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How
can an organic environment where community and belonging can emerge be
developed? By using an organic order
approach rather than a mechanical order approach. Mechanical order is appropriate when it comes
to manufacturing inanimate objects. But
developing something with life requires organic order.
Nine
organizational tools that you can use in a mechanical or organic order way are:
- Patterns
- Mechanical –
attempt to force the realization of a plan that worked somewhere else by
controlling people and processes to get there. You try and make people into parts that
will fit together to look like what you envision creating.
- Organic – allows
individuals and groups to grow and become uniquely themselves in each
situation. The group looks like the
body of Christ when the parts connect and do their special works for each
other. This will be a literal
spiritual expression of Jesus Christ on the earth in His second body.
(Ephesians 4:15-16)
- Participation
- Mechanical – trying
to get people to participate in created positions that serve a plan. Participation is usually forced and
people feel uncomfortable and out of place.
- Organic –
individuals feel free and responsible to act uniquely as themselves for
the good of the group as a whole.
They find out what special graces they’ve been given by God and
they use them to accomplish the works that God prepared in advance for
them to do. (Ephesians 2:10)
- Measurement
- Mechanical – value
is found in numbers related to an end point to be reached. People are assessed based upon the
health of the organization.
- Organic – value is
found in the story of the life of the group. Success is found in the health of the
organism from its individual parts.
- Growth
- Mechanical –
measured in outward evidences of numbers, resources, activities and other
inanimate measuring sticks.
- Organic – takes
small steps forward at the community’s own pace. Growth is based upon individual’s
maturity to completion in Christ. (Colossians 1:28)
- Power
- Mechanical –
delivered through permanent positions.
Man is trusted with control of the body of Christ through the
assignment of permanent power, no matter where the wind (Spirit) blows.
- Organic – revolves
through the parts of the whole depending on what is being demanded by the
life of the organism. The Spirit
gives power to the parts that need it to accomplish His will in a
progressive fashion as time goes on. (John 3:8)
- Coordination
- Mechanical – asks
people to cooperate by falling in line with a plan to make it work. People become commodities to be
maneuvered toward a person’s vision.
- Organic – self-organization
through collaboration of parts based upon their connection. The vision is from the Head through all
of the parts together. (Ephesians 4:15-16).
- Partners
- Mechanical –
accountability to hold people responsible for their actions. The focus is on performance in relation
to sin.
- Organic –
edit-ability to help on the journey to wholeness. The focus is encouragement toward
allowing God to live in and through the person ever-increasingly.
(Ephesians 5:17-18)
- Language
- Mechanical – words
are noun-centric. They turn
dynamic words into static words.
- Organic – words are
verb-centric.
- Resources
- Mechanical –
pre-determined allocation based upon the question, “How are we going to
do this?” People assume future
events can and should take place and make pre-mature decisions based upon
those assumptions.
- Organic – moment-by-moment
allocation based upon the thought, “This is how we can do this.” People do what they are able with the
graces they’ve been given.
Humans
can’t build living things. When they
build something, whatever it is; it is dead.
It may serve a good purpose and show tremendous creative abilities, but
only God can create and sustain something that is living. This is where we’re breaking down in the
Church.
At
the root of who is doing the building of the Church is the issue of
control. The sinful nature seems to want
to take it from God and other people in an effort to deal with the fear that
comes with unpredictability. The fear
that if we let God have control, He won’t live up to His promises and take care
of us. The fear that if we let Christ be
the Head, He won’t know how to animate the Body and it will find itself in
chaos and utterly destroy itself.
God’s
eternal purpose was to create One New Man that would be alive by the life of God
with Christ as the Head (Ephesians 2:14-22).
Because this One New Man is a living organism, it grows and develops
organically, just like all living things.
But, because of man’s fear rooted in the sinful nature, they tend to
take control away from God and try to build the One New Man themselves, in
their own power. This is like trying to engineer
an animal in a laboratory. It just can’t
be done. You can’t engineer the genetic
code of God, the DNA of the Church. The
best one can do is create something inanimate that looks and acts like the
living thing they are trying to engineer.
I’ve
found that many times a conversation about giving up control gets translated
into a conversation about giving up leadership.
But, an important distinction must be made here. True biblical leaders don’t control. “You don’t lead by pointing a finger and telling
people some place to go. You lead by
going to that place and making a case.” (Ken Kesey) Then, watch and see if people do it. Many leaders today are pointing to a place of
organic community and telling people to go there, and waiting for people to go
there, while at the same time doing the same things over and over again in a
mechanical way. They won’t admit it and
they may not realize it, but they are afraid to give up control. The true leaders are the ones that are not
afraid to go to a place of organic community and make a case for people to come
along, even if it means going there alone.
Is
there order in God? Yes.
Is
there structure in God? Yes.
Is
there government in God? Yes.
But
God’s order, structure and government are diametrically opposed to the worlds
(John 15:18-19). It’s alive and always
evolving. Sadly, many of those that are
considered “leaders” today are attempting to engineer the Christian life
according to the world’s system, which is what we need to identify and move
away from.
Creating
an organic environment for community to grow is just like creating the
environment for any other living thing to grow.
The right conditions must be met.
The more you use the nine organizational tools in a mechanical way, the
worse the conditions become for life to grow.
When used organically, the nine organizational tools create the
environment for the organism to grow, thrive and its life (Christ) to be shared
with all.
Prior posts in this series:
Is Your Church a Collaboration?
Myers, Joseph R. "Organic Community"
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