Strategic Plan for Outreach

Go out and share your faith wherever people will have ya. Seems simple enough, so why do we need a plan?

That’s probably what we’ve been assuming at OAC Ministries for ages. But now I’m realizing why we DO need a plan… 

A few months ago I summarized the state of OAC Australia in order to give the Aussie report at OAC International conference. I realized that due to staff retiring, some leaving to start families, and the imminent end of a business that funds our national admin dept. by next conference (2016) our organization could be diminished by half. Half the staff, half the finances, half the branches… which means less than half the outreach will get done!

Oh, we knew this was coming, but we never really knew what to do in a coherent way. None of us organizational leaders have been trained in leadership, we’re just doing it because there was no-one else. We were trained as evangelists, we wouldn’t know what an overall plan looks like. So we were just micro-reacting.

Until now.

I have 2 people on the WA Committee, who are trained in leadership, and I recently admitted to them, ”I dunno what to do!” They said, strategic plan. At the same time, OAC International said, “each branch should have a strategic plan in place by end of 2012.” So on Friday the WA planning begins.

And we’ve already been benefiting from thinking ahead about it.

First benefit is seeing how we fit in the bigger 5-fold ministry landscape. We do evangelism, a small part in the big APEPT picture. We need to be co-operating better with organizations that have Missionary, Prophetic, Pastoral, Teaching gifts. Synergy. If this rings a bell for you, contact me!

Second, I’m more focussed on our main ministry: multiple-presentation outreaches, in partnership with those who will continue the follow-up. I’d love to be doing more of those situations where I get to speak more than once to a group – camps, a series, community contact weeks, Core Stuff. These are by far the most effective in terms of bringing people to a point of decision about Jesus. And to do that in concert with a locals who continue the relationship, that’s the best!

From the locals’ standpoint, maybe they have been wondering “how do we say this?” and maybe need an outsider to voice the issues. Hearing it from a third party can reduce the danger to the relationship. Plus people tend to suspend prejudices when listening to an outsider.

Third, it is helping me see how each aspect of OAC reinforces the main outreach ministry. I really want supporters to see how they help make outreach happen (in fact I want them to be renamed “active members” of the work, not just supporters as if they are supporting our work. They are part of the work!) Let me show you where you fit:

So I’m already seeing more clearly where we have to improve (the red bits). And the strategic planning process hasn’t even started yet!

I’d value your prayers that we do a good job, and do it speedily. And that we find the human resources to put it all into practice. If you want to chat about how you can help this ministry to be more effective into the future, I’d love, love, love to hear from you! Right now, as part of the plan!

Which task?

Here the word call becomes important.

We are not called to save the world, solve all problems, and help all people.  But we each have our own unique call, in our families, in our work, in our world. We have to keep asking God to help us see clearly what our call is and to give us the strength to live out that call with trust.  Then we will discover that our faithfulness to a small task is the most healing response to the illnesses of our time.

- Henri Nouwen

America and Mexico Humble me


For the least 3 weeks, I’ve been in America & Mexico. I didn’t really know why I was going, but now I know I really needed it. What was this trip about?

 How many guitarists does it take to change a light-bulb?
One… and the rest to say to themselves, “I could have done that.” 

I laugh at that joke, because I recognise in myself the propensity to compare myself, to over-estimate myself and under-estimate others. Well, when it comes to guitar, I haven’t thought that way for a long time, knowing my priorities & limits mean I’m not a patch on most other players. But my field of comparison or positive self-illusion would be Christian ministry. Secretly I think I’m pretty good at my bit – maybe not so secretly as I’m aware of a certain arrogance of which I’m not proud… guilty as charged.

However on this trip I have been humbled by meeting, and seeing in action, the skills and ministry expertise of some very amazing people. I’m seeing quality outreach ministries out there that I could not do, not even close. And I’m seeing nuances and strengths of ministries I’d not credited enough previously. I’m finding myself saying, “No I actually couldn’t have done that: that’s amazing!”

I think I can see why God had me go on this trip in a mystery-listening mode. He wanted me to travel with open mind & heart, to watch & learn what He is doing with people who are submitting to Him their lives, skills, talents, gifts, in ways that are out of my league! 

I met simple street preachers who spearhead simple but effective churches. They have kept the gospel DNA pure, without losing the holistic implications of it. Their methods are winsome and bold, and locally appropriate. I’ve come to not just respect but greatly admire the international OAC family. They even let me have a go at it.

I met architects of incrediblycomplex networks-of-networks of evangelistic, transformative churches, who have managed to distill leadership development pathways into simple stages. And we’re talking complex leadership & strategic infrastructures at the top end - and it’s producing a new church-plant every 11 days, now that the networks have spread! And the number of men engaged is wonderful to see. Over my head… oh I understood what CCC and NewThing leaders were saying & doing, but because I haven’t done that apprenticeship, I don’t have that capacity to initiate or lead what they’re doing! I’ll have to start at the bottom if I want that.

Willow Creek baptisms

I met people whose corporate management systems and attention to detail have created a kind of hospitality & servanthood that left me shaking my head in wonder. Willow had 70 baptisms one weekend, and I saw it jump to 90 before my very eyes, and felt the truth of what was happening. And I saw how their generosity works to combat consumerism.

Too often I have crossed that fine line between simply articulating the benefits of what I’m doing vs devaluing the work of others. Positive illusions & negative attributions. And now I feel a bit like Job after God showed him a thing or two – I repent in dust and ashes.

I learned to appreciate anew what God can do with methods-other-than ours. Sure, Cheers is an extraordinary model, incarnated in Banksia Grove in ways that make real practical sense. Sure, hierarchical structures can create co-dependence but they don’t have to, and even if they do, God can still use them in spite of it. Cheers isn’t the best way, it’s just our best way – so far.

Forge prophetically espoused good missionary practices, and exposed problems with church systems in western cultures, but once the prophetic message was delivered and better practice inspired, more practical help would be needed by missio’s in the field, which we weren’t equipped to do. But…

Forge America has been learning those extra bits of know-how. Al & Kim have taken the humility dose, and learned new things from entrepreneurs, & skill-sets we didn’t have in Oz. Kim has garnered some great people and (WA-esque) synergies. Forge has returned to its core pioneering DNA; it’s found right people for the right tasks; it now has working, intentional strategies for reproducing; ways to actually structure networks of networks; and knows who to connect missios with for their next stages of development. It has a youth-forge, a better financial engine, and much better synergy within itself, and with other organizations. ForgeAm has both recaptured it’s pioneering edge, and matured a lot, learned lessons it needed if it was going to be more than a prophetic voice.

I’d like to think Forge Am can reboot a better Forge Aus, to make the prophetic dream real afterall. It will take a dose of humility, forgiveness, and lesson-learning, but I can see it happening because ex-Forgers are experimenters who don’t quit on the first failure. We’re not too proud to try something crazy for God’s Kingdom. Not afraid to eat some humble pie.

So the question for me amid all this inspiring stuff, is, what is my contribution? 

Jim Collins’ “Good to Great,” advises me to pare down to my core: evangelism is my sense of passion, gifting, and blessing, when I feel the Spirit at work in me. Putting into words concepts that help people find their way back to God – inSpiring faith in Christ’s mercy and grace, and its holistic implications.

Now also I have this excited respect for the rest of the Body of Christ, and I think that’s where this trip has been helpful, stirring in me a deeper appreciation for what’s possible in other parts. Maybe since I left Craigie  in ’95 in search of a “better way,” I have incrementally depreciated the norms. This trip has been a corrective, and perhaps might lead to greater co-operation between evangelists and the mainstream, and the other 5-fold ministries (apostle prophet evangelist pastor teacher).

So now I need to work out how this fits together. What I need to stop doing, and what to start. Please pray for me to get this right. 

The Trip itself:

  • LA: Whiteheads, Grant & Bev & Sam – Awww thanks so much for the soft landing in USA. For the water, the coffee, the shoe-shopping, the English pub, and sharing the LA-leg with me. Ssstaples?
  • LA – Mosaic, Hollywood: serving Hollywood artists, local community & associated people. Good chat with Erwin, filled in some of the story from his side about TW handover. EM had more of the knack of translating TW’s elegant planting theory on the ground. When took over leader job, he protected the pulpit – from TW.
  • LA – Tribe, dinner in biggest arts community in LA, which is found flourishing in sheds & buildings in industrial area, like a granny smith apple tree. Encouraged tribe to keep sewing together heaven and earth.
  • Long Beach - thanks Jensen’s for letting me crash, the great soup, and trusting me to share ecclesia with your crew. I love the community of straight up practitioners. Also a catch up on the other side of the EM/TW clash, which ended badly, clumsy at best. Looks like the board didn’t know how to handle the conflict, or the end, properly. Needed AO’s Teamwealth & T-Grids.

Mexico:

  • Misael – legendary job with the conference. Servanthood personified, and clearly uber-proficient guy. A pleasure to ride with you in the trunk! Robby G – for introducing me to the OACI family. Chris M – uber-skilled guy. Anatolly – festivals, street-preaching, with BU church-planters, 24-42 churches in 7 years. “If I get arrested it will be my sabbatical.” Holiday Inn, Guadalajara Centrico Historico, thank-you.
  • Street preaching > + contacts > Bible studies > church plants. Keep it simple where simple will do!
  • Secular westerners are hardened towards the gospel, everywhere.
  • Strategic Plan for OAC Australia 
  • Strategic Plan for OACWA

Chicago:

  • Whiteheads, Brandy, thanks for waiting for me, and still hosting me anyway, & Sidney, Scarlett, &Violet, thanks for the morning crazies. Darren, top book, top work, top bloke. Claimjumpers, yeah! Jake thanks for stoogie night, even tho Bulls lost.
  • Christian Community Church – Dave Ferguson, thanks for coughing up the goods when I put the stethoscope on your heart, and inviting me into the meet with Joe. Great to meet Eric & brian and Jon etc. Serious Franchise CEO-level strategies goin’ on there. And Joe’s network achievements in Russia, & reaching his limits. Yet CCC also simplified what they are doing in mission to Reach-Reproduce-Restore, & BLESS (Begin with prayer, Listen, Eat Serve, Story-tell). I was introduced to CCC office staff, and chatted with Kirsten who added Restore to their DNA.
  • New Thing does networks of networks, now there’s a new church plant every 11 days! Eric has some serious strategic skills. English clubs > BS > ch plants. KISS at coalface.
  • Willow Creek, Dr B’s cafe, 7 huge auditoriums, and multi-meetings per day. Alpha upgraded, Axis (way to go Laura!) Shifting restorative services to Sth Barrington to more closely align outreach gospel with services. Staff of 375+, need business/structure skills to run it. 5 campuses including DuPage. 7000-seat Big House. Closely guarded pulpit/teaching. tens of staff per service handling shop-front details etc… Gives heaps away for building funds (BH Fridays), cars, clothes, services, schools, partnering parents in intentional parenting. And remember all the Baptisms.
  • Steph, Lily & Chase, thanks for having me, and being so interested in how this “cousin” thing works. Reece, mate – thanks for the car-keys & TomTom, and all the insights into Willow, DuPage, and your world.
  • CCC-East Aurora – A piece of Mexico. Keep up the good work.
  • Hometown – a billionaire’s dream of infrastructure for community. And KH is doing a Cheers-esque work there. (Starting with 4 other couples).
  • Forge America – Kim has done great work. Networked in, slowed down, listened, learned the culture and from the past, made good connections > synergies, especially with CCC (auspice), & New Thing (structures of networks). Hubs, in KC, CA, KC, and with Wheaton, Johnson. People with necessary skill sets. Boot camps underway this year, 3.0 Youth-Forge, publishing. Renewed DNA (network of networks, pioneering primary, Reproducing systems, & structures for networks). Thanks Carter, Brian, Eric, for the insights and camaraderie. Thanks Kim for the honesty – pass on my love to Al. There is plenty of DNA for a better resurrected body. (The story doesn’t make sense without Phil’s part, but would he confirm it?)
  • Cheers 24 does Psalm 24 – there was nothing like our Cheers. You guys are so culturally amazing! :-) )) I really enjoyed watching the swimming pool version of Psalm 24 that you guys did while I was away!

The Take-home Lessons: 

  • AO’s Leadership Teamwealth & T-Grids. – are handy everywhere. Add them to my roles in OAC (WA,SA,Aus,Zone,International), and SU, and Cheers.
  • KISS at the coalface. Simple as can be: street-level evangelism (however its done) PLUS church planting is the kind of synergy we want to see.
  • Super-strategy-structures can work, are even necessary when you’re running thousands! And thousands at a time can work too (Willow baptism night). Churches sometimes need to be complex, and require specialist skill-sets. But if they have good DNA* they can do ecclesia-missionary work.
  • *DNA more important: It doesn’t matter what the structure, simple or complex, it’s what you do with it that counts – the DNA. The orientation, what you’re fundamentally trying to accomplish, how for-the-other you are, how you manage the inner animal-defaults, whether you have the basic elements of worship, discipleship (disciplines like BLESS – Begin w prayer, Listen, Eat, Serve, Storytell) and a mission (like Reach-Reproduce-Restore).
  • ForgeAmerica – is now better than Forge Oz: (more like WA was, and then some.) They’ve found people with necessary skill sets, to provide: auspices, synergies, renewed DNA (skills for networks of networks, ensured pioneering is primary, viable income streams, boot camp content got underway this year.) Plus a kind of Youth-Forge, publishing, reproducing systems, & structures for networks (New Thing). I think ForgeOz can get back to its feet, improved, and encourage the DNA-holders to do mission even better than before. (In addition I suggest we add Andrew Olsen’s leadership stuff, and evangelism skills.)

So there you go. That’s a lot to process in terms of recommendations and changes. Please pray for me as I make necessary changes, so I know what to add and to subtract - all to the glory of God! 

Chicago deep-dish pizza - seriously!

For these and other pics from my trip, go to my FB page.

Cheers-log 2011-09 Mediation

I’ve had a running conflict with the school principal, and mediation was suggested - but it was doomed to fail because the mediator didn’t know the processes mentioned here.

Mediation. A word we use generically to mean keeping two parties from fighting whilst they sort their differences. But there’s more to mediation than you first think – the art of reconciliation has detail. The Peace-Maker, by Ken Sande outlines personal peace-making, and if you go on and learn more in the seminar series, you can become a mediator.

A mediator would:

  • Coach BOTH parties beforehand, to
    - prepare a genuine apology, that gives hope for things to be different in future
    - prepare your story, that gives understanding, empathy.
  • Meet when all is prepared by both parties, so the way ahead is already obvious.
    - share stories,
    - share apologies, and
    - form a joint statement for the future, that you can both sign
  • Share the joint statement with as many who have been effected by the dispute.

In our “mediation,” despite assurances that the principal would ‘be prepared’ – he hadn’t been prepared at all (poor guy). So at the meeting, I gave my apology, it was accepted, the end! 

The end? Er… Where is the foundation for future trust? No recognition of his part in the conflict, no apology, equals no likelihood that anything will change.” So I can give no trust in that environment. There can be no reconciliation.

When I tried to express this, I was quickly made to look like the troublemaker, the one “not willing to end this dispute.” In actual fact, I am the one looking for real reconciliation.

So here are lessons for me:

  1. Mediation means different things. What you’re going into may be called mediation, but it may not be real mediation. Let’s explain carefully what everyone means, before we go into it. All need to be confident in the process. Now I have a good model to start with.
  2. No wonder Aboriginal reconciliation is so far off, when good mediation processes are so hard to find.
  3. Peacewise are onto it. Want to join me in getting equipped for this massive need?

Leadership and Missional Communities

Blind-spots. You can’t know what you don’t know. Not until someone shows you, then you know what you didn’t know before.

Andrew Olsen showed us some leadership blind-spots which, on reflection, are some areas in which I could have benefited if I had known about them earlier.

1. Human nature defaults to pecking order and scapegoating.

This is why groups of good people, that started well and co-operatively, ended up devolving, quietly drifting apart, “losing interest,” or loudly arguing, fracturing, or ending. I thought that if we consciously figure out good ways to go forward, that the Spirit’s leading and logic would make that apparent to all. But it’s the sub-conscious primate-brain that short-circuits us. We THINK we differ on “the issues,” but IN FACT as soon as there is a group loyalty there is a subconscious drive to have our place in the pack, and to protect and galvanize our pack by expelling “threats.” This sinful human nature lies at the base of all our conflicts, all our groups!

Maybe some missions failed because we trusted each other to be good, and failed to properly acknowledge our sinful human nature. 

2. Human nature needs to be managed by good civic ground-rules.

Everyone knows what is right. It’s just that we struggle to do it. So a leader can form good civics by asking three basic questions, and letting the people shape the civics. ”How do you want the meetings to be?” safe, not talking over the top, honest, etc. “How do you want us to relate to each other?” Respectfully, listening, honest, friendly, etc. “How do you want the leader to conduct the group?” Keep us on task, safe processes, etc.

So now the leader’s job becomes clear: he/she is accountable to the group to make the group behave like we all know we should. And we have given the leader authority to do it. The leader uses these civic ground-rules (which we chose!) to make us behave better towards each other. If he doesn’t, he fails and we tell him off. If she does, we all perform much better towards each other.

Maybe some missions failed because we failed to set up solid ground rules that manage the human nature. 

3. Parallel Thinking Grids overcome Oppositional thinking.

How quickly arguments get out of hand! Brain research tells us that when we feel under threat, adrenaline is released which interferes with the function of the frontal lobe, the part only humans have, used for reflective and rational thinking. We default to primate-brain, pecking order. So as soon as adrenaline kicks in, stop – we are no longer physiologically capable of understanding other viewpoints!

Oppositional thinking (he said / she said) is our default way of dispute resolution, and it creates adrenaline in no time!

Alternatively, if the leader makes us think in parallel ways, it keeps us together, and tables far more information on both sides of the issue. In parallel thinking, the leader makes us all park our points of view. Then all together, we all brainstorm as many reasons for ‘A’ as possible, uninterrupted. Then we all brainstorm as many reasons against ‘A’ as possible, uninterrupted. Then we all brainstorm as many reasons for ‘B’ as possible, uninterrupted. Then against ‘B’. Then we all consider all that info together and mention what has become obvious, without defending our observations. Then we all name the obvious actions to take.

At no point did we become oppositional, we stayed together throughout. No adrenaline, so we can empathize.

In fact  brainstorming by using a thinking grid like this gives you 5-10 times more useful info, than just brainstorming “pro’s and cons.” This is because the “value-finding” part of your brain is different from the “danger” finding part. The thinking grid makes you stay in one part for an extended period, which triggers a spiraling creativity. You also spark off each other by being collectively in that brain-space together.

Parallel thinking grids are one of the most powerful tools to manage sinful human nature, and also create synergistic thinking. I wish I’d known that before!

Maybe some missions failed because we used oppositional thinking processes that ended in adrenaline, and failed to use parallel thinking modes enough.

4. Leading well requires skills to be learnt.  

I under-estimated the complexities. I had two tools – prayer & logic. I thought if God prompted and it made sense, that would win the day and all would follow. All I had to do was be clear. Ba-poww! Wrong!

I’ve already mentioned the skills of setting up good civics, and parallel thinking grids. I also learnt about: value-creating questions; shortest possible time negotiation; commentating on thinking and social processes; techniques for stimulating imagination; delegation; reflection; and finally the ability to teach all this too.

I did not know all this! And that’s just the skills of leading a group to do it’s tasks.

I also under-estimated the complexities of getting the tasks themselves done. There’s all the interplay between the setting, the staff, the clients, management of operations, admin and logistics, communications and command, relationships, conflict resolution and peacemaking, strategy planning and execution, priorities, stages of formation.

Yikes! A bit more info on all that would have helped. Did Jesus have a handle on all that stuff? Well, now that I think about it, yes he did. It doesn’t mean he formed a company, but he had a wide repertoire of those skills and more.

Maybe some missions failed because one or more of these many elements were not tended to properly, because we just didn’t learn about them, or because we had too simplistic a model of what was happening. 

5. Teams Dysfunction at different levels

Patrick Lencioni gives this pyramid of dysfunctions of a team: Absence of Trust > fear of Conflict > lack of Commitment > avoiding Accountability > inattention to Results.  As soon as this was described, I suddenly saw the dysfunctions that made sense in the various groups I was a part of, and then I could work on it. Until I saw it, the group “just wasn’t working” and I couldn’t do anything about it.

Maybe some mission groups failed because there was one of these foundational dysfunctions. 

6. Flat leadership structures do not mean laissez-faire

Laissez-faire means, “whatever.” That’s not flat leadership, that’s just flat! It’s no leadership. That can be OK in a partnership where there is mutual initiative, but when more people are involved, relationships become more complex, and group-loyalty engenders pecking order in the primate-brain. Therefore trust has to be worked at, otherwise the weeds of fear and sinful human nature will choke the garden of community. As soon as we give someone responsibility we require them to lead in that area, and, as we’ve seen, people can lead well or poorly.

Flat leadership is not an oxymoron. The group can defer to each others’ expertise in different areas, and there can be a co-ordinating leadership that asks questions and facilitates the whole group expertly, without dominating. And that kind of leadership has to be conscious, or else it will be blind-sided by the above issues.

When the group defers to someone’s leadership in an area, each area-leader would benefit from understanding all of the matters listed above.

Maybe some missions failed because there was no leadership, leaving them defenseless against the entropy of primate-brain defaults.

7. Hierarchy can be used to serve

If you have a hierarchical leadership structure, you can use it to serve, or to dominate. From the Arbinger Institute we learned about “out-of-the-box” thinking vs “in-the-box” thinking. This is not about creativity, but empathy. Being “in-the-box” is relating to people from within your own frame of reference. Being “out-of-the-box” is relating in open-hearted ways, being other-centered. It’s the mindset that says no to manipulation, and yes to service. Conversely, in-the-box thinking can turn the most gentle method into heartless manipulation. Being out-of-the-box is an important overlay to all leadership skills.

Maybe some missions failed simply because leaders were “in-the-box.” 

I’ll be going through these in more detail at a public meeting for SUNO (Scripture Union Neighborhood Outreach.) 730pm, Tues Nov 15. Venue TBA.

Cheers-log 2011-07 Steering

From the Steering meeting yesterday:

1. We articulated ground-rules for how we behave when together, just as a way of managing any lazy defaults that might otherwise creep in. (These can be reviewed at anytime.)

In Meetings: friendly, inclusive, open, non-judgemental, safe, supportive, ‘out-of-box’ (not stuck in own little world), flexible, educational (taking ownership of our own learning), contributions from all, no over-talking, no waffling, quiet play for toddlers, summarize (one thing), more time for people to download at start.

The Leader: reminder email, prepared (put together MC agenda), some good theological input, boundaries on kids, keep group on track.

Team Relating: be in communication, eat with each other, help for a date night /respite, trust enough to conflict well. (Trust>conflict>commit>account>results)

The leader (usually me), will be evaluated by the group as to how well I keep us to these agreed ground-rules.

2. C24 Contributions: Also we discussed how some feel “intimidated” about coming to Cheers 24 because everyone is expected to contribute something about the topic. Actually it’s not so much intimidated as uncomfortable if they didn’t bring something, and if they did, scared they might be wrong. We agreed to:

  • Maintain the expectation that all contribute, but make sure we don’t make anyone feel lesser if they don’t, and are careful with people’s contributions to ensure they feel safe and loved with it. Encourage the activist, contributor DNA.
  • Revisit resource books, and the bookmark of starter ideas. And the different pathways of expressions of learning/worship.

3. Next Topic for Cheers 24 will be key chapters from the Emmaus Road conversation (Luke 24) when Jesus explained about the prophecies concerning him. This solid foundation will help firm up people’s foundations when they have doubts about the Christian life. And after, it looks like we might revisit the Beatitudes again. Sounds great.

Shortly I will edit this blog to add those key chapters for the Emmaus Road series. Obviously next C24 will be Luke 24.

Titration

I am increasing haunted by these titration experiments we did back when I was in School. We would add, and add, and add the dye, and nothing seemed to happen. Add. Add. One drop at a time. Add. Add. Nothing, nothing. Add, then suddenly one drop pushed the experiment over the tipping point, the liquid changed color, and the megashift happened! All from one little drop!

Why do titrations haunt me? Because our planet is undergoing a series of giant titrations. The ocean, air, soil, the whole biosphere, (not to mention cultures & economies) are all changing a drop at a time. And yet although we hear the gloomy predictions, many people seem to think the change will happen slowly, “so when we see significant changes happening, we’ll do something about it then, because we’ll know our limitations and will deal with it.”

But with titrations, when you see something happen, it’s already too late!!!

Our global environment is titrating.

Furthermore, we have not even acted well upon the significant changes which have already happened.

- 90% of our oceans’ food stocks have gone in the last 50-100 years, but there is no comprehensive shift in our behavior.

- There is still no real effort for a comprehensive shift away from our unsustainable oil-based economy. We are reaching the exponential “runaway” points with energy, air, food-production, water…

Our governments and businesses need to hit the brakes hard now. Or the bigger the crash later.

Drip. Drip. Drip…

Together For Humanity

Together For Humanity is a great incursion for schools, in which a Jew, a Muslim, and a Christian run a program together. TFH openly addresses differences and stereo-types, and misunderstandings about people unlike “us.”

"An imam, a rabbi, and a minister went into a school..."

Plus TFH shows how in many ways we can work productively together, without ever having to ask one another to compromise our own faiths.  In fact TFH will help set up aid projects that your students can do together with students from other religious schools.

I’m willing to participate in this, because we have to teach students how to practically work together with people quite different than us, without ignoring each other’s spiritual perspectives as if they don’t matter. They do matter – profoundly. But we can still work together.

TFH doesn’t go into how to discuss the differences in depth. But we do model that. TFH’s primary brief is to show how to work together despite differences.

My own OAC school seminars also show why religion/spiritual issues really matter, how integrated into life they are. I show that from a Christian point of view, but also model how to look into spiritual beliefs without condemning others. TFH is one way I do that.

The website is www.togetherforhumanity.org.au. And Rabbi Zalman Kastel describes it on youtube.


media, time, Tamara Lowe

Thanks Tamara! This is excellent – not only because it rhymes, but because it names the lies of the marketing machine that is mainstream media. Show your teens for the content, and have a good chat.

Now, get the core stuff sorted out, then go find something good to do!

Perry Marshall & biology myths

I do like Perry Marshall.

I love that he has the time to answer so many emails, and participate in so many online discussions. Why? Because he’s a sane and well-informed voice – the kind I’d like to be. The kind I want participating in online forums. And he has the time to do it, and does it well.

Checkout this list of “myths biologists believe, that an electric engineer would never tolerate”:
http://www.cosmicfingerprints.com/blog/ee/

Bookmark him: an excellent resource, if you’re wired like me.

Cheers,

Geoff