Is the PC(USA) a Starfish or Spider, Part II
This post is the second in a two part series exploring the implications of Brafman and Beckstrom’s The Spider and the Starfish: The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations for the Prebyterian Church (USA). For part I, an overview of the book, go here.
Which pointy-limbed creature is the PC(USA)? Starfish or
Spider?
First and foremost, a distinction between the church universal and individual denominations seems necessary.
The church universal does not have a center; it does not have a spider’s head. It perhaps has “centers”–Rome, Colorado, South Africa, Seoul–but the church universal is a decentralized faith. Or, speaking theologically, the claim that Christ is head of the church leads to a decentralized starfish like faith. This is great in terms of Christianity’s survival. There’s no one person in charge. There are no headquarters. If you take out a denomination–or even an entire stream (say, Lutherans) the faith still survives. Knowledge and power is distributed all over the world. Units are self-funding. You cannot accurately count the participants. Thinking of the church universal is thinking of a starfish organization.
Denominations, on the other hand, can function in much more spider-like ways. I’ll consign the rest of my denominational comments to the Presbyterian Church (USA), my tribe, which I know well.
First, I’ll turn to the starfish/spider characteristics as applying to the PC(USA). Is there someone in charge? Yes, two some ones, in fact (or maybe three). We have the moderator of the last General Assembly. The stated clerk, elected to serve a term of several years. And the chair of the General Assembly Council. These folks do the work of the church, the work assigned them by PC(USA) members and they wouldn’t want to be thought of as the head of the church (right Bruce?, right Gradye?), but they do function in many ways as “in charge,” perhaps leaning towards a spider-like structure.
Next, the PC(USA) does have a headquarters called “The Presbyterian Center” in fact: spider. But, on the other hand, if one took out the center (sorry Louisville), the denomination would still function. It’d be severely impaired, but our polity has enough framework in place for the denomination to survive: starfish. Does the PC(USA) have a clear division of roles? Depends who you ask, and what you’re speaking of. Thinking of worship, for instance, we are clear that only ministers of Word and Sacrament may perform the sacraments. But, any person may preach, teach in church, or say the benediction. Muddying the waters even more are the specific instructions as to whom arranges worship: the minister chooses the scripture lessons, but the session decides what time worship is held. The minister presides at communion, but the session authorizes how many times it is celebrated. The minister is responsible for “the music to be sung” in worship, but the session is responsible for “the overall program of music and other arts in the church.” And that’s just worship! Brafman and Beckstrom ask to distinguish spiders from starfish, “is there ‘a clear division of roles’ or ‘an amorphous division?’” Might us in the PC(USA) say “both?”
Similarly, the PC(USA) is both remarkable rigid (spider) and flexible (starfish). We are rigid, for instance, in our ordination process. Pages of the constitution are dedicated to describing the appropriate steps to take before becoming ordained to the office of Minister of the Word and Sacrament. But, that said, I have heard of persons ordained to the office of elder who are not even members of a PC(USA) congregation. The constitution, by some, is not treated in a particularly rigid manner. In my experience, different congregations can be remarkably rigid or flexible themselves. I’ve seen congregations gather hundreds of people with just a few hour’s warning to serve in an emergency. I’ve also seen session meetings last three hours and accomplish precious little. Overall, the PC(USA)’s history of having teaching elders (minister) and ruling elders (elders who “measured out” fidelity to the gospel) is an exercise in flexible rigity. Or, perhaps, rigid flexibility. So, perhaps, neither a spider nor a starfish.
The PC(USA) does keep careful statistics and we can count our members: spider (unlike Alcoholics Anonymous, for instance, which does not even know how many AA chapters exist). But, working groups (or congregations) can and do communicate with one another directly: starfish. Also, though, they communicate with one another through the presbytery, so that’s another someone hybrid characteristic.
Finally, a characteristic that distinguishes starfish and spiders is their funding sources. Again, the PC(USA) is somewhat hybrid. It’s starfish-like in that congregations are self-funding (unlike, say, our brothers and sisters in the Church of Scotland). That said, individual congregations are required to pay a per capita allowance to the national church. Fascinating, though, is the trend for churches unhappy with the actions of the General Assembly to withhold per capita. Withholding per capita, it seems to me, is an attempt to injure the spider’s head; it’s an attack at centralization. Interestingly, however, the churches withholding funds often do so out of anger regarding moves toward the changing of ordination standards to allow more people to be ordained–a starfish characteristic–and the churches who withhold tend to function with a slightly more hierarchical ecclesiology (spider).
Also, consider the founding of new PC(USA) churches, or New Church Developments (NCDs). The funding for NCDs usually comes, in large part, from the presbytery or perhaps another multi-congregational body. So even our new churches are funded by a centralized (and spider) system.
In my estimation, the PC(USA) is neither a starfish or a spider but a hybrid organization. In the book, a business expert explains of Toyota, “I taught them that top management is a function and a responsibility rather than a rank and a privilege” (185). This car management philosophy echoes precisely our Presbyterian theology of ordination–officers are ordained not to a higher or lower calling, but to a responsibility.
The challenge of the PC(USA) is to find “enough decentralization for creativity, but sufficient structure and controls to ensure” faithfulness (191). We also do this with an added challenge Brafman and Beckstrom do not address–honoring our tradition, being led by the word, and always seeking to follow the new movements of Holy Spirit.





Nice assessment Adam. I just finished Starfish this week. I had not read it, but the pmergent event sparked my interest. As I was reading the book, I began pondering the very thing that you wrestled with here, and came to the same conclusion. While there are so many aspects of the PC(USA) that are hopelessly cumbersome and “corporate” in a GM, Record Industry kind of way… there is also the great freedom that local congregations have to be contextual if they are brave enough to do so. So it is more hybrid than it is spider.
My struggle as the pastor of a larger church within this denomination is how to help it transform from it’s spidery tendencies and become much open sourced when it comes to ministry and mission.
I’ve been reading a lot about this lately, and though I have some good directions (Seth Godin’s “Tribes” was helpful as was Roxburgh’s “Becoming a Missional Leader”) I am still trying to find my way.
Good entry.
Adam – When it comes to denominational life and culture, I think equally of not more influential is the Executive Director of the General Assembly Council, in this case Linda Valentine. She blogs at http://presbyterian.typepad.com/lindavalentine/. She helps to set the tone, culture and structure of out mission work along with the GAC itself. Gradye does the same for the Office of the General Assembly and I, well the jury is still out
On the whole, I think the hybrid idea is you can make a good case for it, but overall, I think we know would should move towards starfish like ways of being, but most of us are still far more spidery that we would like to admit. I think that until we see more actual starfish churches and governing bodies lives as starfish for a while, we will be hard pressed for any major change to happen. The questions should we and how do we become more starfish like.
Thanks as always and i am done saying “starfish”
A neighboring PC has not had a called pastor for more than 10 years. The Session is moderated by a pastor from another congregation. They have no staff, although one member/elder is a clp granted permission to serve communion. They invite in some folks to do pulpit fill and otherwise take turns. It strikes me that this small, country church in Wisc is more starfish than a lot of our churches.
@Bruce, yeah, sorry I didn’t mention Linda. That was one of those thinking but not writing things. Thanks for that and the call for a bit more starfishyness from church and governing bodies.
@Leon, many thanks.
@Susan, very interesting. Thanks for the good word. I wonder when/if churches can become too starfishy and disconnected entirely — not saying said church is at all, it’s just the first time I’ve thought of it
Adam – intersting series! Thanks.
You might want to check out another blog that has meditated on The Starfish and The Spider, looking for what PCUSA Presbyterians might learn from it – Tod Bolsinger’s blog, “It Takes a Church . . .” (http://bolsinger.blogs.com/).
Tod’s a really interesting writer, and he is part of the “Odyssey group” in his presbytery, Los Ranchos Presbytery, which is seeking to imagine and be presbytery in new ways (http://www.losranchos.org/odyssey). The Odyssey group and Los Ranchos presbytery give one glimpse of what happens when a group of presbyterians works to put these (starfish/spider) and similar ideas into practice.
Adam, in the book remember that the authors gave the example of Ebay as a company that is neither Starfish of Spider but a combination of the two. You asked above if there could be a third “amorphous” division and so, yes, the book does leave that option open.
The book does not aim to be so distinct in its definitions and classification of the two types of organization but is using the images of a spider and a starfish to illustrate the trend that more and more we are, as a society, moving toward a starfish mentality. Blogs, open source software, craigslist etc. are manifestations of this. I think that the PCUSA, is still by and large a spider organization in the sense that it is centralized and hierarchical in structure. Of course this does not mean that the whole church would die if the headquarters were suddenly taken away. The church would survive, I’m sure. But if it were a starfish organization, it would not only survive if the head is taken away it would actually multiply and reproduce spontaneously.
Another book you might find interesting is “Here Comes Everybody”. It would also be fun to see how this book can contribute to church government.
Thanks for both of your recent comments. You hit the nail on the head when you wondered if the PCUSA would thrive with its headquarters chopped off. Unfortunately, that’s exactly the perspective of some in the church these days. Even though I’m a sucker for decentralization, I like the hybrid system and want the head intact. Thanks again.