Some Thoughts on Community
I’ve learned a
few things about community over the years because on several occasions I’ve
been fortunate enough to be present when it happened. One of the first lessons
I learned is that community is not a commodity that can be fabricated for mass
consumption. Community-in-practice (as opposed to “community-in-theory” or
“community-as-cliché”) is people sharing their lives with each other. It is not
an effortless way of life but I believe it is worth the struggle.
Those who are
drawn into community-in-practice soon learn about interdependence. We are
connected to everyone and everything else. Everything we do has an impact on the
world and people around us. It takes a while for that kind of awareness to take
hold since we are conditioned to think in terms of “me and mine” rather than
“us” (i.e. “we are all in this together”). The rhythm of life experienced in
community requires a different spirit, one of cooperation instead of
competition. The illusion of total self-sufficiency has to be abandoned.
But community-in-practice
is not the fruit of blind optimism. It springs from the practical knowledge
that I can only discover and grow toward my truest self when I am in relationship
with others. Everyone, even those who might appear to be weakest (the “least of
these”), are important because they are a unique expression of the life of God
that help make the community whole. We are not only connected to everyone else,
we also need them.
Of course, if
this way of life is so challenging and difficult why would anyone bother? When
you find yourself in the midst of an emerging community (as I do now) it
becomes clear that it is not simply a desirable goal but a precious gift.
Community is a visible demonstration of God’s presence in the world. It is the
kingdom of God (as Jesus called it) expressed in the language of human
relationships. It is alive and always evolving and cannot be limited to static
organizational structures. It requires a willingness to set aside our long
cherished beliefs about what a community “must” or “should” be to allow room
for growth into what we are being called to “become”.
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