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03 May 2011

Filter Bubbles and "my" church

When was the last time you worshipped with other believers.  Wait, but I mean not at "your" church?  I mean when was the last time you joined believers outside of your congregation and fully engaged in worship in their Sunday morning worship gathering?"


Why does it matter?


Watch this 9 minute video, and then we'll talk.  


"As web companies strive to tailor their services (including news and search results) to our personal tastes, there's a dangerous unintended consequence: We get trapped in a "filter bubble" and don't get exposed to information that could challenge or broaden our worldview. Eli Pariser argues powerfully that this will ultimately prove to be bad for us..."
The search engines that "tailor" [read: filter] what we see.
The effect of the "filter bubble" that homogenizes what we see.
How it should be, so that we see the full picture.

What if we would apply the idea of "filter bubbles" to our experience at "our" church. The [capital C] Church is much bigger than "your" church. But so often, we only see how we do church.  And I believe that if we only get to see and experience one tiny, tiny segment of the Church, we will neither see her full beauty nor have an accurate and appropriate perspective of who she really is.


I have a different experience and therefore perspective than most. I do have a home church, but I am in other congregations about twice a month on Sundays and partner  with over 25 distinct congregations each year, seeing not only their Sunday morning gatherings, but, with my ALL-ACCESS, behind the scenes pass, I get to see their inner workings and culture as I coach their leadership.


And I know, I know, "your" church is great and it has everything you've ever wanted, but...


When was the last time you experienced...

  • the richness of a Presbyterian liturgy?
  • the freedom of an informal house church?
  • the artistry of a seeker church?
  • the fire of a pentecostal church?
  • the intellect of a United Methodist church?
  • the simplicity of a Mennonite church?
  • the passion of a "river" church?
  • the funky, hand-shaking groove of a black church?
  • the community of a...community church?
  • the "Word power" of a Bible church?
  • the open-invitation tribe at a Mosaic church?
  • the diversity of a multi-cultural church?
  • the flat out rock n' roll of a big church?
  • the newness of a church plant?
  • the history of a 250 year-old church?
  • the calisthenics of a portable church?
  • the familiarity of "your" church?
  • the awkwardness of a traditional church doing contemporary music?  [sorry, I just had to throw that one in there!]

Does that make you want to get out there and experience something beyond the "filter bubble" that your current perspective gives you?  I'd love your comments with further descriptions of your experiences...


And if you're wondering why I keep putting references of "your" church in quotes, I'm trying to correct the perception that we have a church.  See we ARE the Church.  Jesus said in Matthew 16:18 that "I will build my church."  I get that you want to call your local congregation "my church" and that's fine.  But what I see over and over as I coach churches is that far too often church goers act like it's their church, make decisions like it's their church, make demands like it's their church...and it's not.  :)  [does that smiley soften it?]


Oh, and if you're a church shopper taking this as a free pass to engage in uncommitted church dating, know this: there is huge joy in being a member one to another of a local congregation, there is great safety in being under Godly authority, and there is a clear command to live in community, be devoted one to another, and to genuinely love each other.  That will never happen if you keep up your fickle ways.  Plug in.


http://adlibmusic.com/

2 comments:

Adam Ranck said...

We are often only as open as we let our peripheral eyes see (within respect). In general, narrow mindedness is a hidden problem within local churches (maybe more exclusively in the US?) and with people's view, speaking generally. Honestly, I also have noticed the idea of "put yourself in their shoes" has really been lost. "Filter Bubbles" are a (me) consumer target idea, and though it has some benefit, I wonder if the benefit is worth the damage, especially if we don't notice it.

I think you're right in how to help. We need to be intentional in being open-minded by meeting with other believers and experiences outside our "norm". You're a good example of that Dave. Also, this makes me think about how local church leadership should help people understand this and help them apply it. I've read about church leaders closing group gatherings for a week asking their people to visit other local church communities that week to open their eyes. I think that is a good idea, but only the cookie crumbs in starting to help this. Intentional plans are a wise idea.

On a parallel note, one thing I don't think we realize is that because of who we are, where we grew up, where we live now, and the people we spend time with, we interpret the Bible in a specific way. I think it would benefit us greatly to read other people's thoughts on Scripture, not just from around the US, but from around the world. For example, I know there are theologians in Africa who are writing books on theology and pastoring. Because of their own experiences and "norm", they relate with different parts of Scripture, probably understanding things that we don't quite get more easily. You can find a sample of one compiled by African pastors on the book of James here: http://www.zondervan.com/media/samples/pdf/0310264731_samptxt.pdf .

Thanks for sharing Dave.

Unknown said...

Great perspective Adam, thanks for posting! And welcome...you're my first follower. [cue cheers] :)