Peter Chynoweth
New Member
The following post is a re-posting of a discussion I started at unitedfuture.ca
I am posting it here as well based on a recommendation from one of my respondents (Jim Kenney) who suggested that Wondercafe and Wondercafe2 might be a place to initiate this kind of discussion.
I'm sorry if you construe this as spamming, or cross-posting. I only had two respondents at unitedfuture.ca, and maybe that is all that the topic deserves, but I think it is quite an important and current issue and that it has legs with the kind of community that is attracted to wondercafe(2).
I added a slight bit extra on Wondercafe, so that's the (edited) one I will post here. It follows:
I don't have a lot of time to edit the piece for this forum, but I suspect it will transfer fairly well. I can add one piece of information: When I refer to the Observer article, the article I am specifically referring to is in the January 2012 issue. The article is "Rules for the digital road" and in the article, Karen Smart and Whit Strong, if you take their comments literally, prohibit the Holy Spirit from exisiting outside of "real time". It may be a Smart and Strong argument (I couldn't resist) but I think it is neither! Here's the original from United Future:
The Comprehensive Review (of The United Church of Canada) has often (always?) said it was an invitation to 'think outside the box'. The Manual has been clear in the past, bolstered by decisions made by General Secretaries and confirmed in Observer articles (I can get specific, if you need me to) that the 'Holy Spirit' can only exist in 'real time'. Decisions must be made in face to face gatherings, or by conference call. So YOU don't need to be present, but your voice does, and your voice must be there at the same time as every other voice. I believe this is 'inside the box' thinking.
Many important things in our day and age and in the past have been discovered, discussed, learned, and inspired not in face to face, real time discussions, but in a healthy back and forth, with time for discernment, with well stated points of view, with well argued defenses and vigorously proposed theses.
I think the 'Holy Spirit' has been present in these times as well. I think it is time for us to say that the Holy Spirit transcends time and space, and that the Holy Spirit can indeed inspire decisions which are not made in 'real time'.
What do you think? Is it time for our decision making processes to acknowledge the high degree of collaboration which is happening in our day and age and allow for decisions which would lift up other ways of expressing inspiration?
Sometimes when the Holy Spirit is supposed to be present, it is the loudest voice, or the most well argued position that wins the day and the vote.. Sometimes the Holy Spirit is present in the still small voice, in the time taken for careful consideration and in the inarticulate, anxious words of someone who is shy.
You know where I stand on these questions, What about you?
I am posting it here as well based on a recommendation from one of my respondents (Jim Kenney) who suggested that Wondercafe and Wondercafe2 might be a place to initiate this kind of discussion.
I'm sorry if you construe this as spamming, or cross-posting. I only had two respondents at unitedfuture.ca, and maybe that is all that the topic deserves, but I think it is quite an important and current issue and that it has legs with the kind of community that is attracted to wondercafe(2).
I added a slight bit extra on Wondercafe, so that's the (edited) one I will post here. It follows:
I don't have a lot of time to edit the piece for this forum, but I suspect it will transfer fairly well. I can add one piece of information: When I refer to the Observer article, the article I am specifically referring to is in the January 2012 issue. The article is "Rules for the digital road" and in the article, Karen Smart and Whit Strong, if you take their comments literally, prohibit the Holy Spirit from exisiting outside of "real time". It may be a Smart and Strong argument (I couldn't resist) but I think it is neither! Here's the original from United Future:
The Comprehensive Review (of The United Church of Canada) has often (always?) said it was an invitation to 'think outside the box'. The Manual has been clear in the past, bolstered by decisions made by General Secretaries and confirmed in Observer articles (I can get specific, if you need me to) that the 'Holy Spirit' can only exist in 'real time'. Decisions must be made in face to face gatherings, or by conference call. So YOU don't need to be present, but your voice does, and your voice must be there at the same time as every other voice. I believe this is 'inside the box' thinking.
Many important things in our day and age and in the past have been discovered, discussed, learned, and inspired not in face to face, real time discussions, but in a healthy back and forth, with time for discernment, with well stated points of view, with well argued defenses and vigorously proposed theses.
I think the 'Holy Spirit' has been present in these times as well. I think it is time for us to say that the Holy Spirit transcends time and space, and that the Holy Spirit can indeed inspire decisions which are not made in 'real time'.
What do you think? Is it time for our decision making processes to acknowledge the high degree of collaboration which is happening in our day and age and allow for decisions which would lift up other ways of expressing inspiration?
Sometimes when the Holy Spirit is supposed to be present, it is the loudest voice, or the most well argued position that wins the day and the vote.. Sometimes the Holy Spirit is present in the still small voice, in the time taken for careful consideration and in the inarticulate, anxious words of someone who is shy.
You know where I stand on these questions, What about you?