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Minister and Presidents Message
Technology
has broadened our connection as Body of Christ
May,
2001
By
Erwin R. Bode
If
the last 50,000 years of human existence were divided into lifetimes
of approximately 62 years each, there have been about 800 such lifetimes.
Of these 800, 650 were spent in caves.
Only during the last 70 lifetimes has it been possible to communicate
effectively from one lifetime to another, as writing made it possible
to do. Only during the last six lifetimes have we known the printed
word. All we know about the computer has been developed in the 800th
lifetime. And the computer has changed everything about how we communicate
with each other since its arrival on the scene around 1950.
This became a reality for me in a World Future Society meeting I attended
in 1980 in Toronto. Seated in the room were 20 scientists from every
sector of the world. They had never met in person before that moment.
And yet they had been in regular communication with each other via a
computer network for several years. It was an awe inspiring moment for
them, and for me, as well. A new world view had begun. The computer
had revolutionized everything for us with its unprecedented power for
analysis and dissemination of extremely varied kinds of data in unbelievable
quantities at speeds that stagger the mind.
No wonder the Conference has adopted Communications in the 21st Century
as an integral part of our Vision for Renewal and Growth. I like to
say that our task is to discover ways to communicate with each other
as a community of 100,000 persons, the collective membership of our
432 congregations. Prior to our generation we would not have considered
such a goal. In the 21st century we must address it.
With fresh eyes I view Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 18:20 where he says
“where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.”
This teaching has always presupposed that Jesus’ presence is only with
us in community when we are physically together, even if there are only
two or three of us. What do we do when we are computer connected with
tens of thousands in the flash of an instant? It broadens immensely
the possibilities of our being connected as the Body of Christ.
Of our 432 Conference churches 240 have an email address, and 145 have
Web sites. The Northeast Area newsletter went “online” in March. Daily
emails in our conference, association, and local church offices are
growing, and at the same time telephone messages are decreasing. It
has already impacted the way we do committee communications and the
way we prepare for meetings. We email each other down to the last hours
before face-to-face meetings. In the midst of a major communications
revolution, we are heading toward the development of a communication
community eventually connecting our entire 100,000 total membership.
I am not suggesting that this electronic explosion will take the place
of our human interactions. Jesus’ teaching about being in our midst,
even if there are only two or three of us in the room, is central to
us. Our personal relationships are still at the heart of who we are
in the United Church of Christ. People AND computer relationships are
complementary aspects of the same reality. But everything is different
because of the computer. The opportunities for enlarged communication
is exponentially changing us. The ways we communicate with each other
in congregations and associations and Conference are radically different
in the 21st century. And we can’t even imagine how it will be ten years
from now.
If you need assistance in your congregation with computer upgrading
and training or Web site development, please contact Tiffany
Vail of the Conference staff. More than 100 of our churches have
already received financial support through our CONNECT program to secure
new computers, software, modems, and training.