CurtHarlow.com

March 2, 2010

Cubism and Community

descending staircase cubismI can’t remember the name of the class now – something like “Art And Our World 399.” I do remember the fighting.  It was 3 a.m. ish when it boiled over. Everyone was greasy, dog-tired, over-caffeinated and about to get an F on the biggest project of our academic lives.

The three grad students and two undergrads I was cloistered with in this last minute project prep session didn’t get along from the start. On the eve of the due date our normal dysfunction escalated into open warfare. Two were yelling, one was crying and one paced while I sat in a trance, wondering if the grade I was about to receive would lead directly to life in a van, under a bridge, down by the river.

In the midst of this GPA death roll a strange brain burp bubbled to the top of my head. I realized that our problem wasn’t about dissecting Cubism at all, but about negotiating community.

Community is fundamental to me. Even today our campus ministry is still heavily influenced by that Jesus people, petuly oil soaked, 1970s community centric mode of being. When I got involved in the 1980s we were far from perfect (our diversity at that time went from white to see-through) but one thing was for sure, we practiced community with a passion.

It was this community mindedness that helped me. Once I stopped looking at the art project issues and started looking at the community dynamic issues, I knew exactly what to do to get our grade back on track.

Talk-ability Mode

The guy who taught me the most about community was a giant former navy seaman turned campus missionary named Ron. He had one of those old school mustaches that made him look like a giant Holy Ghost walrus, and his gentle nature made him great at starting lengthy discussions, soliciting vulnerable admissions and even facilitating loving confrontation.

With impeccable hermeneutics and serious personal humility, he spent his days buying us Cokes, asking questions and letting us talk. So powerful were his dialogue inducing skills that our small group bonded on a level I have never experienced before or since.

The in-depth relationship of that time seems to be lost today. Too often the financial pressures and hectic academic loads of competitive programs make real vulnerability seem impossible. I frequently meet graduate students who have impressive resumes but no actual friends – some even mistaking professional networking for real community.

Finding the time to talk before task is essential. Yes, it can be time consuming, but the value of immersing oneself in that Eph. 4 “speak the truth in love” community is often the best way to see trust and real character transformation develop.

Our group project was typical of this lack of bonding talk. We had failed to actually process relationship before tackling our task, and the end result was an inability to work together on even the simplest of goals.

Humor Hangovers

Just last year, after three days of hard work together, a group of campus ministry leaders and I went to a Eugene bistro (where the whole wheat organic humus is 30% more organic then normal humus) for a post-project debrief. Our conversation turned to “the worst church skit you have ever led.” As the tales of bad acting and even worse dancing piled high (think early-round American Idol meets Carman), my ahi tuna threatened to repeatedly shoot out of my nose. The next day my spirit was full but my muscles were actually sore from the laughing.

This was not the first time I’ve had a humor hangover. I have observed over and over again that healthy communities laugh a lot – especially at themselves. I can’t tell you how many pizza-soaked nights I spent in hilarity during those first days on campus. And some of the funniest moments came in the midst of our most trying times. In a world of perpetual deadlines, program expectations, problematic dates and an abundance of pain, the joy of the Lord must be our strength (Neh. 8:10 NIV). Simply put, one either chooses to laugh or go insane.

This does not mean we are ignorant of social injustices or that we target the weak with cruel satire. It does mean that we are humble enough to see our own faults as comedy gold. It also means that we see our place in God’s kingdom with a laughter-tinged realistic perspective. Laughter is the evidence of a Biblical humility that trusts God’s sovereignty over our importance.

Typical of art students (and Christians I might add,) we were taking our project and ourselves too seriously. The end result was a lot of preaching at each other and not much progress.

Cash and Carry

In those early days I was basically a part of a functioning communist kibbutz. We shared everything. Money, cars, pizza, laundry duty, etc.  No one demanded that we live collectively. We did it to survive (we were poor) and we did it because of our belief in the power of community.

We were taught that the mission of man was reconciliation – first with God and then with each other. Late into the night we dialogued about every implication of the Greek pronoun allelous. Love one another, carry one another’s burdens, and forgive one another were our topics de jour.

God was the “with” God – triune and Immanuel. He was the relational instigator with Abram, Moses, David, the disciples and all of mankind. The ultimate means by which he demonstrated His “with” nature was the cross.  It was clear to us – real communities instigated relationship and made sacrifices for each other.

The real problem in my little art group was simple selfishness.  If we couldn’t find a way to sacrifice for one another, we were not gong to be able to work together.

The first step was getting us to talk.  Out of desperation they agreed to my suggestion that we sit in a circle and follow some small group 101 ground rules. No one interrupts. All eyes on whoever has the floor. Ask questions instead of making criticisms. I made them chitchat about their lives and just as the conversation started to ease, I asked each one to admit to one area in which they had personally failed the group.  I took the first turn at confessing and as I mocked myself for an unmet deadline, they laughed. Right then, I knew I had ‘em.

As we continued our conversation, the fun and the sense of mutual deference began to grow. By 6:00 a.m. we were finished with the project and all fear of living in vans under bridges had left the room. As we packed to leave someone asked me if I had taken a masters course in group dynamics. “Nope,” I told ‘em. “Just four years living out community in small group Bible studies.”

July 3, 2009

Trends, Changers and Churches

wesleypreachingCharles Wesley was a 20-year-old college student when the Methodist revival began. Pioneering missionary Hudson Taylor was 21 when he climbed aboard a boat for China. Conversely, the father of all anti-supernatural philosophers, David Hume, embraced his convictions at age 18 and Joseph Stalin left seminary and dedicated his life to the communist cause at age 21.

This historic trend of college students changing the world is even more relevant today. Researchers Neil Howe and William Strauss believe that today’s collegians will “emerge as the next great generation” in American history. It is not hard to see their influence in our world already. Yahoo, Google and Facebook were all founded by students under the age of 22 and many demographic experts site their giving and voting in record numbers as the most important development our last election cycle. Clearly they are a powerful group.

While this generation changes our world, the church struggles to keep their attention. According to Barna a majority of twenty-somethings who grew up in church – 61% of today’s young adults- are spiritually disengaged by age 29. Research by the Southern Baptist convention, UCLA’s institute of Higher Education and others find similar results (http://www.gallup.com/poll/6124/Religiosity-Cycle.aspx, http://fulleryouthinstitute.org/college-transition/, http://www.lifeway.com/lwc/article_main_page/0,1703,A=165949&M=200906,00.html).

Why are we failing to reach these future leaders? One reason is that when they literally scatter after high school to new jobs and news schools the church is literally not going after them.

The best example of this is community colleges. The vast majority of these two year schools receive little or no specific ministry attention from either para-church organizations or denominations. California for instance, has 3.5 million college students, two-thirds of these (2.5 million) attend these highly unreached campuses and yet they are the last place you will find ministry investment.

The two years school environment is where almost all of our students are forming their world view and yet we are no where to be found. The saddest part is that most of these schools are literally just down the street from a church.

If we want to grow churches in the next decade ministries like Chi Alpha must do a better job of working with local churches to mobilize believers on every campus, especially the two years schools.

How? Six years ago I started to take a closer look at what student friendly churches and effective Chi Alpha groups were doing to plant new ministry on commuter campuses. Here are some of the ideas I’ve gathered.

1.    Pray on campus. Strong outreaches almost always start with a small group committed to prayer on campus. Each campus and each church near that campus is different. By spending time listening to God customized plans emerge. Also, busy students need a supernatural touch to become engaged and prayer is the key to making that happen. Is there anyone in your church willing to spend an hour a week on campus asking, “Lord what do you want to do here?” If so, you can start a campus ministry.

2.    Meet and Greet. To start a strong outreach to the campus a church must facilitate
relational connections. Because of their highly volatile jobs and frantic study schedule, college students are more scattered and unconnected than any other demographic. By sponsoring events that are highly relational on or near the places where students live (apartment buildings near campus for instance) churches can facilitate greater connectivity. Is there anyone in your church effective at helping college students build relationships with each other? If so you can start a campus ministry.

3.    Adopt a Leader. Chi Alpha has had great success ministering to international students by recruiting church families to host students in their homes. This approach also works for commuter students. By hosting students for a meal or free use of the washer and dryer, church members gain a greater burden for this generation. When students are well hosted they in turn become committed to the vision and values of the local church. In this way the church effectively recruits new twenty-something leaders. Do you have four or five couples willing to cook for a college student or two? If so you can start a campus ministry.

This is just a sample of the practical ideas available. Our booklet Connecting can help any church start a Chi Alpha ministry. Start here: http://www.chialpha.com/leaders/start-new-group/.

If we are serious about reaching our world we must reach these strategic souls. If we do, more leaders like Wesley and Taylor will send shock waves of revival through the church. If we do not, more leaders like Hume and Stalin will use their political and intellectual skills to convince a generation that God is dead?

May 6, 2009

The Garden of Eden

cal-poly-worship-bandSanta Barbra is where the Garden of Eden must have been. If you have not been, I highly suggest you go. I spent three days in April working with our Chi Alpha leaders at UCSB and the entire time I was there I kept asking God, “Tell me again why you don’t want West Coast Chi Alpha headquartered here?”

It is not an exaggeration to say that the size, power and academic influence of the ten University of California schools represent the most powerful educational institution on the planet. We are currently on 7 of the 10 and UCSB is our oldest Chi Alpha chapter in the group. There are some amazing faithful leaders there and I believe we are about to see our best days ever on this campus. Pray for our UCSB ministry and for us to get on the last three UC campuses.

From Santa Barbara I headed into LA to spend 40 activity filled hours on site at Cal Poly Pomona. Lindsay Fudenna our amazing planter is one of my true campus ministry heros. In the last three years she has done the impossible. On a major commuter campus, in a major urban area, with little funding and lots of obstacles she has forged a healthy Chi Alpha group from scratch. Amazing. She is a Commuter Campus Whisperer.

One of her partners in the Chi Alpha-gineeering is the young adult/worship leader at Covina First, Jarrett LeMaster. Jarrett is a creative funnel cloud of music, ministry and fun. He is a part time voice over artist, song writer, producer and comedian and a full time worship pastor, young adult clairvoyant, father and husband. Oh and Jarrett does the best impression of Christopher Walkin reciting the Beatitudes of any human alive. His equally talented spouse Christina and very cute son (6 mo. old) Liam are also two of my favorite humans.

April 22, 2009

Jarrett LeMaster – The Picard of Next Generation Spiritual Leadership

jarretlemasterLet’s just all agree that Santa Barbra is where the Garden of Eden must have been. I spent the weekend there working with our Chi Alpha leaders to do a comedy night outreach and look at our long term strategy at UCSB. Very fun.

From Santa Barbra I spent a hurried 40 some hours on site in Covina CA with our Chi Alpha leaders at Cal Poly P. Lindsay Fudenna leads our group there and is amazing. Basically, she has done the impossible. On a major commuter campus, in a major urban area with little funding and lots of obstacles she has forged an amazing Chi Alpha group from scratch. An all this working with mostly engineering students. Amazing. She is a Commuter Campus Whisperer.

One of her partners in Chi Alpha-gineeering is the young adult/worship leader at Covina First, Jarrett LeMaster. Jarrett is a creative funnel cloud. Part time voice over artist, actor, song writter, producer and comedian. Full time worship pastor and young adult clairvoint. Oh and Jarrett does the best impression of Christopher Walkin reciting the Be Attitudes of any human alive. Put the mix in with the equally talend spouse Christina and cuteness manifest 6 mo. old Liam and you have a power packed leadership family.

Being around these leaders makes my cells divide faster and my hair follicles hang on for one more year. They are life giving in their commitment, skill, spiritual intimacy and humor.

I rarely promote things but to get a just a small taste of the talent at Cal Poly P check out Jarrett’s music here: http://cdbaby.com/cd/jarretlemaster. You’ll notice by the cover art the Jarrett is one of those guys who went bald at age 10. That is why I call him the “Jean Luke Picard of Next Generation Spiritual Leadership.” Enjoy.

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