Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Public Dancing



This video shows a coordinated public dance stunt conducted at Belgium's Central Station. Allan Roxburgh gives some background,

"Over a couple of hours, 200 people were given instructions in a simple dance routine, then, let loose in the Antwerp railway station without any warning or preparation for those walking through the station. See what happens to the ordinary people passing by. At first they want to ignore the silliness of a few dancers who start to engage the music; they’re breaking the rules of propriety by dancing in a public place. But as the music continues and more dancers (all kinds - not just the lovely people with great bodies) enter the dance, the crowd changes, the atmosphere becomes different."


I encourage you to read the rest of his reflections on how this video might inspire and inform our practice of leadership in the church. I think the video also carries implications for the church as a whole.

What if we regularly engaged in simple practices that were peculiar? What if people saw what the church was up to, and couldn't walk any further without stopping to take note of what was happening, to reflect, and maybe even participate themselves? What if our actions stirred up unexpected joy in people?

Theologically, this is the basic idea behind the word 'witness.' Our life together, our lived out beliefs, give witness to Christ's Spirit working in us. This is why Paul calls us the "body of Christ." This doesn't mean we just try harder to get along with each other, it means we have to trust that Christ is actually working to join us together for the purpose of showing the world how the reconciliation and redemption of God operates. The question the church seeks to answer is not just, 'How does one find salvation?' but also, 'How does the salvation of God look when it gets worked out in a group of people?' Did you notice all the people in the train station that were starting to participate in the dance? When our faith gets compellingly lived out and embodied in a community, the onlooker/seeker is much more prone to ask 'How do I get in on this?'

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

More on the New Homeless

Here's yet another story on how people are losing their homes; this one from Tuesday's New York/Region section of the NYTimes. If you've been keeping track, New York has lost a huge number of jobs in the last several months, and this (homelessness) looks to be one of the many repercussions. In New York, Summer Brings a Wave of Homeless Families.