what does this mean for the ways we live together as the body of Christ and how we engage the world? Etch A Sketch Church, Part Three will begin to explore this in concrete and practical ways. In the meantime, the conversation will continue in person and online as we seek, together, to be faithful servants of Christ and stewards of God’s mysteries. Please add your perspective to the mix!

(Thanks to the following folks, who responded via Facebook, Twitter or this blog and whose insights are incorporated above: Lisa Dahill, Karol Gafkjen, John Hickey, Larry Isbell, Dan Kreutzer, Steve Stewart, Rebecca Suchomel, Christine Wulff.)
 
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