I attended and spoke at the Symposium on Worship and The Arts this week and had a good time. I actually had a bit of an inspiration for my next project. My book is sort-of done. I met with an editor from a publishing house to be named later and he sent my book out for reviews. What happens next depends on the reviews but he's "hopeful." So I now have to do one of my non-favorite things: wait.
So, what's next? I'm thinking that this whole inter-generational worship thing that I've been working on needs some juice. I've been talking about this a lot and giving general type suggestions when I speak to church groups and at conferences but I'm thinking that I need to perhaps spend some time making resources that churches can use. Stuff that allows them to actually try a few specific things that will get them on their way.
What do you think?
Spectacle and Spectacularization
9 years ago
1 comment:
I think the first step to being intergenerational is to stop thinking "us" and "them". I told you how annoyed I get when baby boomers speak with distain about post-modern youth. So, though generalizations are helpful, don't let them become stereotypes.
So I think there is a need for better understanding of what it means to be intergenerational.
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