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  • The Power of Uniqueness: Why You Can't Be Anything You Want To Be
    The Power of Uniqueness: Why You Can't Be Anything You Want To Be
    by Arthur F Miller, William D Hendricks
« Sermons I wish I'd preached | Main | Charlie Brown Christmas »
Monday
Dec082003

Open Source Article Instructions

You're invited to co-write an article. This is an experiment; I have no way of knowing if it will work or not. But it should be fun. Here are the details:
Go to the EditMe site containing the article. (Bookmark this page!) Register using the menu to the right. Follow the links to the article. To edit the page, use the menu on the right side of the page (Page -> Edit).
Let me know if you have any questions. Don't be shy. Get in there and get involved. If you have a blog, post on this so we can get others involved. A couple of notes: If this article is ever published, or makes any money, proceeds will first pay for the direct costs of the EditMe service, and will then be donated to World Vision Canada. Here's how the article starts, although you can edit anything I've written:
The Death of the Modern Church And Why It's a Good Thing These arenít easy days to be a pastor, or a committed churchgoer. Letís face it. Things arenít going too well. Many of us have sensed a growing and inescapable sense that the modern church ñ the church of programs, buildings, budgets, and meetings ñ is at least losing its effectiveness, and just may be on life support. Things have gotten so bad that itís not entirely surprising to read a Southern Baptist Leader write, ìA growing number of people are leaving the institutional church for a reason. They are not leaving because they have lost faith. They are leaving the church to preserve faithî (Reggie McNeal, The Present Future p.4). The church, or should we say the old way of doing church, is dying. And hereís the thing: thatís not at all bad. The church as it existed didnít deserve to live. Long may something else live in its place. The End of Christendom For a long time, weíve been accustomed to Christendom as the norm. Christendom describes a society in which the Christian faith ìis the dominant religious and cultural forceî (Charles Bayer, A Resurrected Church p. 10). Within Christendom, one can assume that the teachings, values, music, and ethos of the church shape society. The modern church is a product of Christendom, and itís doubtful that it can survive without it. All around us, Christendom is ending...

Reader Comments (4)

I like this idea Darryl and I'll weigh in with a few thoughts as we go! Sounds like a fun experiment. Just registered

December 8, 2003 | Unregistered Commenterhamo

I'll jump in, too. Tied up at the momemt over the whole Bruce Almighty thing, but it should blow over eventually... maybe.

December 8, 2003 | Unregistered CommenterBrian

EditMe seems to be Mac-unfriendly. I'll try a little later from the PC in the cold, cold basement... SMc

December 9, 2003 | Unregistered CommenterSandy McMurray

Good stuff Darryl - I'm sure that the wiki idea is going to take off soon. I'll give some thought to the article. Would it be OK to mention my two wiki projects while I'm here? BlogWiki is a wiki about blogs and blogging. compass is an "open source" Christian encyclopedia. (And, Sandy - they're both mac friendly!)

December 9, 2003 | Unregistered CommenterRichard Hall

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