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Catalyst Vanagon

Orange Conference, Day Two

April 30, 2008


New pictures from the second day of Orange 2008 are now up on our Flickr! Page, check them out! It's been a great event and we've had a chance to meet a ton of people from all over the country - the bright yellow van is a great ice breaker! Breakout sessions are in progress and then the final session will begin at 4:15, just wanted to send a quick update...

Your Friendly Catalyst Road Trip Team
(just had a conversation with a new friend from Toronto, could the Catalyst Vanagon make it that far north???)

Homosexual Loved


There has been some interesting news regarding homosexuality this week.

Last week's "Day of Silence" - a day where students protest the lack of acceptance of homosexuals - was met with love from Christian groups this year, rather than boycotts and animosity.

From the Christian Post:
As part of the "Golden Rule Initiative," students passed out cards throughout the day vowing to live in the manner of Christ's teaching to "Do to others as you would have them do to you" in reference to the passage from Scripture. The cards also read, "As a follower of Christ, I believe that all people are created in the image of God and therefore deserve love and respect."
...
"The LGBT community saw something revolutionary – they saw Christians loving them and more than that, they saw the love of Christ. What would happen if next year, hundreds of Christian students walked around with duct tape in silence?" she recalled in her email, a day after the event.

This is very interesting indeed. One of the few examples I've heard of homosexuals feeling loved by Christians. This story comes from The Christian Post, a very conservative and traditional source of Christian news. I hope more of us can make a change from condemning people to loving them. Is this marking a turning point for Christians?

Dear Artists…

April 29, 2008


This is an open invitation to all artists. I would like to personally invite you to join in this collaborative art project for Catalyst, "Artists Together."

In an age that is increasingly creating individualism and an unconscious separation from true community, we are fighting back. This year at Catalyst, we want to bring communities together for bigger ideas than individuals could do on their own. So, we are calling all artists to join in this fresh story of intentional community. We are calling artists from all over the nation to submit their artistic expression of what "together" means to them. Our hope is to create an art installation of the work created as an exhibit at Catalyst in October. As we receive these creations, we will be featuring the pieces online, promoting your work, linking to your website, sharing your stories, and together offering a beautiful example of creating an exhibit together through the Catalyst Blog.

WHAT DOES 'TOGETHER' MEAN? It is difficult to define and laser focus our ideas around what together means this early in the conversation. Between now and the event we will have numerous creative meetings to really define our distinct definition of our theme and how to communicate that at the event. In the mean time, the best we can give you is a manifesto of some thoughts we have in relation to this theme. Hopefully, one of these thought progressions will resonate with your creation.
  1. A leader is dependant on others - people you influence, people who influence with you, and people that create with you. You can't be isolated and expect to succeed; to succeed we need each other.
  2. Catalyst has an uncanny ability to bring leaders together.
  3. There are unfortunate things separating communities of faith today including denomination, ethnicity, gender, and politics ... lets try to limit the things that are not essential and focus on the things that unite us.
  4. Imagine the Church working together to be the church. What could happen?
  5. We are shaped by others around us, and must rely on others to win as a team.
  6. This is the largest gathering in the country of like-minded young leaders.
  7. Being at Catalyst is a great way to catch up with friends from around the nation and world.
  8. Community is found by working together (thanks to Mike Metzger and the Fermi Project interview).
  9. Jesus had 3, and then 12 and then 120 - a social network (thanks to Andy Crouch).
  10. The world has never been so small (globalization), lets think about community from the aspect of our global neighborhood and take advantage of the global community by introducing leaders from around the world.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES We are looking for a wide array of artistic expressions and mediums represented. We do not want to limit the creations in any way, so please create how you see best fit. Please submit a high resolution version of your creation and a picture of the artist to jeff@jeffshinabarger.com by May 9. By submitting your work, you give digital rights to Catalyst for digital distribution, prints, and to exhibit the collection, while giving credit to the artist. Catalyst will not offer any original art pieces for sale unless agreed upon with the artist. By submitting your artwork, Catalyst agrees to promote you and your artwork however they see fit in the months and days ahead and will communicate with the artist as they promote the work. Catalyst may or may not ask to have a video or audio interview with selected artists to promote the work and project.

Thank you for participating in this project with us.
Catalyst Vanagon

Orange Conference, Day One

April 28, 2008


It's late and we have an early morning tomorrow morning. Tonight was the opening session for the 2008 Orange Conference in Duluth, GA... the very same venue where Catalyst will be held in October. Reggie Joiner, the founder of The reThink Group opened the conference highlighting the very purpose of why Orange exists - the simple reality that tomorrow's church will be today's children. Orange focuses on children AND parents:

"Orange is our color because it represents the idea that 'two combined influences will make a greater impact together than just two influences alone.' Red and yellow are fine on their own, but combine them and you get a third, more vibrant option: orange! It's why we want to put children's leaders and student leaders in the same room discussing their strategy for graduating Godly students. It's why we want church leaders to combine their influence with parents. And it's why we want ministries to be both relevant and strategic, to teach truth while offering hands-on experiences, to be more together than we could ever be alone."

We will be at Orange through Wednesday and will post pictures from each day. Take a look! New Flickr! pictures are online now... click on the pictures along the left margin to see more action from Day One at Orange.

Your Friendly Catalyst Road Trip Team

Church: The Diluted Commodity, by Tim Willard


"The company that taught us that coffee is not a commodity has itself become one."
A couple weeks back, Starbucks closed business to "re-educate" their employees on everything Starbucks. The billion-dollar company is all over the world but at the cost of what made them great - excellent coffee, a place to be with others.

This realization was penned last year by founder Howard Shultz: "We have had to make a series of decisions that, in retrospect, have led to the watering down of the Starbucks experience and what some might call the commoditization of our brand."

These are big words with even bigger implications. But the refreshing thing is Shultz and Starbucks are doing something about it. TIME magazine reports some major changes on the near horizon for the mega-brand. Turns out that, for Starbucks, success means remaining true to yourself.

A similar brand shake up is underway with the western church. With their recent book Reveal, Bill Hybels and Willow Creek take a long hard look at their approach to "doing church" and its ripple affect in the greater church culture. It seems that self-evaluation isn't dead.

If you step back and look at the western church it looks like the current bloated version of Starbucks: one on every corner, smells like something it's not suppose to, has countless unrelated trinkets for you buy, and the main product it sells tastes like a tepid instant mix rather than a hot java cup that burns your taste buds and lights your wick.

In can be argued that the church has become more commodity than community, more instant than intimate, and more marketing savvy than Maker savvy.

It's time to shut down business and "re-educate" ourselves as to what made the church great to begin with. Let the discussion begin.


Tim Willard is a consistent contributor to Catalyst Monthly and was the managing editor for the Catalyst GroupZine. Check-out Tim's blog - FlickerNail.com

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