Monday, January 21, 2008

tensive visionaries or stenic managers?

The following is a piece I recently posted on the listserv localucctransformation:

Jesus didn't spin data. He didn't instruct in theology. He was of the highest intellect, but he connected with people on a vision of the kingdom of heaven. He enabled them to see what their intellect on its own could not see (in fact may have more so contradicted) , that the kingdom of God was at hand.

I find intellectual liberals and fundamentalists approach scripture less by faith and more by literalism. The fundamentalists say it is all literal (or close to that), intellectual liberals often reject those portions of scripture they can't "believe" in.

Walt Brueggemann many years ago taught me on the Psalms and introduced me to the difference between tensive and stenic. Stenic comes from the similar root as stenographer. They copy down exactly what they are told. Tensive comes from a similar root of tension...that is which changing, fluid, moving. Walt said (this was in 1978) that we live in a stenic world and especially in regards to the Psalms, it is a tensive piece.

We are taught much more in seminary to be stenic. We are not led to as much to be visioning, tensive leaders. But the scriptures and the journey of the church is much more tensive. Dynamic. Alive.

This is where I learned a lot from both Anne Wilson Schaef and Ed Friedman about how much our culture and we as individuals are addicted to specificity rather than casting a vision. What was ML King? A tensive visionary. Unfortunately, many of us in his same profession are stenic managers.

I think we all have the capacity to share a piece of the vision. But the organizations/ institutions are not into vision. Not even those who think that they are prophetic liberals. The issue is not intellect but passion and vision. Is the kingdom of God truly at hand? You can never prove it by historical/scientif ic method. But King convinced a significant number of us in a window of time, that it was.

That's your role as a leader for your church. Not as much a manager/chaplain, but a visionary leader of the kingdom which is at hand...and is yet to come.

(David Loar, Fairlawn West United Church of Christ - UCC, Akron, OH)

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