Douglass Blvd Christian Church

an open and affirming community of faith

n open and affirming community where faith is questioned and formed, as relationships are made and upheld. 

What If Small Is the New Big?

By Derek Penwell

Bookstores and Our Relationship to “Bigness”

As a kid growing up, almost all of the bookstores I knew about were found in malls—B. Dalton and Walden Books. You could expect to find one (sometimes two if the mall were big enough) in almost every mall. These bookstores didn’t carry an extensive inventory—mostly best sellers, coffee table books, children’s books, magazines, and so on. The experience was about buying—browse if you must, but find what you want, buy it, then get back to the rest of your business at the mall. They had no chairs, no coffee. It was a place to stop in and take a break from doing something else. The strategy wasn’t about great selection; it was about ubiquity: “We’re everywhere, and if we don’t have it, we can order it.”

As the 1990s unfolded, however, the ubiquity of mall bookstores began to decline. People’s relationship to books and the stores that sold them began to change with the increasing popularity of a couple of new chains, Borders and Barnes & Noble, and their imitators. These stores carried much more substantial inventory, and they appealed to people’s book buying experience. These new bookstores made an attempt to appear like a cross between a retail library and a coffee shop—come in, browse, relax, read a little, and have a latte. They provided comfortable chairs that they actually seemed to want you to sit down in, new and interesting music softly played, grad students with tattoos and multiple piercings, and a crap ton of books that allowed you to discover new authors and subjects you didn’t know about. The strategy was about great selection and an inviting experience—”We’ve got stuff you didn’t even know you wanted, which you get to explore at your leisure.”

But as the Internet realized popularity, a new kind of book buying experience emerged—online shopping, led principally by Amazon. Amazon and the other online bookstores boasted a nearly exhaustive inventory that could be accessed from the comfort of your own living room. What they gave up in ambience, they made up for in convenience. Not only could you order books and have them shipped straight to your door, you could order just about anything else—from TVs to hernia belts. The strategy centered on almost unlimited selection available with unbelievable convenience—”We’ve got just about everything, and you don’t even have to put down your Mountain Dew to get it.”

Things really started to change, however, with the advent of e-books. Amazon introduced digital books that gave people the convenience of online ordering coupled with instant online delivery. There was almost no waiting at all. You could have a new book in seconds, no matter where you were.

Still, after the big chain bookstores almost crushed them, and after Amazon and e-books almost crushed the big chain bookstores, some local independent bookstores have managed not only to survive, but to thrive. How do they do it?

Here’s where a really good writer might offer the winning strategy, distilled to its essence: The thing that makes some small independent bookstores succeed in the land of the giants is __________.

But if there is a strategy, distilled to its essence, I don’t know what it is. Of course, I have some ideas—an emphasis on niche marketing, an appeal to customer service, a local community atmosphere. I imagine all those things, and probably some others, have contributed to the success of certain small independent bookstores.

What I want to focus on is the broader reality of bigness. For years the roadmap to success appeared to wend its way through Mega-ville. Go big or go home, right? Walmart. Microsoft. McDonalds. Google. The New York Yankees. Hollywood blockbusters. Page views. Empire.

In fact, so closely did success seem to correlate with bigness that—at least informally, if not explicitly—that’s gradually how success came to be defined. Biggest is best.

When Big Became Small

But the narrative of bigness has bumped up against some difficult realities. For one thing, a market that is increasingly fragmented by the vagaries of demographic diversity—race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and gender expression … not to mention, the perennial issue of the range of individual taste—is difficult to dominate in a general way. When a culture is largely homogenous, generating broad appeal is much easier—you only need to get a couple of things right to saturate the market. When the market is fragmented, however, broad appeals are almost impossible, since whatever you offer will almost certainly exclude wide swaths of the population.

For another thing, with the increasing presence of the Internet, and it’s almost endless platforms for publishing and marketing, the signal to noise ratio is as high as it’s ever been. So, while it’s easier now than ever to get your message out, your message is one among millions. Being heard is both easier and more difficult, in that your message is easier to broadcast to a potential audience, but because there are so many voices, it can be more difficult to have your message actually heard. Time was you could craft a message, publicize it through traditional media, and have a reasonable chance of having it being heard by your intended audience. If you were quick enough, properly resourced, and sufficiently smart, you might run the table. Boom! Big. Nowadays, however, mass appeals untailored to highly specific audiences have difficulty making connections.

No question but that bigness still exists. And where it does, it’s really big … huge, in fact. (Think Apple, Walmart, Google, Comcast, Verizon, American Airlines). But it’s becoming rarer and rarer.

Small and local are also thriving (Think Farmers Markets, CSAs, Record Stores, Community Ministries). What we have less and less of is moderately big (Think Montgomery Ward, Circuit City, Newsweek, Borders, My Space). A large swath in the middle—including much that would traditionally have been called large—finds itself being squeezed on both ends.

So, maybe we need to rethink the endgame. Maybe our understanding of success needs recalibration.

* What if scrambling to be a monopoly is a waste of time?

* What if “mega” scares off more people than it attracts?

* What if, as Seth Godin has suggested, small is the new big?


I want to suggest that these are questions denominations and congregations should be considering just now.

When Words Aren't Enough (Matthew 21:23-32)

People will know they’re welcome in God’s house—not just because we tell them (as important as that is)—but because we show them . . . we keep throwing open the doors and inviting people to come in. We keep working on behalf of those who’ve been turned away by the very people who are supposed to be tending the vineyard—but who’ve proven themselves inadequate to the task by their continued failure to actually pull the weeds and dress the vines. Sometimes words aren’t enough, in large part, because those words have to bear at least a passing resemblance to the lives we live.


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Who Said Anything about Deserving? (Matthew 20:1-16)

Spending our lives identifying our value by any other measure is not only pointless, it’s a distraction, verging on sinful—because we’re ceaselessly grasping for something we don’t have, thinking that possessing it will finally make our lives worthwhile, when God has already said our lives are valuable, based on nothing more than the love God used in creating them.


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Blood Drive Tomorrow!

If you have blood in your body, and would like to donate it to someone else who needs it, you can do that here tomorrow.

The Red Cross will hold a blood drive at DBCC in the Family Life Center on Saturday, September 20th from 9:30 - 3:00. To schedule an appointment please call 1-800-RED CROSS. They also except walk-ins. Currently there is an urgent need for donations.

This is pretty important. We hope to see you around!

Mexican Dinner & Dessert Auction next week!

In the final stretch of our fundraising efforts for our group's annual trip to Casa Hogar de San Juan, we're having a Mexican Dinner on Sunday, Sept. 21, as well as a Dessert Auction immediately following.

These dessert auctions are thinly veiled excuses for some of our members to roll up their collective sleeves and do some world class baking, so it's likely something you won't want to miss.

We'd love for you to join us for worship on Sunday morning, but if you aren't able, you're more than welcome to hang out with us for the dinner at around 12:30pm.

Bring your stomachs empty and your checkbooks open!

If you're interested in contributing a dish, call or email the office this week to ask Jennifer what to bring.

What Does Forgiveness Even Look Like? (Matthew 18-21-35)

In order for Jesus' followers to endure as a community of truth, a community that seeks first justice and peace, those followers have to learn how to forgive. When? How much? Exactly whom? These are all secondary questions in Jesus' mind. What's at stake has to do with more than my hurt feelings; it has to do with the relationship necessary to sustain a community of truth in a world of lies, a community of justice in a world in which everyone seems most concerned to guard their own feelings against the very real possibility of hurt and betrayal, a community of peace in a world always in danger of being rent asunder by our tendency to harbor violence in our hearts against those who've wronged us.


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Irreconcilable Differences (James 2:1-10, 14-17)

In a culture that tells us to pile up as much stuff as we can, it’s difficult not to cling—to our possessions, to our longing for success, to our relentless need for respectability. But following Jesus is about letting go of those things and traveling down another path—a path that leads us through all the wrong neighborhoods, populated by all the wrong people, occupying themselves with all the wrong things, things that we’ve been taught are pointless (at best) or ruinous (at worst)—a path that is irreconcilably at odds with the available paths offered by a consumerist culture.

And that path—even though it appears to lead us through all the places our culture has told us to avoid—according to Jesus, and usually without our knowing it, is the path that leads us home.


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The Gates of Hell (Matthew 16:13-20)

Better late than never, Derek's sermon from this past Sunday, August 31. Really good stuff.

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You see, empathy . . . that’s good. We have to have some sense of how other people feel, the suffering and the indignities they undergo. But it’s not enough to feel someone else’s pain, we need to find a way to share in it, to help them confront it, endure it, transform it into a power of its own.

I think the only way to do that is to stand with those who suffer injustice, who live with the alienation of being the one to whom no one must pay attention, who know only the dehumanizing pain of constantly having to act like you’re someone other than who you are, just so you won’t get bullied, beaten, sexually harassed, or shot. We have to raise our voices with the voices of those who wield no power, who are always in danger of having their voices ignored. We who would follow Jesus must sacrifice something for them.


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Christian Abundance (Matthew 14:13-21)

Sermon delivered by Rev. Chuck Lewis on August 7, 2014

We've been blessed with many gifts. What kind of stewards should we be?

Discipleship lives above the economy of scarcity and dares to live the economy of the abundance of God, with eyes to see those who "need not go away,” and ears to hear our mission to “give them something to eat”—and there will always be enough.


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Our Friends at Freedom House Doing the Lord's Work among Mothers in Recovery

If you want to know how difficult it is to be in recovery from substance abuse and try to have a baby and try to hold your family together, read this article. We're proud of our friends at Freedom House, and all the work done by Volunteers of America. They truly are doing the Lord's work among Mothers in recovery.

Book signing at the Farmers Market

If you missed Derek's book signing on August 17, it may well not have been the biggest mistake you've ever made.

Derek will be signing books again this Saturday, August 30 @ the Douglass Loop Farmers Market from 10am-2pm.

There will be copies of the book to purchase on the day of the signing. But if you'd prefer to purchase one of your own beforehand, you can preorder one at chalicepress.com.

If you'd like to find out more about Derek the author, or read a few excerpts from the book--you know, just to see if it's worth your time--check him out on his website, and on his author page of Facebook.

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Hope Floats (Exodus 1:8 – 2:10)

We're proud to welcome Rev Candasu Vernon Cubbage to the pulpit. Speaking truth to power, y'all.

We can't save the whole world, but we can do something. And if we look hard enough, there is usually more than one way to respond when those in authority over us are wrong.


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Bake Sale!

What: Bake Sale! 

When: Sunday, August 31 (after worship)

Where: In the Gathering Area at Douglass Blvd. Christian Church

Why: Because you need the sweet goodness of homemade baked wares (and to raise money for the Mission Trip).

How much: You're just going to have to bring your check book and find out.