1. From Mainframe to Network -
Changes in the Church by Terry Somerville
A great
transformation in how we do church is under way. It seems that as
a
culture changes, God leads His people into new wineskins, if they are
willing to go. The church that doesn't have fresh wineskins soon loses
the wine! Todays
generation places high
value on relationship and personal empowerment. The saints are
looking for the ministry God has for them, and the centralized
structure of the local church has not served this well. In fact, God
means for every believer to be a minister and so He is moving
ministry into the hands of every believer.
A good way
to understand the transition is to think of moving from a "Mainframe
Computer" to a Computer Network". I remember seeing the mainframe
computer at the University of Western Ontario when I was about ten. It
occupied a room as large as a house. It was very large, very expensive,
climate controlled, specialized, high maintenance, and compared to
todays PC's , very slow. The focus was on a few programs run by
qualified operators in a safe controlled atmosphere. Sound
familiar? Bill gates was the radical thinker who began the PC
revolution.
Today we are seeing a revolution in church wineskins not unlike the PC
revolution.
The
"Mainframe Compter" model of Church. 
The form of tradition church is like a mainframe computer.
Features - Large, expensive,
operated by a few experts, focusing on a few tasks at a time, operates in
one place in a highly controlled
environment.
Involvement - A few users
(member) can have a dumb terminal (ministry), if one is
available. They can only operate the program selected
by the experts with supervision, after training .
Focus - all focus is toward
the mainframe. (church organization) It exists behind four walls.
If it grows larger more terminals will be added, but theres never
enough for everyone. Applications tend to be specialized and not
for the real world. The greatest vision of involvement is to be a
programmer.
The
"Computer Network" model of Church
The
emerging church is like a network of PC's.
Features - Small,
affordable, operated by anyone, flexible, mobile, and operates in any
environment. Based in connections not a single organization.
Involvement - Each person has a
fully operational computer (ministry), with software that fits
the personal situation (an anointing from the Holy Spirit). Freedom not control! Each one
is connected to many others in a network of relationships that
help each other.
Focus - Mainframes
are still there, but not in control. The focus is
on the application operated by each one, not a central computer. Each
computer (ministry) is significant and impacts
the sphere each person is in (the world) and the network. (Body of
Christ).
This
emerging "Network Church" (some call it a Third Day Church) is not
based on an organization, but organized connections. Each
"PC" could be an individual, a home church, itinerants, a
marketplace minister running his business, a conventional church. It's
a network of any believer or group walking in Jesus calling. The
body actively interconnects because there is life! There is
relationship, support, team ministry, leadership, and larger worship
gatherings.
Over the next
few years the face of the church will change dramatically. While this
illustration cannot completely illustrate the changes taking place, I
hope it has been helpful.
Terry Somerville www.totalchange.org