Community Christian Church

I spent Tuesday morning at Ground Level Cafe in Naperville, a part of CCC. I had some great conversations with Lee Messersmith, their facilities manager, on the role and function of the coffeehouse in a church context, the role of design and branding, and how environment impacts upon experience.

We talked about how people get behind something thats missional – it’s about so much more than the coffee, though great coffee is important. We talked about the concept of the ‘third place’ and what it is in our cultures. We talked about how form follows function, and the need to tell a story visually. We talked about facilitating a worship service in a coffeehouse. We talked about the duality of a coffeehouse and the need for both business and ministry plans.

Lee shared this quote with me, unfortunately I can’t remember which book it is from, but I’ll find out. Think it says it all…

“You are not who you say you are. You are who your community say you are.”

CCC have some excellent stuff going on, including a School for the Arts which caught my attention. I read Dave Ferguson’s (lead pastor) book yesterday while at the airport/on my flight. He has some great thoughts on the need for complete clarity and for simplicity in presenting one idea at a time. I’ll blog some from the book, The Big Idea, tomorrow.

Peterson & Storytelling

Just watched this excellent video of pastor and author Eugene Peterson in conversation with Dean Nelson at the Writers Symposium by the Sea. Peterson is one of my favourite writers, his books are extremely well-written, he goes into a lot of depth while still making it accessible. In this conversation Peterson discusses storytelling predominately, along with translation, imagination, and many other things.

“There are never enough storytellers… I think writing is one of the sacred callings. I wish the church would ordain writers the way they ordain pastors and professors. Give some dignity to this work of the imagination. William Blake always capitalised the word Imagination – for him it was the Holy Spirit…

The imagination is almost, not quite, the same thing as faith. It’s that which connects what we see and what we don’t see, and pulls us through what we see into what we don’t see. Now when that imagination involves trust and participation in the unseen, its faith, but imagination is the training ground for that.”

Watch the video on YouTube here.

HT: Scott

How I Spent My Morning

Reading Dave Ferguson’s book The Big Idea (lead pastor of CCC, where I was yesterday) and drinking a coffee frappuccino in O Hare airport waiting for my flight.

And catching my last glimpse of Chicago for however long – hopefully not that long.