Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Church and the starfish and the spider

Cut off the leg of a spider and the leg dies. Cut off it's head and the whole spider dies. Starfish are different. You chop one leg off, the leg scuttles off and becomes another starfish. Organisations tend to be either centralised like spiders or decentralised like starfish. So which is the church? 

I've just re-read 'The Starfish and the Spider: The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations' by Ori Brafman and Rod A. Beckstrom. I cannot remember where I first heard of this book, but it intrigued me the first time and re-reading it made me think deeper.

The authors compare and contrast centralised (spider) organisations like the US government and record companies with decentralised (starfish) organisations like the Apache tribe and Kazaa. 

In a battle between a centralised organisation and a decentralised one, history shows us that the decentralised one will always win. In fact, historically, attacking a decentralised one makes it stronger. Which is why killing Osama bin Laden was not the answer to stopping terrorism from al Qaeda. The 'war on terror' was doomed to failure from the day it started.

The attributes of a centralised/spider organisation are characterised by having a person in charge, some sort of headquarters, a clear division of roles, with some or all people funded by the organisation. An attack on headquarters or even a single unit can or will significantly impact the organisation.

A decentralised/starfish organisation is structured differently. A starfish has five legs, and the authors contend that decentralised organisations have five attributes:  The first is what they call, autonomous 'circles' -- with the circles also being leaderless. The members are part of a community with a core ideology spelt out by one or more catalysts. They are part of one or more pre-existing networks with one or more champions nudging it along. In a sense they are pure chaos flowing in a common direction.

The first part of their definition is broadly similar to Katzenbach and Smith's description of teams in their book 'Wisdom of Teams: Creating the High Performance Organisation'. The concept of leaderless structure might seem counter-intuitive but if the group has a high sense of ideology or faith then observably they outperform 'working groups' which have individual accountability every time.

Re-reading the book I was immediately struck by how the early church was appeared to be a decentralised/starfish type organisation. It was one of the reasons why it was unstoppable against the might of the Roman Empire. But isn't there a person in charge? Isn't Jesus the 'boss'?

It is true that Jesus is head of the church, but in a completely different way from the human head of an organization. God is accessible to all people everywhere simultaneously. Attacking or destroying one circle in the church by throwing them to the lions may eliminate one circle, but the organisation continued and grew stronger. Killing a catalyst or champion like St Paul will not impact the overall organization as did, for instance, the death of Hitler to the Third Reich.

The authors used the example of the ongoing battle between the Apache native Americans and the US government, which continued into the first quarter of the 20th century, as an example of how strong a leaderless/decentralised organisation can be. The question they then asked was how the US beat the Apache. They answer is simple and somewhat terrifying: They empowered and personally benefited the champions/catalysts in the Apache tribal groups. Then infighting resulted in loss of interest in anything other than self-interest.

Why it's concerning is that is reminiscent of what happened to the church. From my reading the early church elders were catalysts and champions rather than leaders. By that I mean they encouraged rather than dictated what should happen. When Constantine issued the Edict of Milan in 313 AD and property taken from Christians returned it was the start of institutionalising Christianity. 

Two thousand years later and we have a whole hierarchy structure in different confessions and denominations, frequently resembling the anatomy of a large multi-national conglomerate. Pastors have changed from gifts or a 'living' to a salary. Leaders speak for the whole body. Negative publicity affects the whole church. Even the 'circles' (churches or fellowship groups) tend to be hierarchical with a leadership, a regular location and time and an agenda.

In a discussion with Rick Dugan, a friend who pastors a church in Cyprus, he said:
Rick Dugan
Every expression of church is institutionalized. Once we have a meeting place, a meeting time, a leader, and some type of structure we have an institution. The scale of institution may differ, but the essence is still the same.
We end up designing our corporate [church] life primarily to convince people to come. This makes it very, very difficult for a local congregation to be disciplined in doing those things that produce mature, fruitful followers of Jesus. Attracting and discipling are often competing agendas.

My contention is that this is because the church has changed from starfish to spider, from decentralised to hierarchical. 

But I'm seeing change, more change than before in my lifetime and possible more than for many centuries. Almost every month I meet a new person who is no longer a regular attender at a hierarchical or structured church but is interacting with other followers of Jesus in an organic or relational way. One of them I met recently used to be a pastor himself.

Does this mean they have rejected the remainder of the church as the rest of the church seems to think? In my experience this is completely the opposite. They are comfortably in fellowship with structural church, but are seeking fresh expressions of the Body of Christ in an informal rather than formal way. They are using church as a verb rather than a noun. Where do you go to church? Wayne Jacobsen is one of the catalysts in what I'm calling the fresh expressions movement and answers that question:
Wayne & Sara Jacobsen
I have never liked this question, even when I was able to answer it with a specific organization. I know what it means culturally, but it is based on a false premise--that church is something you can go to as in a specific event, location or organized group. I think Jesus looks at the church quite differently. He didn't talk about it as a place to go to, but a way of living in relationship to him and to other followers of his.

Asking me where I go to church is like asking me where I go to Jacobsen. How do I answer that? I am a Jacobsen and where I go a Jacobsen is. 'Church' is that kind of word. It doesn't identify a location or an institution. It describes a people and how they relate to each other. If we lose sight of that, our understanding of the church will be distorted and we'll miss out on much of its joy. [
Why I Don't Go To Church Anymore!]

I was in Beirut last week and was churching with a couple of other followers of Jesus - sharing, learning and encouraging each of us in our journey of faith. There was no leader, no structure, no set time or place. It was organic, relational and family.

Almost continually I am finding the Lord bringing more and more relationships together and some becoming deeper and deeper based not upon what we do together on a Sunday or any other specific time during the week, but upon the depth and the freshness of this expression of the Body of Christ.

Does this mean the rest of the church is wrong and needs to change? Some sort of 'house church'? I would say 'No', you are totally misunderstanding me.

Wayne Jacobsen again:
I think following a model for 'church' is a step away from being the church. If we're going in relationship to God and looking for ways to share that with others, it is not so difficult a thing to do. And God has an infinite variety of ways to do it among his people. I've seen so many different ways for people to share God's life together, that trying to force it into a one-size-fits-all package really is impossible. [House Church]

These fresh expressions are working themselves out in so many varied and disparate ways. In the West, in the Middle East, in Africa, in Asia... all over the world we're seeing autonomous new expressions of the church grow up.

Some people are worried about the theology of these new 'circles' and clusters of circles. Rightly so. I have seen some very syncretistic groups. However, Bishop Alan Wilson also reviewed the book and warns us:
Alan Wilson
There's a hilarious tale in the book about some beefy Aussies who charged off down the beach in their tiny speedos to go deal with the starfish on the reef. When they got the machetes out they had 300 starfish, and by the end of the day they had 3,000. That's the power of starfish, and to tap it you have to be a radically decentralised network, but strongly held.

So there are other groups charging round trying to cut off these syncretistic groups. Which is proving about as ineffective as the war on terror. My concern when I hear about many of these activities it that they appear to believe God is dead. By that I mean, since God is omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent, doesn't He have the capability of doing something about it if it's really a problem?

In their charging around attempting to chop off limbs that are not really part of the Body of Christ they appear to also chop off some of those that are. And I'm not too worried about that either since in true starfish fashion I'm seeing them regrow and the overall body strengthened. The fear that I do have is for the spider parts of the body of Christ which don't have that resilience.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Hyper-Connectivity and Future Identities


The last decade has seen the transition from connectivity to hyper-connectivity with respect to the Internet. Now our phones and other mobile devices allow us to be permanently connected. They bleep when a new email comes in, an ebay item we're following changes status, when Facebook or Twitter updates or when someone connects via LinkedIn. We turn them off when we fly... nor not if you are taking a flight with Internet access. My wife was thankful when the latest version of iOS allowed me to turn off alerts overnight!

We were connected to the Internet very early on in it's development and brought our kids up to not reveal personal data online. So although my name is shown on my account in Facebook, my 27 year old son still uses an alias.

We talk about online identity, but the change to online identity is only the last step in an evolving journey of identity over centuries. I think this can be seen in four basic strides. I believe we are in transition right now from the third (Authentic) to the fourth (Synthetic).

Pragmatic => Romantic => Authentic => Synthetic

Online and offline identity are linked. Way, way back many centuries ago, our identity was linked to our trade or profession. These often evolved into our surnames in the UK: Butcher, Smith, Wright or Taylor being examples of this:
...a (more) relevant starting point is Sennett (1977). He argued that in more ancient times identity is almost entirely ascribed. A person was born to a class, occupation and role. If a butcher went on the street inappropriately dressed for that role, he should be publically reprimanded. This changed with the enlightenment and new genres such as theatre. When people appreciated that a person could act out identity as a theatrical performance, the contrast was with an identity assumed to be authentic or real. A trajectory leads from this all the way to a 1960’s search for a purely personal identity found deep within. Online possibilities exacerbate this fear that we are losing real or authentic identity.[1]
Thus the pragmatic identity ascribed by trade, profession or position in society evolved into the romantic identity played out as an actor. People could mimimic an identity by dressing or behaving as they wished. This showed to in a fluidity of western culture where transition between classes and roles was acceptable.
Media today is all about authenticity -- and largely dominated by participatory media and consumers, who see right through advertising and marketing hyperbole and shut it out. Participating in these media is the only way to gain a "true" understanding of how and which work, and which don’t. Clients are demanding that their PR counsel and support teams are in the conversation, and that they themselves use the media where their content is being created and distributed.
Take, for example, the use of social media for online business networking or lead generation. As the saying goes, 'it’s hard to teach an old dog new tricks'. The old dog in this instance -- baby boomers -- use traditional, in-person offline meetings as their primary source of building their business networks, while the younger generations are building their own brands and businesses more quickly, and reaching a much wider audience by leveraging new digital tools like LinkedIn and Twitter to run full-on campaigns.[2]

The son of of a friend of ours is a teenager with his own business buying and selling pallets. His clients find him via the Internet. You'd never guess his age from his telephone etiquette with clients. While being driven by his mum when a business call comes in he tells everyone in the car to be quiet and changes voice to his 'business voice'. He has synthesised an entity without anyone having any idea of the reality. Of course the pallets are very real!

Future identity? Yes, future identity.

Image courtesy of photostock / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

The everlasting journey...


The journey without end...

We started the journey because of the very nature of our Father; He loves to create
[1] and and He loves to love[2]. So I AM became we are[3]. 

An early traveller on the journey became a friend of our Father[4] and was promised a blessing in order that he too might be a blessing to others[5]. However, some people are more interested in being blessed than being a blessing. This is certainly not the destination.

During the journey some of us were introduced to the Teacher[6] and decided to follow Him[7]. Being blessed[8] and being a blessing is part of following the Teacher[9]. In following we became transformed into apprentices[10], learning from Him and being trained in His ways[11]. This is not the destination.

Later on the journey we will again be transformed[12]. Our aged, worn out shells will be discarded, but we will continue on the journey. This will still not be the destination.

Further on the journey our Father will look at what direction we have been travelling[13]. Are we headed towards receiving blessings or giving blessings[14]? For those who are merely interested in receiving their journey is over and they are no more[15]. But for the others this is not the destination.

Continuing on the journey our Father throws a party so we can enjoy time with Him[16]. Some think this is the destination. But the journey goes on forever[17]; we are travelling an eternal and enjoyable journey with our loving Father.

On Facebook there has been discussion about neo-Reformed, Arminian, Prosperity and various other Gospels... about whether Hell really exists or not... and the whole debate about who is 'saved' or who is 'in' and who is 'out'. This seemed to me to be missing the point. There is no destination.

So I wrote this short summary of the way I see Scripture talking about our lives. It's not about different ways to God. There is only one way, but focussing on the destination seems to be not what God is calling us to!


I was discussing this in the car with a couple of friends the other day: If you think about tenses, past, present and future, our relationship or walk with God is not like that, it is a sort of present continuous based also on past. We see time as a linear progression. God doesn't. It's like trying to describe a sphere to someone who only understands two dimensions. To them a sphere is a dot that becomes a circle that becomes a dot as it passes through the two dimensions. God sees and lives outside and inside time simultaneously. We see time as past, present and future. He sees it as a whole.

Image courtesy of artur84 / FreeDigitalPhotos.net