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Reformed Christians in a Digital Age
 
 
DR. PETER PIZOR
chairs the Worldwide Ministries Division of the General Assembly Council. An active elder of First Presbyterian Church in Cody, Wyoming, he has taught in the field of public administration for 29 years and is president of Churchwright Associates, a consulting firm specializing in the needs of churches and not-for-profit organizations. He can be reached at peter@churchwright.org.
 
By Peter Pizor

Although it's hard to imagine John Calvin surfing the Net, or Paul getting a fax in Corinth, millions of Reformed Christians do something comparable every day as we struggle to balance our lives and faith in a world moving faster than the institutional church. The stable institutions and consistent rules that characterized the last century are gone. Although a few Christians fear these changes and many more find them inconvenient, I believe that God is calling church leaders to serve as missionaries to the emerging digital culture. In the words of Isaiah: "See, I am doing a new thing in your midst" (Isaiah 43:19a).

 
         
 

Great leaders of the church have been measured against the challenges posed by dramatically changing circumstances. Abraham was called to move to a foreign land. Moses led his people into a troubling and uncertain freedom. Peter and Paul broke ties with Judaism and brought the Gospel to the Roman World. Augustine wrote the City of God during the death throes of the Roman Empire.

The Reformation leaders experienced turbulent times which offer insights into our own. John Calvin undercut the traditional sources of authority when he asserted "the priesthood, the prophethood, and the kingship of all believers." These concepts transformed the way the church related to the state and the culture. The priesthood of all believers shattered the traditional boundary between priests and parishioners. His advice to minister to the whole city and not just to the congregation opened the boundary between sacred and secular life. The kingship of all believers, with its unmistakable egalitarianism, struck a direct blow against feudalism. As a result, the Protestant Reformation helped establish the nation-state and fostered the concept of representative democracy.

All these leaders were raised in times of turbulent change. Born and educated in one paradigm, they guided the people of God as they discerned God's will for new and uncertain times. Our challenge is comparable.

The invention of movable type in the mid-1400s rearranged the political and ideological landscape of Europe. Widespread access to printed information reduced the power of both king and pope and paved the way for the emergence of the Protestant Reformation and the nation-state. In this process, old institutions died or changed, new ones emerged. In a similar way, a revolution in communications has brought fundamental changes to our times. I want to summarize some of those changes from a Reformed faith perspective.

Living in Transition

Ours is a time of contradictions and transitions between paradigms. Most church leaders are emigres, born and raised in the old paradigm, but their children are full citizens of what is emerging. As a result, we need to be bilingual, to speak both the old language and the new. Peter, raised as an observant Jew, was called to the house of Cornelius, a Roman military commander. Prompted by God in a dream, Peter reached beyond his background to minister across the divide of culture and language. In so doing he opened the doors for Christians to reach beyond their local circumstances to a waiting world. After reaching out to Cornelius, Peter said: "I now realize how true it is that God does not show favoritism, but accepts people from every group" (Acts 10:34). God does not pick and choose among the races, nor among paradigms. Even as we remember the language of our past, we need to be conversant in the common language of the future. So log on, dudes!

Spiderwebbing and Annealing

Under the old paradigm power was arranged in large hierarchical structures. From the time of the Roman Empire until the 1980s most organization charts resembled pyramids. Information flowed "up" and decisions came "down." The base was broad and power was concentrated at the top; the way to influence an organization was to get to those at the top. Effective organizations drew lines, and the difference between outsiders and insiders was clear.

The new shape takes its geometry not from ancient Egypt but from the strong and flexible spider's web. Connections are radial, not linear. The pre-eminent model is the World Wide Web with its links and nodes. The Web is the most extensive communication network ever devised. Stuart Kauffman, in his seminal study The Origins of Order, notes that a decentralized process of experimental combinations and recombinations may be fundamental to innovation in the universe. This is planning without a strategic plan. Small units are allowed enough leeway to reconfigure themselves to their environment. When they perceive a poor fit they have the latitude to make adaptations in order to find a better fit. According to Kauffman a similar process happens when making super-strong metals. As a metal is heated, molecules can shift and reconfigure. Cooling allows the new combination to become fixed. The process of repeated heating and cooling, called annealing, produces very strong metals. The combination of annealing and spiderwebbing will produce a network of great strength. The emerging paradigm allows each unit to meet local needs with great precision while the links maintain their connectional unity.

The similarity between Calvin's polity and this emerging structure is unmistakable. All that is necessary would be to strengthen the base through greater empowerment. While decentralized congregational structures provide independence for creative action, they lack the links to bring the advantages of connectedness. On the other hand, rigid episcopal structures provide the connections, but reduce the flexibility to adapt to rapidly changing times and varying local circumstances. The unexpected finding is that Calvin's legacy is a polity even better suited to our times than to his. Moreover, with relatively few modifications it will serve us well into the future.

Learning How to Learn

Emerging vital organizations have learned how to learn. Projects are initiated in an experimental way. Many fail and are abandoned, but over time, others succeed. Failures are not seen as disasters, but are treated as valuable feedback that can be analyzed to reshape the organization or project. Adaptive organizations adjust to a changing world because of their ability to reconstruct their core as needed in order to adapt to the challenges of their environments.

Many classical organizations also learn, but this is typically reactive learning that is linear in nature. Mark Twain once observed that a cat "having once sat on a hot stove lid will never again sit on a hot one, nor on a cold one, either." Chris Argyris, a scholar of organizational learning at Harvard University, calls the former "single-loop learning." The lessons learned are often counterproductive. He suggests a process of "double-loop learning" where the entire system that contributed to the error is analyzed and then the organization retools itself to take into account both the system in which it operates and its own structure. In times of rapid change, double-loop systems can react, change and reposition themselves rapidly.

Create and Release

Under the old model, organizations gained strength through growth. This produced the large entities that dominated the economy and politics from the start of the Industrial Revolution until the present. Maintaining subsidiary units places a burden on the entire organization. Old-paradigm organizations can be excavated like a fossil bed: the various layers take you back through the history of the organization. Each layer captures the priorities of a bygone time while capturing resources that could be used for present priorities. In a "create and release" approach new entities become partners, not dependents. They are created with a culture of self-reliance and staffed with entrepreneurial leaders. They will need nontraditional start-up capital, the most important of which is a commitment to Reformed theology.

The parables of Jesus are replete with "create and release" images. In the parable of the fig tree (Luke 13:6-8) Jesus shares the advice given to a vineyard owner concerning the fig tree that did not bear fruit: "Sir," the man replied, "Leave it alone for one more year, and I'll dig around it and fertilize it. If it bears fruit next year, fine! If not, then cut it down."

Create and release was well understood by the Reformers. Visitors from distant lands journeyed to Geneva to experience the changes there. When they returned home they had internalized portions of Calvin's model. John Knox recognized this when he wrote of Calvin's Geneva that it was "the most perfect school of Christ that ever was in the earth since the days of the apostles."

The Power of Vision

The hardest aspect of the new paradigm to grasp is the power of vision. Traditional organizations maintained power through efficiency, firm boundaries, control over the means of communication, and a centralization of authority at the top of the organizational pyramid. The emerging paradigm uses a more potent form of power. Vision is the motive force in decentralized organizations. Positive vision has tremendous potential to bring good; negative or malevolent visions can cause great harm.

Traditional organizations have a command and control center that promulgates rules and has the power to punish those who violate them. Order is maintained through coercive sanctions. One of the limits on the size of traditional organizations is simply the cost of maintaining authoritative control.

Emerging organizations are quite different. Their boundaries are semi-permeable. Membership is less important, hence the threat of suspending membership carries less threat than in traditional organizations. What holds these webs together is an infrastructure that facilitates communication and the direction provided by a shared vision.

Many thoughtful people balk at the notion of vision as a powerful motivator. This is likely because they have observed the numerous trendy but ineffective vision statements which wallpaper today's institutions.

Shared vision has a power to cut through layers of bureaucracy, to slice through procedure manuals, and to replace the traditional chain of command. The most powerful visions create their own reality and lead people into it. Jesus used the power of vision in his parables, short stories that invite the hearer to enter into a world of virtual reality. In this alternative universe we experience the power of the kingdom. The last become first, the weak become strong, the lost are found.

In the emerging paradigm, vision cuts through geographical and organizational boundaries. In an old-style organization, decisions that motivated members or workers originated at the top of the organization. Old-style vision was weak, but at least it could be controlled by hierarchical organizations. Power, in the form of institutionally detached visions, characterizes the emerging paradigm.

Consider the power of four letters: WWJD. By themselves they have no meaning, but point out that they stand for the question "What would Jesus do?" and they take on a more compelling meaning. Add them to wristbands, T-shirts, lapel pins, and they become icons of a Christian subculture.

The critical point-and where the power of vision-as-icon comes into play-is that the four letters, with all their potential to change lives, came not from church councils but from outside the church. In an era of more or less open boundaries, the power of vision-as-icon easily transcends traditional boundaries.

Churches have excelled at the production of documents, but they have lagged at the production and distribution of vision-as-icon. This is a major weakness since more nimble competitors will have no qualms about using their own vision to attract individuals.

Luther's theses were handwritten and nailed to the door of the cathedral at Wurtenburg, while the documents of the Presbyterian controversy were printed and distributed. Future debates will be waged in the domain of semiotics, the study of signs and symbols, a field that old-line denominations are ill-prepared to enter.

Reduce the Middle

As we have seen, if organizations fail to speak directly to their members, others will take advantage of the possibilities for direct communication.

In traditional organizations, information flows tend to meet the needs of the organization. Emerging organizations meet member or client needs first. They direct the bulk of their efforts toward finding out what their network wants to know and delivering that. Emerging organizations eliminate their wholesale activities and directly connect information suppliers and users; they examine every communication chain and reduce its length, allowing information to enter the network from any point. In so doing, they link individuals both horizontally and vertically and avoid intermediaries.

As they have in the past, church leaders are called to live and witness in their own times. For us this means learning how to use both old and new tools. Although institutions have been slow to adjust, many individuals are already living and working under the newer model and its rules. We should learn from them and remember the advice given to overseas missionaries: "Before you ever get there remember that God was there first." As Christian leaders our call is neither to resist nor to serve as cheerleaders for the emerging paradigm. Regardless of our feelings, times are changing and we need to restructure the way we conduct our lives and our actions so that, like Paul summoned to the house of Cornelius, we can minister to a world that needs the healing balm of Christ-filled lives.

 

 
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