The Conservative slogan of 'Broken Britain' gained traction because there is the perception that communities have fractured. Perhaps that's supported by people not knowing their neighbours and 70% of us being selfish but the internet has seen them reborn. The social web exists because people want to share their lives with others, they desire more than simple individualism or quiet desperation. And while some of those social spaces remain entirely virtual the real value of everything web 2.0 is seen in the act of transition to the real world. It is word becoming flesh.
And it's great to see some creative people recognising this and trying to help the church understand it. Christianity is all about relationships. The Trinity is a beautiful image of relational community. The Bible is the story of God's desire for relationship with His creation. The church exists to encourage and support, to connect and transform, to be both home and sanctuary. We're meant to be modelling community beyond just pitching up for a few songs and a prayer predicated on subscription to some specific beliefs.
So whilst C may stand for Church, what we discuss on a Sunday is not just for Church and Christians. The relevance and value remains without belief in God. There is a massive amount to say about the leadership of people, the management of performance and the very nature of organisations. In the last 7 years, at work and in study, it's remarkable how much of what has been offered as good practice has characteristics or motivation that resonates with my theology.
The first page of text ends with this paragraph, it's good stuff for everyone faith loaded or not:
when there is a thriving sense of community, there is a healthy degree of communication and an increase in communication leads to more collaboration. This type of environment is conducive to developing innovation, creative ideas and productivity
Take a look, have a think and let me know if you think I'm talking absolute rubbish :)
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