Back in 2006 he wrote a blog post highlighting the way that influence in modern society is moving from 'centroids' to 'edglings'. You might like to consider which term best describes you.
What he wrote about industry, government, and society is equally true for the church. It's uncanny. We think 'house church' is unrelated to developments in society generally, but it's just part of a much wider trend. House church folks are 'edglings' par excellence.
Stowe Boyd - Stowe is what Wolfgang Simson would rightly call a prophet. He may or may not be a believer, but he is a man who sees core issues. He recognises the difference between the day-to-day view of the majority and unborn megatrends that are bubbling beneath the surface. He knows they will burst out soon and surprise everybody. How does a prophet know these things? Prophets don't know in some mysterious way, they are sensitive to tiny vibrations that others miss, subtleties of heart, mind, spirit. When they speak of these things they often go unheard, they are commonly rejected as fools, interfering busybodies, or enemies of the state.
Here are some quotes from Stowe's 2006 post, see how they mesh with the recent growth of house churches worldwide.
Personally, I favor the term Edgling because I want to move away from media metaphors, and use economic or sociological ones. This is not about who is "producing content" and who is "consuming" it: which is the basic paradigm of media thinking. Instead, it is about control moving from the central, large, mass-market organizations -- which includes media companies, but also other large organizations, like government, religious organizations, and so on -- out to the individuals -- we, the people -- at the edge.
As power moves from the center to the edge the "Centroids" -- those that hold with the centralized power of an industrial era -- will scream about all the negatives that they perceive in the out-of-control future that threatens the basis of their worldview. But the Edglings will find it liberating to get out of the stranglehold on information, communication, and the marketplace that centralized organizations attempt to impose.
Centroid or edgling? - Does that ring any bells? Take a look at Stowe's list of characteristics...
Centroids | Edglings | |
Work and Politics | Top-down, authoritarian | Bottom-up, egalitarian |
Point-of-View | Objective, Impartial | Subjective, Partial |
Belonging | Hierarchies | Networks |
Family | Nuclear | Post-nuclear networks |
Political scope | Nationalism | Regionalism |
Media | Mainstream | Participative |
Culture | Monocultural | Multicultural |
Environment | Exploitative, Unsustainable | Restorative, Sustainable |
Spirituality | Centralized, Dogmatic, Outside of Nature | Decentralized, Enigmatic, Nature based |
George Barna - You might like to compare this with George Barna's comments in his book 'Revolution'. Here's an extract from p 13-14...
I want to show you what our research has uncovered regarding a growing sub-nation of people, already well over 20 million strong, who are what we call Revolutionaries ... They have no use for churches that play religious games ... worship services that drone on without the presence of God ... ministries that compromise ... people in ministry ... who seek popularity ... man-made monuments ... accredited degrees.
There's a fresh wind blowing through the church as also through society. People sense that it's time to move on, to change the rules, to move from organisations with centralised authority to organic groups at the periphery, where the edglings are living and meeting in a fresh, new way.
It's no longer about organisations, it's about an organism that is alive and can reproduce in a natural way.