Ebook
Community is a fundamental life search and one of the key
aspects people look for in a congregation. But community can't be
forced, controlled, or easily created. The problem, says Joseph R.
Myers, is that churches are too focused on developing programs
instead of concentrating on environments where community will
spontaneously emerge.
Organic Community challenges key leaders to become
environmentalists--people who create or shape environments.
Outlining nine organizational tools for creating a healthy
environment, Myers shows readers how to diagnose their current
situation and implement patterns that will develop possibilities
for healthy communities.
Shaping environments where community emerges naturally
Can you really create community through master plans and elaborate
strategies? Sometimes, says Joseph Myers--but more often, lasting
authentic connections occur organically within healthy
environments. Organic Community offers you practical guidance for
helping your church or organization create spaces where community
naturally comes into being.
"Once again, Myers hits a home run. Organic Community calls us
all--church and congregants alike--to honesty about our goals and
then offers us sophisticated, efficacious, and grace-filled ways to
realize them."--Phyllis Tickle, contributing editor in religion,
Publishers Weekly
"Looking back on twenty-four years of church planting and pastoral
ministry, I wish I had thoroughly digested Organic Community before
I got started. It would have saved so much wasted energy--mine, and
those whose lives I foolishly tried to 'master plan.' This is a
book I will reread and widely recommend."--Brian McLaren, author,
activist; brianmclaren.net
"If a classic is something that has never finished what it has to
say, then this little gem is a 'classic.'"--Leonard Sweet, E.
Stanley Jones Professor of Evangelism, Drew Theological School;
distinguished visiting professor, George Fox University;
www.wikiletics.com
"Myers acknowledges that his is a different kind of how-to book. As
much, or more, it is a how-not-to book that exposes fallacies
inherent in common organizational policies and procedures, which
are all the more destructive in organizations relying on volunteer
efforts."--Ray Oldenburg, emeritus professor of sociology, the
University of West Florida; author, The Great Good Place
Joseph R. Myers is an entrepreneur, speaker, writer, and owner of
FrontPorch, a consulting firm that helps churches, businesses, and
other organizations promote and develop community. Author of The
Search to Belong, Myers is also a founding partner of the
communication arts group settingPace, based in Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Joseph R. Myers is an entrepreneur, speaker, writer, and owner of FrontPorch, a consulting firm that helps churches, businesses, and other organizations promote and develop community. Author of The Search to Belong, Myers is also a founding partner of the communications arts group settingPace, based in Cincinnati, Ohio.