From Mirrors To Maps

March 1, 2009, posted by Jim, under The Practicing Church | | 7 Comments

from-mirrors-to-maps

Since 2000 Off The Map has been helping Christians see themselves through the eyes of Outsiders. We’ve been holding up a mirror for Christians and asking them if like what they see. Other insultants like Christine Wicker, David Kinnaman, Rick Richardson and Dan Kimball have also contributed to the growing body of evidence that Christianity needs more than a face lift – it needs heart surgery.

We all have mirrors but most of us spend as little time as possible in front of them. Mirrors aren’t friendly. Mirrors are reality checks. Generally we don’t put them up in the living room, instead we position them in private places and use them only as needed.

In A Prophetic Imagination Walter Bruggerman says something about prophetic people needing to both criticize and energize. A heartfelt follower of Jesus (the free-est person who ever lived) needs to practice both. When we try one without the other we create messed up people and we become messed up ourselves, meaning we stop living as free people.

We chose the name Off The Map because we want to do two things

  1. Explore – travel, see new things, and experience difference
  2. Explain – help the church grow and change

As Off The Map enters a new season we’re going to focus less on mirrors and more on maps, less on critiquing the church and more on energizing the church.

Unlike mirrors, maps are hopeful, informational and motivating.

Mapmakers make the invisible visible and the dangerous doable.

It was only a little over 500 years ago that the most popular maps showed an earth that ended at the Equator. The Equator was a boundary no one crossed and lived to tell about. We know that isn’t true now and wasn’t true then but it felt true to them.

Here’s the lesson: Maps make people feel (imagine) so if we want people to change we need to give them alternate feelings – a new map. Only then will they walk out the door and see that the world is much bigger, more interesting and more receptive than they had come to believe.

The Practicing Church is a new map of the church – not a new church.

When Columbus set sail in 1492 he was looking for India and Japan. Even after he bumped into North America he and those who followed in his footsteps spent the next 300 years thinking it was something they had to get through in order to get to the much sought after spices of Asia.

Christians have come to believe their world is much smaller than it actually is. Our beliefs based maps show us a world with so many equators we’ve lost count. Consequently we’ve stopped exploring and become what my new friend Charlie Peacock calls a “bored and clichéd people.”

We mistakenly got into the beliefs business and have come to see serving and otherlyness as something we do because of correct beliefs, when a simple reading of Matthew 25 illustrates that just the opposite is true. Heartfelt practices often lead to right beliefs.

The Practicing Church has been around from the beginning, we just haven’t noticed it. As William Gibson says “The future has already arrived. It’s just not evenly distributed yet.” The Practicing Church will help Christians see the church for what it could be rather than what they’ve come to think it should be.

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7 Responses to “From Mirrors To Maps”

  1. Benjamin Ady says:

    Just a wee note–your link to charlie peacock is slightly broken, and would be relatively easy to fix =) It has one too many “http”s in it.

  2. Jim says:

    thanks team

  3. Jonny says:

    thanks for that Jim. helps me re-focus. particularly the ‘energizing’.
    cheers
    Jonny

  4. Jim says:

    Thanks for caring Jonny

  5. Elaine says:

    As William Gibson says “The future has already arrived. It’s just not evenly distributed yet.”

    I have sensed the same thing – the shift has already happened – modern to post-modern to ??? – we just don’t have eyes to see or a vocabulary to name it. Many people are writing and speaking about this and yet…how do we help others have eyes to see it?

    When I read this, it resonated with how I have been feeling

    Servant-Leadership and Community Leadership in the 21st Century Keynote Address, The Robert K. Greenleaf Center for Servant Leadership annual conference, June 1999 – Margaret J. Wheatley

    There was a geologist being interviewed. He was a beach geologist, so his field of study was beaches and sand and the like. And at the time he was being interviewed, there was a storm. One of the large hurricanes was pounding the outer bank off the Carolinas. And he was being interviewed about what hurricanes do to beaches. Now, we all know what hurricanes do to beaches and beach houses and such. We feel they’re very destructive, right? They destroy homes and take down power lines and take away even sand, and whole beaches disappear in a hurricane. So this interviewer was talking to this beach geologist about this hurricane going on. And then the geologist said, “You know I can’t wait to get out on those beaches again once these storms have passed. And I hope to get out there in the next 24 hours.” And the interviewer said, “What do you expect to find out there?” and I was listening, and I thought he was going to talk about all the destruction he was going to find. What he said really surprised me.

    He said, “I expect to find a new beach.”

    Now wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could be in the same relationship with life as that beach geologist, where we would look for newness rather than predictability, where we would look to see what just happened rather than agonize that what we wanted didn’t happen?

    We, humans don’t like change – or at least we hold onto the old ways as long as we can. We cannot know the mind of God – and yet we continue to try to put God in a box. He doesn’t fit nor does he like it.

    We have been in the midst of a hurricane for a while – it feels like it is settling down – I’m ready to run to the beach and see what God has done. Are you?

  6. [...] our new blog, The Practicing Church, is that Off The Map’s focus has changed. As Jim wrote in From Mirrors to Maps on The Practicing Church blog As Off The Map enters a new season we’re going to focus less on [...]

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