Churches: like any large volunteer organization

Thomas has found a great quote from Malcom Gladwell and an interesting blog on Rick Warren:

Churches, like any large voluntary organization, have at their core a contradiction. In order to attract newcomers, they must have low barriers to entry. They must be unintimidating, friendly, and compatible with the culture they are a part of. In order to retain their membership, however, they need to have an identity distinct from that culture. They need to give their followers a sense of community—and community, exclusivity, a distinct identity are all, inevitably, casualties of growth. As an economist would say, the bigger an organization becomes, the greater a free-rider problem it has. If I go to a church with five hundred members, in a magnificent cathedral, with spectacular services and music, why should I volunteer or donate any substantial share of my money? What kind of peer pressure is there in a congregation that large? If the barriers to entry become too low—and the ties among members become increasingly tenuous—then a church as it grows bigger becomes weaker.
One solution to the problem is simply not to grow, and, historically, churches have sacrificed size for community. But there is another approach: to create a church out of a network of lots of little church cells—exclusive, tightly knit groups of six or seven who meet in one another’s homes during the week to worship and pray. The small group as an instrument of community is initially how Communism spread, and in the postwar years Alcoholics Anonymous and its twelve-step progeny perfected the small-group technique. The small group did not have a designated leader who stood at the front of the room. Members sat in a circle. The focus was on discussion and interaction—not one person teaching and the others listening—and the remarkable thing about these groups was their power. An alcoholic could lose his job and his family, he could be hospitalized, he could be warned by half a dozen doctors—and go on drinking. But put him in a room of his peers once a week—make him share the burdens of others and have his burdens shared by others—and he could do something that once seemed impossible.
When churches—in particular, the megachurches that became the engine of the evangelical movement, in the nineteen-seventies and eighties—began to adopt the cellular model, they found out the same thing. The small group was an extraordinary vehicle of commitment. It was personal and flexible. It cost nothing. It was convenient, and every worshipper was able to find a small group that precisely matched his or her interests. Today, at least forty million Americans are in a religiously based small group, and the growing ranks of small-group membership have caused a profound shift in the nature of the American religious experience.”
As I see it, one of the most unfortunate misunderstandings of our time has been to think of small intentional communities as groups ‘within’ the church,” the philosopher Dick Westley writes in one of the many books celebrating the rise of small-group power. “When are we going to have the courage to publicly proclaim what everyone with any experience with small groups has known all along: they are not organizations ‘within’ the church; they are church.

Wear Yellow on Saturday

From the Global Night Commute Group:

That’s right….everyone wear yellow shirts and bring the following

1. You and every person you know
2. A pillow and sleeping bag
3. Wear a YELLOW T-shirt
4. Pen and paper and sharpie
5. Art supplies to draw pictures for the Ugandan children
6. Snacks for the morning
7. You and every person you know

Most of the Dallas group is meeting at SMU and walking from there to the church on Northwest Highway. Phil and I are still planning on walking from Waxahachie, but we will likely jump the DART rail at Ledbetter since the site is further away. Right now we’re planning on leaving between 10 a.m. and noon on Saturday. Let us know if you want to join us, we’ll be glad to have your company.
We’ll walk from Waxahachie to the Ledbetter DART Station (estimated 10-15 miles) then ride the DART rail to Park lane and walk to the church (estimated 5 miles or so). We’re going to double check those figures so we better know what time we need to leave.
Sign up and join us: invisiblechildren.com.
And BTW – Dallas isn’t the only city – city’s around the world are holding their own events.
AND… The filmmakers are scheduled to be on Oprah this Wednesday. This should grab everyone’s attention. Watch out. This is going to be big!

Immigration an “elixir” for Britain’s economy

From the AFP:

Eastern European immigrants are an ‘elixir’ for Britain’s economy, easing inflation, boosting output and raising tax revenue, according to a study.
The latest official figures show that net migration to Britain hit 223,000 people in 2004 with beneficial effects for the British economy, according to the Ernst and Young Item Club, published in British newspapers.
Most of them came from the new eastern member states of the European Union, which allows them to come and work freely in Britain.

Happy Earth Day

Earth Day is tomorrow and with it, I’ve been reading up on biodiesel more and more.
I’ve even found several sites with people using straight vegetable oil in their engine, rather than a biodiesel blend.
Apparently, with a conversion, you can run your diesel engine on straight used vegetable oil – which most restaurants will give you for free, so they don’t have to pay for it to be recycled.
I found a couple bands here in the U.S. who are driving their entire tours across America on used vegetable oil – for free.

“The diesel engine can be fed with vegetable oils and would help considerably in the development of agriculture of the countries which use it”
“The use of vegetable oils for engine fuels may seem insignificant today. But such oils may become in course of time as important as petroleum and the coal tar products of the present time.”
Rudolf Diesel 1911 (inventor of the diesel engine)

According to Wikipedia, used vegetable oil costs on average 40 cents a gallon. Boy I’d love to fill up on that today.
Here’s a company that has perfected the conversion from diesel to used vegetable oil to a science: Frybrid
They sell entire kits, including tanks for the used vegetable oil within toolboxes for trucks. How about a 91 gallon fuel tank, full of dirt cheep or even free fuel?
The conversion kits they sell average between $1500 to $2000.

Powering up a car withvegetable oil rather than gas
Lehigh University fired up over alternative fuels

Emergent/Postmodern

Thanks to Thomas I’m an Emergent/Postmodern Christian. Ok… maybe not thanks to Thomas. He just showed me the way to find out what I am. It’s probably thanks to many other things that made me the “man” I am today.

You scored as Emergent/Postmodern. You are Emergent/Postmodern in your theology. You feel alienated from older forms of church, you don’t think they connect to modern culture very well. No one knows the whole truth about God, and we have much to learn from each other, and so learning takes place in dialogue. Evangelism should take place in relationships rather than through crusades and altar-calls. People are interested in spirituality and want to ask questions, so the church should help them to do this.

Emergent/Postmodern

79%

Evangelical Holiness/Wesleyan

68%

Reformed Evangelical

68%

Fundamentalist

61%

Neo orthodox

50%

Classical Liberal

46%

Roman Catholic

36%

Charismatic/Pentecostal

32%

Modern Liberal

32%

What's your theological worldview?
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