1
November

Voxtropolis World Map

Welcome back. You belong here.

Who will be finding their voices at voxtropolis.com? Check it out…

Voxtropolis World Map

Hats off and many thanks to Steve Watson , aka “breathe fire”, for yet another brilliant stroke.

The [soon to be launched] blog community known as Voxtropolis.com is one aspect of a multidimensional collaboration to reclaim western culture for Christ. Other complementary aspects are the elusive tribe known as The Mystic, the soon to manifest Voxtropolis cafes and the Culture Pubs. There’s more…

into the mystic…

Alex McManus

4 comments

31
October

Homo Electronicus Migratus

Welcome back.

Friend and fellow conspirator, Dean Sharp, mentioned this article of mine on his blog. If you didn’t read Homo Electronicus Migratus on my website or through my newsletter, you should read it here today. The discussion that follows should be of special interest to those in Search of The Mystic.

Enjoy.

Homo Electronicus Migratus

“You’re going to the United States to live with your mother,” his grandmother told him. She struggled to lift and carry him towards the car.

Instinctively, the boy leaned over, grabbed and squeezed with all of his might the wrought iron fence that protected the windows of their home.

She pulled on his legs gently. “You’ll be happy there.”

He pulled himself towards the fence. “I’m happy here.”

The boy’s grandfather walked past with the luggage and placed it into the trunk and turned back to help his wife loosen the boy’s grip on the fence. Eventually, the will of a defiant six year old submitted to the power of the way things had to be.

Hard to believe after so many years… I thought as the 767 turned to face the California coast, raced down the runway, and took off over the Pacific. Thirty-four years have passed since that day, and thirty since I last set foot there.

A lot can change in three decades.

My name had been changed from the Spanish name of my birth to an Irish name. My primary language had changed from Spanish to English. I was no longer a young boy, but a father. Indeed, the path I resisted as a young boy had turned out to be a blessed path.

But the change I had experienced was little compared to the dramatic changes happening around me. In the course of those thirty years, the whole world had been in the matrix of rapid change. A breakthrough in science in the morning, an advance in technology later in the day, and the whole world is new again.

Do you remember life before email?
It seems so long ago. It was.

The speed of change to which we’ve become accustomed is such that even the recent past is the distant past. At the end of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first, three hundred years pass in thirty.

I believe it was Peter Drucker [Post Capitalist Society] who pointed out that most historical epochs have been characterized by a rate of change that came on a snail’s back, in which grandfather and father passed on to their sons and grandsons a trade, or a skill, which would serve the next generation as it had theirs. In contrast, we live in a world in which grandsons teach their fathers and grandfathers how to program their VCRs.

Contrary to the ancient pattern, in the 21st century time flows backwards, and the younger generation is mentor in certain arenas to the older.

Three decades of chronological time had passed since I left the land of my birth, and three hundred in evolutionary time. In the course of the three decades since I had visited El Salvador, the world had changed from an earth-bound, industrial world that was migrating at amazing rates from the farm and country towards the city to a space-trekking, bio-electronic world that is migrating from terra firma towards cyber space at warp speed.

Earth had become a memory.

This movement may be more akin to an evolution of the human race than to a migration. Is mankind in a transitional phase of evolution from Homo Sapiens Sapiens to some as yet unnamed new species of man? If so, we are Homo Electronicus Migratus, an intermediate humanoid between the species we were and that which we are becoming. The famous Captain Kirk of the Starship Enterprise once said to a twentieth century earthling who mistakenly thought Kirk was from outer space, “I’m from Iowa. I just work in outer space.” In the same way, many among us are from the future, we just live and work in the present. And in the future, man has evolved from earthling to cyberling.

The former generations were married to the earth. Even in their migrations, those generations were grounded. They knew from where they came and often to where they were going. They had roots and found their identity in the land and in its names. They were generations that could point to a peak of mountains, or a cove, or a valley, and call it home.

The generation of the twenty first century is married to the wind. Even should they stay at one fixed locale, which many do not, the world changes beneath their feet. Movement is constant. This world of changing landscapes has evoked from deep within their hearts a primal longing for place to belong, a hunger for community.

This is a common experience for immigrants.

Predictably, scores of Electronicus Migratus are looking through the hardware of their computer screens in search of the community that as Homo Sapiens they could not find in their workplaces and neighborhoods. In this age of migration into a cyberspace Eden, which promises electronic connectedness, human connectedness continues to be an elusive treasure.

I unbuckled my seat belt when we arrived at our gate at San Salvador International Airport. The future needs a past, I thought, as prophecy needs memory and vision purpose. Later that same afternoon we sat together on the small front porch on which I played as a small boy. My children sat on one side and their great grandparents on another, wind and earth.

I translated as they talked about time, about places, about people. We talked. No modems. No email. This was a face-to-face encounter between Sapiens and Electronicus, and it touched something deep, something ancient. I felt myself reach for the wrought iron fence of the past and I heard a primal scream: Is earth not home? At the same time, I heard the wind passing and saying, time for defiant wills to submit to the power of the way things have to be.

And so, on the same porch of three decades past, I let go of the fence again, knowing that the world into which my children travel is new, but the path is blessed. Fear not, my son. Sail the winds, daughter. And to whatever world this path takes you, make it human.

Alex McManus © 1999
Slightly modifed from my article, Homo Electronicus Migratus , published June 7, 2005 in the newsletter of the International Mentoring Network. Originally written 1999.

What do you think?

into the mystic…

Alex McManus

12 comments

20
October

“Where will the new wave of global brands come from?”


Welcome back.

“Where will the new wave of global brands come from?” Not the USA, according to an article from www.marketingweb.co.za. “Apparently, America and its brands are no longer seen as ‘cool’ and desirable.”

The source for this fact?

A Seattle-based polling group that “found that 20% of Europeans and Canadians in the sample said their anger over US foreign policy deterred them from buying American products.”

Not much of a surprise there.

I grew up in the two thirds world and am an immigrant to the USA so I don’t have the anti-American bias that seems to mark a percentage of native born citizens…and about 20% of Canadians and Europeans. And, if you read the article, you’ll notice the disclaimer that when it comes to American appeal globally, nothing has changed. At least, not yet. The magazine may, in fact, be reporting on what it hopes will happen rather than on what is actually happening.

Nevertheless, there is truth here we should recognize. No doubt that American products are desired around the world. Nothing wrong with that.

But there is a growing awareness that we live on a small and diverse planet. Sophistication in our small world is becoming synonomous with enjoying a global feel enough to pour into one’s cup african coffees, thai iced tea, brazilian Guarana, or Boba.

Certainly even American companies, with all their marketing savvy, will soon begin to present a non-western feel [or even source of origins] to some of their products, if they aren’t already.

This is a good thing.

Babylon undone.

A secular pentecost.

This shift is an opportunity for Christ following leaders. Here are some things to remember for Christ following leaders located in the west:

  • The gospel was born in the east, not the west, and belongs not only to America but to the whole world.
  • Christ is a nonwestern savior.
  • We should be at least as in touch with the non-western origins of the Christ following movement as we are aware of our western context for mission.
  • We must be as alert to the emerging globally diverse western context of our mission.
  • We can engage emerging world cultures with our double identity: universal/global AND ALSO particular/local.

If “made in America” becomes less attractive, where will the new global brands come from? Nike and Coke must answer this question. The Christ following movement has since conception been global. Let’s let this dormant aspect awake in our midst.

What do you think?

into the mystic…

Alex McManus

23 comments

16
October

Is Blogging a Revolution?

Welcome back.

One hundred thousand blogs are added to the blogosphere per day, according to the home page of the “blogon 2005 Social Media Summit.”

Yahoo Inc. announced on Monday, the 10th of October, that “it will begin featuring the work of self published bloggers side by side with the work of professional journalists, leveling the distinction between the two.”

Blogging is beginning to enter the consciousness of mainstream America, but can we be so enthused as to call blogging a revolution? Probably not. While Blogging is not a revolution, it is becoming another tool, a means, towards a greater end — human connection and conversation on a global scale.

For me, this kind of connectivity and conversation provides another place for telling the greatest of all human stories: how and where the story of Jesus intersects with the story of us. Moreover, the blogosphere also provides an unprecedented opportunity for discovering, developing and deploying leaders to “post threads” [i.e. code for "planting churches"] throughout the western world and beyond.

While blogging is not the revolution — Jesus is the revolution — blogs can certainly be use by revolutionaries compelled to advance the kingdom. In the same way, though not everyone will blog, blogging is an emerging 21st century tool with potential we musn’t ignore.

What do you think?

into the mystic…

Alex McManus

23 comments

13
October

Fads are so yesterday

Welcome back.

Make it Sizzle: Fads, trends and other really important things you gotta know to make it.

What’s cool? What’s hot? What are the trends that matter?

I locked my car in the parking lot of Asuza Pacific University and hurried for the chapel where I was the scheduled speaker. Even though I was in a hurry, I had to stop and watch a really interesting thing: A young man in a nice suit and tie skateboarding to class.

Elegant yet youthful, I thought.

Last week I was in one of the two centers of the universe, Manhattan. It seemed that every eighteen year old male walking the street sported a baseball cap slighted tilted up and pointed to the side.

After about the hundredth male sporting this look walked by, cool began to look uniform and a bit ridiculous.

Today, producer and songwriter, Fau, stopped by our house. He got up to leave after a short visit.

“Well gotta go back to the hood,” he said.

“Interesting, isn’t it?” I said. “Today, the burbs are the new ghettos”.

“In the 80′s everybody was moving to Moreno valley. The ‘burbs’”. Gettin’ out of the city. It was nice. Quiet.” He said. “Now all you see is boys walkin’ ’round with pants dragging on the floor.”

The hood used to be here closer to the cities. Now it’s out there in the ‘burbs’. So what’s hot? What’s cool? Who’s moving where? Who’s doing what? And what are the trends that matter?

Tracking trends was, it seems, just a trend according to an LA Times piece, Fads are so yesterday – Los Angeles Times, and is so out of style.

Change happens so rapidly that fads don’t matter for long. Maybe Marketing, rather appealing to what we like, is designed more than ever to create our appetite for consumer goods. More interestingly, the article suggests that “culture” and “consumerism” are intimately dovetailed in our connected age. The moment we do simplify our lifes, or add an interest, someone out there is marketing products to help us in our new lifestyle choices and cash in.

Christ following leaders do well to stay on top of pop culture. We need to know our audience. But we do better when we stop only asking:

  • what are the trends?
  • What are people doing?

And start also asking…given our context and most importantly in light of the life of Jesus

  • what should be a trend?
  • What could people be doing?

Market that. Make it sizzle. Trendy or not, what we could be doing to live and walk in the way of Jesus will always be hot… or cool.

What do you think?

Into the Mystic…

Alex McManus

13 comments

27
September

American Policy and Hurricane Katrina

Welcome back.

Is Hurricane Katrina God’s punishment on the USA?

I suggest that Katrina and Rita are not God’s punishment but in fact what we call “hurricane season” and that what some believe to be “God punishing America” is in fact, well, weather.

What do you think?

Into the Mystic…

Alex McManus

22 comments

15
September

An Unreached People in North America

Welcome back.

105 Minutes by air from Detroit.
Six hours by car from New York.

Perched on an island in the Hochelaga Archipelago where the Ottowa flows into the St. Lawrence, stands one of North America’s oldest cities.

Montreal.
Home of great jazz.
City of amazing cuisine.
Land of beautiful summer days.
And centre for the largest unreached people group in North America.

Yes, an unreached people group in North America.

Established in 1642 by the French, this city that bustles with jazz, cuisine and culture remains practically silent when it comes to the gospel. Less than half of one percent of French Canadians tend towards Jesus, the hope of the world.

Less than half of one percent. Out of two hundred — one person follows Christ.

Steve Norman and Beau McCarthy of Genesis the Church in Detroit and I met with Montreal Pastor, Lorenzo DellaForesta of River’s Edge Community Church, and spent an afternoon and evening discovering the city.

Lorenzo, who is most definitely not among the silent, knows what it is to start a church in the midst of an unreached people and see God work. More of his story later.

Shock.

That’s what I felt as the realization grew that there is within easy reach of the US a significant city (3 million when the universities are in session) with an unreached people group. This throws into a new light our conversation about the mission to reclaim our post Christian western culture.

Exhiliration.

Some of you know that I’ve been seeking to identify key cities in which to locate the International Mentoring Network. [I started the IMN earlier this year].

  • The Detroit area with Steve Norman and Mike Harris is at the top of the list.
  • The German speaking part of the world [ with my friends Marcus Wagner in Munich; Adaumir Nascente and team in Dusseldorf; and Derek Webster in Zurich ] is also at the top.
  • Miami, Orlando, Atlanta, Boston, New York, London and Barcelona all seem to loiter in the top twelve list.

Now that I’ve been to Montreal, I think it may be time to team up with my Canadian friends and lend them a hand in the exciting task of reclaiming an unreached city for Christ. What better context could exist for training future leaders?

What do you think?

into the mystic…

Alex McManus

27 comments

4
September

Homeless in America (6.28)

Here’s part 1 of a conversation with Dean and Christina Sharp on their experience working with the homeless. These two are not among those who just talk about it, they’ve done it.

Listen to it : Dean and Christina Sharp (6 minutes 28 seconds)

5 comments

2
September

Hurricane Katrina

Welcome back.

Thanks Anne for alerting us to how your church is mobilizing relief for the city of New Orleans. Check out the letter from the pastor of her church ( Anne’s church) to get an idea of what they’re doing.

A couple of my friends, Tim and Stacey Bagwell, emailed me to let me know that they’re giving a portion of the revenue from their church marketing and web design business ( Dream churches) towards New Orleans relief between now and the end of the year. Niza walked into my office and told me we’re giving a portion of our CD sales ( doSul ) to the effort.

For fellow journalists (bloggers) on the ground check out

Both of these guys are students at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. I’m an alumni. Amy made an inspirational post on Niza’s blog about the opportunity that awaits the city in the wake of the storm.

Seize the moment.

Into the Mystic…

Alex McManus

11 comments

24
August

Following Christ or Culture? (4)

Welcome back.

Two items today.

1] “Is creating wealth a Christ following value?” With regards to my post of August 16 …

Interestingly, although there were a healthy number of comments and contributions, there were very few real practical applications.

But here’s the rub: Why did no one mention “giving to the local church” as something practical we can do?

What do you think?

2] Why do we buy things we don’t need?

According to an article in Mission Frontiers by Bob Putman, who is citing from “Why People Buy Things They don’t Need,” by Pamela N. Danzinger, we “fork over 30 percent of our income for stuff we don’t need.”

Danzinger lists 14 ways we justify our unnecessary spending. Marketers tap into these 14 “justifiers” and sales skyrocket. So I’m looking around and asking myself: Thirty percent? Why do I buy stuff I don’t need?

What do you think?

Into the Mystic…

Alex McManus

36 comments

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