• Cultural Gravity (Part 1)

    July 24, 2009

    Try to jump and hang in the air for 10 seconds.  How’d you do?  You either failed, cheated, or are reading this from the moon.  You are a captive of gravity.  It pulls at you, refusing to let you wander off.

    Culture is a lot like that.  The various elements of the culture we inhabit pull us toward some sort of center.  Culture, in all of its various forms: language, architecture, customs, expectations, rhythms, etc., creates a sort of reality for those who live in it.  This is what I am calling cultural gravity.

    Cultural gravity cuts two ways – it simultaneously frees and binds.  As regular gravity gives us the ability to walk around and explore our immediate surroundings, it also binds us there, making any desire we have to explore our not so immediate surroundings extraordinarily difficult.  Analogously, cultural gravity is what enables us to authentically enter a particular time and space – to know it personally and deeply.  But it can also trap our imaginations and stymie us intellectually and creatively.  The longer we live with in a particular brand of cultural gravity (geography, tradition, denomination, etc.) the harder it will be to enter new ones with any degree of receptivity or discernment.

    Anyone who has ever lived cross-culturally has experienced this tension.  It is why new cultures can be hard to adjust to and why we may have a hard time (or outright fear!) returning to the culture we came from.

    As one who has had some varied over-seas experience and has moved from the suburban mid-west, to urban So. Cal, to some blend of suburban/urban culture in the midsouth, and now lives outside of Chicago, these are some thoughts I have been having.

    In Part 2 I plan to offer some reflections on what I think cultural gravity has to do with missional churches.

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    Posted in: chicago, church, culture, memphis, midwest, missional, suburban, travles, urban

Recent Comments

  • geoff holsclaw said...

    1

    jr,
    i’m interested to hear more about this in relation to missional life.  it reminded me of St. Augustine when he would speak of the weight of carnal habit, and by carnal habit he meant both the weight of sinful patterns as well as the weight of cultural customs.  all these things draw us down and keep us from God and his mission.

    07/28/09 6:06 AM | Comment Link

  • JR Rozko said...

    2

    St. who ? ;)   Yeah, totally see the connection there.  Whether aspects of culture, or facets of sin, there is that battle being fought for our attention and allegiance.  Light and darkness, but “the darkness has not overcome it.”

    07/28/09 8:00 AM | Comment Link

  • geoff holsclaw said...

    3

    St. Who?  you know, the Saint whose icon I have on my desk and pray to for wisdom because I’m becoming catholic, I mean “C”atholic.  :)

    07/28/09 8:18 AM | Comment Link

  • Cultural Gravity (Part 2) said...

    4

    [...] posts:Cultural Gravity (Part 1)Missional Community in a Capitalistic SocietyThe MOVE: The Journey from Attractional to [...]

    08/5/09 4:55 PM | Comment Link

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