Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Vantage Point
One of my favorite movies to help us understand InterGenerational strategies is “Vantage Point.” Released in 2006 by Sony Pictures, the movie is based on an incident in Spain and is relived through the eyes of eight strangers who all had perfect views of the assassination.
In each of their views there was part of the truth that was only seen clearly when pieced together with the views of the other seven.
Isn’t that today’s church? We see everything in church from our own vantage point. What we see is often not the entire truth, but a part of the total truth. The actual truth cannot be determined until the view of each person is woven together with the others.
When it comes to the key issues of InterGenerational Ministry, they are often seen from the vantage point of the each person.
We often try to make things far more difficult than they need to be.
We are starting a new year. It is a great time for change and trying something new.
Let me ask you a simple question; where do you generally sit for the weekend worship service at your church? I mean actually sit! Most people go to the same service and sit in the same general area, if not the same exact seats. Seating in many churches is similar to season ticket holders for sports. They choose their seat and then everyone else, including the new folks you might be trying to reach, fills in around them.
One of the easiest things a church family can do to begin to grasp the idea of an InterGenerational church is to attend a different service--if you attend the same service, sit in a different seat. I am not saying one row over--I am saying the other side of the church. If you are a front sitter, move to the back on the other side.
In short, see things from a different vantage point and shake hands with different families.
Churches often plan a large program and invest significant resources to do something that can be as simple as some of us in our 60’s who are thought to be “unmovable” from our sacred seats moving and sitting next to a family in their 30’s. If you really want to be radical, try sitting with the teens or college age.
If you truly want to move towards an intergenerational community, try looking at things in your church from a different vantage point.
If you are willing to do this simple act, drop me a note next week and let me know what you saw from your new vantage point.
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4 comments:
This is great and a very clear simple example of the truth!
Being a church, we do not need to be stocked in one place all the time and seeing one thing or else, we'll be speaking one saying and thinking we have the total fact about the truth.
We might be harming oursleves. But being mingled, looking at the facts from other people, churches, we can collect the whole truth! With that we are bound to progress in our churches, christian lives, etc.
God bless you brother!
This is great and a very clear simple example of the truth!
Being a church, we do not need to be stocked in one place all the time and seeing one thing or else, we'll be speaking one saying and thinking we have the total fact about the truth.
We might be harming oursleves. But being mingled, looking at the facts from other people, churches, we can collect the whole truth! With that we are bound to progress in our churches, christian lives, etc.
God bless you brother!
Interesting and very true. Another funny thing that happens when you move around the church is people think you are sitting in "their" seats. I have gotten some interesting looks when I did this a couple times. Sometimes we forget why we are in church. It is not about us, it is about how we worship Him!
haha! I settled on the place where I sit because of a)difficulty hearing; b)sitting in the back is WAY too distracting with people talking, going to the restroom, etc. Every now & then I sit on the other side of the room "just because" and have gotten feedback that people thought I was not in church that day! :)
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