Showing posts with label society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label society. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Church and the Interwebs, Part II

Continuing my thoughts on Here Comes Everybody.

So what are the things that are the essence of the church? On the United Church of Canada's website they describe Five Marks of the Church:

Kerygma (proclaiming)
Didache (teaching)
Koinonia (fellowship)
Diakonia (service)
Liturgia (worship)

It is possible to do all of these things online.

Of course, not all of these things will be as good online as in person, or, the online piece will be better as a reinforcement than as the actual thing. But teaching online, in general, is already a big thing - witness the University of Phoenix. Fellowship online is basically what Facebook is. And podcasts of sermons and livecasts of worship services exist now. Are they a perfect substitute? No. But is the extra effort worthwhile? As you can see, I have more questions than answers at the moment.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Church and the Interwebs, Part I

I'm about halfway through Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky. It's about peoples' ability to organize quickly and easily using the internet, and how that makes a lot of institutions redundant. This is because there used to be a high cost to getting organized, so you needed large institutions to collect the people power to get it done. For example, journalists used to be people connected to publishers who owned printing presses or radio stations or TV studios - the means of producing and distributing information. Now, however, anybody with a cell phone and a web connection can get information out to the entire world instantly. What used to be a tremendous cost is now almost free.

This has me thinking a lot about traditional churches, especially since I'm starting up a church myself. (Here's the website.) What were the difficulties and costs that traditional churches were brought together to overcome? Gathering people into groups, building houses of worship, educated and accountable leadership, economies of scale for overseas mission, and, that's what I can think of right now. Which of these things still require the church as an institution?

On a more personal level, this has implications for the clergy as a profession as well. (Ulp!) Of course, I already knew that, since I know a bunch of people who have become ordained online to do a friend's wedding. But what is the purpose of ordination if what a clergy(man) used to be was one of the most educated people in the village? Knowledge is not a scarcity anymore.

Shirky writes the story of what happened to scribes. Before the printing press, scribes performed the valuable service of maintaining libraries by recopying books. Once people started using printed books, scribes co-existed for a while, but eventually faded out to almost nothing - modern-day calligraphy is about all that's left. Is that the destination of our major institutions, the church included?