The trend these days is to call the thing you’re involved with a movement. “Its more than a message (or a group, or an event or a denomination, or a place of business). Its a movement!” But saying doesn’t make it so. Calling a thing a movement doesn’t make it a movement. So … what makes a movement? Taylor Williams and I sat down with JD Walt for an Art of Holiness conversation and discussed the marks of an authentic movement. Here’s the list I cultivated as JD talked:
- Movements start before they start.
- Movements start underground.
- The only secret to making a movement is: Become the seed.
- Movements move.
- In a church world, movements are more lay-led than clergy-led.
- Movements start before they are ready.
- Movements learn the difference between resistance and opposition (so push against opposition, but receive resistance).
- Movements see vision (or as JD puts it, if you want to take the hill, you have to see the hill).
- Movements meet. They don’t happen in a vacuum but in the company of others.
- Movements seek to meet with God.
- Movements have a culture about them.
- Movements rise on centered-set thinking, not bounded-set thinking (but they don’t attempt to be all things to all people).
- Movements don’t ask you to lower the bar; they just want you to move the barriers out of the way.
- Movements persist. They are patient with the process.
- Movements stay on Day One (think of Day One as the day of Pentecost).
- Movements may be hidden.
- Movements don’t focus on statistics. They focus on the score.
- Movements flower in connection. Connection bears creates fruit.
- Movements make friends.
What would you add to this list? And if this is our definition, would you say the Global Methodist Church is an institution or a movement?