I don’t know  about you but I love to read. I probably read about 5-6 books a month. In fact  if you see me walking around with headphones in my ear (which admittedly is a  lot of the time) I’m probably listening to a book. (Does that still count as  reading? I like to think so.) If you’re a reader like me then you probably also  have an ever growing stack of books to be read sitting somewhere in your house.  This week I was able to pick up a book from that stack and read it through, and  I found some insights that may be valuable to us as a church. See what you  think.
As many of you  know I like change, probably more than most people. Because of that I’m always  on the lookout for trends and asking myself the question “What’s next?” I’ve  been challenged in many ways because the future has looked somewhat cloudy. In  the past I could go to conferences, hear speakers, listen to the newest music  and put my finger on the “next new thing” that was going to bring effective  change to the church. However, over the last few years the “next new thing” has  gotten seemingly more elusive. In my reading this week I began to get some  clarity on why it has been so difficult to identify the newest trends. I was  reading a book by Mark Oestreicher called Youth Ministry 3.0. In  it he identifies that our culture, especially youth culture, has become more and  more contextualized. What this means is that one thing, one program, one event,  doesn’t work anymore. This is not only true in culture, but I would venture to  guess that even in a church our size that there are multiple contexts and  communities within our small congregation. There is no “next new thing” anymore!  So how do we be relevant and missional? Perhaps some of the answers come in the  idea of community. I know that it is somewhat of a catch phrase, but the more I  look at church and it’s reason for existence (even in multiple cultural  contexts) community seems to rise to the top. Community answers the key question  of the postmodern era “where do I belong and to  whom.”
The following are  some key concepts of what communion is as described in the above mentioned book.  See if you agree, and ask yourself the question as I am: Is the 
"Communion is best  done small
Communion  building takes time and takes patience
Communion is  simple and not flashy
Communion is  fluid
Communion is  present – it demands face time and lives in the here and  now
Communion is  Jesus-y – God is expected to show up"



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