Title: CONSUMERISM
1CONSUMERISM
- CHOICE THE CORE VALUE
- ADDICTIVE - Desire an end in itself.
- AROUSING AND MEETING SHORT TERM NEEDS
- SHOPPING FOR SENSATIONS
2SHOPPING AS A PICTURE OF LIFE
- FOR IDENTITY
- LIFESTYLE CHOICE
- FOR TRUTH - BUY INTO A BELIEF
- PICK AND MIX A WORLDVIEW
3BOTH CONNECTED AND FRAGMENTED
4GLOBALISATION
- THE WORLD SEEMS SMALLER
- WE ARE MORE AWARE OF THE WORLD AS A WHOLE
- GLOBAL PROCESSES MAKE A LOCAL DIFFERENCE
5COMMUNITY SPLITS FROM LOCALITY
- The communities of the Global Age generally have
no local centre. People living in the same street
will have fleeting relationships with each other,
having widely differing lifestyles and household
arrangements, and have common interest only in
the maintenance of certain shared facilities they
take for granted. Martin Albrow
6PLACES ARENT WHAT THEY USED TO BE! - Porous
boundaries
- All boundaries are tenuous, frail and porous.
Geographical discontinuity no longer matters.
Zygmunt Bauman - In any week 25 of families will be visiting
absent parents, often at the weekend.
7SOCIAL CAPITAL HALVES IN FOUR GENERATIONS -
Bowling Alone
- 'Without at first noticing, we have been pulled
apart from one another and from our communities
over the last third of the (20th) century.'
Robert Putnam - 'Members of any given generation are investing as
much time in organizational activity as they ever
were, but each successive generation is investing
less.'
8FAST AND FLUID
9LIQUID MODERNITY
- A flexible identity, a constant readiness to
change and the ability to change at short notice,
and an absence of commitments of the till death
us do part style appear to be the least risky of
conceivable life strategies. Zygmunt Bauman
10THROWAWAY SOCIETY
- A throwaway society meant more than just
throwing away produced goods, but also being able
to throw away values, lifestyles, stable
relationships ... and received ways of doing and
being. David Harvey - Your car has an MOT every year, so why not your
partnership? Hugh Wilson
11SELF CONSTRUCTION
- 'Identities are constructed through consuming.
- We shape our malleable image by what we buy - our
clothing, our kitchens, and our cars tell the
story of who we are (becoming). David Lyon
12VULNERABLE
13POWERFUL BUT VULNERABLE
- FOOT AND MOUTH
- HIV / AIDS
- THE MOOD OF THE MARKET A global casino?
- ASSAULT ON THE TWIN TOWERS
14THE PASTORAL COST OF A WEB WORLD
- THE PRESSURE OF CHOICE
- 'Depression, eating disorders, suicide and
attempted suicide have all become more common. - Young people now the most vulnerable to suicide.
(Putnam) - Constantly having to live in a temporary world.
Richard Scace
15SELF CONTAINED
16CHANGING STORIES
- WE USED TO HAVE A STORY ABOUT MAKING THE WORLD
BETTER. - NOW WE HAVE A STORY ABOUT MAKING OURSELVES UP!
17THE LOSS OF REFERENCE POINTS
- There are few if any reference points left which
could reasonably be hoped to lend a deeper and
longer-lasting significance to the moments we
live. Partnerships, families, skills, places
of work, neighbourhoods, possessions, styles and
habits. Zygmunt Bauman
18I AM THE CENTRE OF THE WORLD
- History shrinks to the (eternal) present, and
everything revolves around the axis of ones
personal ego and personal life. Ulrich Beck
19Culture is now an organised diversity with
little sense of defining centre.Alan Roxburgh
20THE POINT OF BALANCE
- No centre?
- Our society cannot reach its deepest longings by
the road it is traveling. - We know a better way
- Not just a belief
- But a new beginning
- And a new way of living.
21Christian ministry offers an alternative
- Matthew 713-14 Enter through the narrow gate
for the gate is wide and the road is easy that
leads to destruction, and there are many who take
it. For the gate is narrow and the road is hard
that leads to life, and there are few who find it.
22A CHANGING CHURCH
23GOD AND CHURCH IN A NETWORK SOCIETY
24THE DEATH OF CHRISTIAN BRITAIN - Callum Brown
- What is taking place is not merely the continued
decline of organised Christianity, but the death
of the culture which formerly conferred Christian
identity upon the British people as a whole.
25RELIGION AS LEISURE PURSUIT
- Religious activity has become, for an increasing
proportion of the population, a leisure pursuit
one, moreover, which competes for the public's
attention alongside all sorts of other pastimes.
' Grace Davie
26Current (or previous) church attendance or
involvement
Regular attenders at least monthly(10)
Fringe- less than monthly(10)
Non Churched(40)
Open de-churched(20)
Closed de-churched(20)
27OUR PEOPLE?
- The Anglican pattern of ministry, built around
parish and neighbourhood, can lead to a way of
thinking that assumes that all people whether
attending or not attending are basically our
people. All people are Gods people, but it is
an illusion to assume that somehow the population
of England is simply waiting for the right
invitation before they will come back and join
us.
28OUR PEOPLE?
- The social and mission reality is that the
majority of English society is not our people
they havent been in living memory, nor do they
want to be. The reality is that for most people
across England the church as it is peripheral,
obscure, confusing or irrelevant.
29OUR PEOPLE
- The task is to become church for them, among
them and with them, and under the Spirit of God
to lead them to become church in their own
culture.
3060/40
Within our reach as we are
Out of reach
Steven Croft, Fresh Expressions, 2004
31THE CHALLENGE
- Go to mission as well as come to mission
- The change is to an outward focus from a come
to us approach to a we will go to you
attitude, embodying the gospel where people are,
rather than embodying it where we are, and in
ways we prefer.
32the mixed economy
- Celebrating and building on what is
mission-shaped in traditional forms of church
and finding new, flexible, appropriate ways to
proclaim the Gospel afresh to those who do not
relate to traditional ways
33CHANGE OF EMPHASIS
- Unplanned consequences of other pieces of
Christian ministry - Church where people are, not bridges to get
people to church - Often lay led
- Church more deeply related to daily life
- Church when people can attend
34THE POINT OF BALANCE
- To reconnect with the world
- And reconnect the world with the gospel through
mission
35MISSION-SHAPED CHURCH
We believe the Church of England is facing a
great moment of missionary opportunity, and we
recommend our report for the consideration of our
church Bishop Graham Cray, chair of the report
working party
36A CHANGING MINISTRY
37A BIT CROWDED
38NOT A FORTRESS MENTALITY
39A MINISTRY DEFINED BY ITS CENTRE
- Not by its boundaries.
- Not a stepping stone to other ministries
- Nor to be defended from other ministries
- To be enriched by other ministries
- To add something distinctive to other ministries
40Dig wells instead of building fences.
41A MINISTRY DEFINED BY ITS CONTEXT
- Not by its past
- But by its opportunities
- In the hope of the Gospel
42THE CENTRE OF READER MINISTRY
43LOCAL LAY THEOLOGIANS
- Biblically and theologically trained laity
- Licensed ministers and teachers of the Gospel
- Bridging Church and world
44LOCAL LAY THEOLOGIANS
- 'In order to fulfill the vocation of ministry,
the pastor has to be a practical theologian who
is able to discern the meaning of the gospel
within the particular context of his or her
ministry.' John De Gruchy
45THE POINT OF BALANCE
- Identify the worlds need
- Identify the local churchs responsibility
- Place yourself where the two meet
- There lies the heart of Reader ministry
46THE CENTRE OF BALANCE OF READER MINISTRY
- Local lay theologians, bridging church and
world, in a missionary church.
47QUESTIONS FOR GROUPS
- I have proposed that the centre of balance of
Reader ministry should now be as - A local lay theologian, bridging church and
world, in a missionary church. - What do you think of that proposal?
- Where is the centre of balance of your ministry
as a Reader? - What would you like to change?
48WALKING THE TIGHTROPE