The Church Machine
Uhhh ohhhh! Hold on to your latte and Iphone because your boy is going off! Just get ready to RT or comment. The fact that I put the word church and machine in the same sentence should give you a pretty good idea where this brain explosion is heading – no pun intended. What has the church created, and is it congruent to the Bible?
Look, I have been in church for 35 years and I am only 29 years old, so that will give you a pretty good indication of my church lens. I have seen visitor cards filled out, clipboards signed, a million different announcements for a billion different events. I have put money in plastic buckets, plastic bags, pottery things, velvet bags and even in one of those boxes in the back. I have sat in wooden pews, comfy theatre chairs, non comfy plastic chairs and even the floor. So what is happening to church?
I’ll tell ya what’s happening: it is called, dollars and sense. You see, WE create these mega churches simply because we like these things. We like great audio systems, we like awesome lighting grids, we like nice buildings with glass and ergonimcally designed chairs. We like modern (and) clean bathrooms with touchless soap, paper and flushing systems. We like our kids to go to church – a.k.a. day care for free and have fun – play with toys and do this all in a state of the art children’s facility. We like walking into a bookstore that looks like Barnes & Noble with a coffee bar and really, really nice people working there (because they are after all, Christians). We like that, it makes us feel good and we begin to say to ourself… wow, my church is awesome, but we don’t use too much excitement because we don’t want to spill our steaming hot latte on the beautiful new carpet.
So what about the churches who don’t have all of these ammenities? I use the word ammenity and I feel like I just checked into the Park Hyatt and am listening to Susan at the front desk tell me about the mini bar, heated towel rack, 7pm complimentary turn down service and the free daily edition of the NY Times. Aaaaaah. I am not at the Park Hyatt, I am at the First Baptist Church of God Covenant Tabernacle trying to figure out what the (explitive) Wifi password is? Wait, you guys don’t have Wifi? How the (explitive) am I going to check my FB status and send a tweetpic? OMG, this church is laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaame!
What do you do now? Well that is when we make sure every new visitor is called each week and invited to our welcome brunch on the 8th sunday of the month to meet our team and fellowship. aaaaaaaah! Hate that word fellowship. Really? When was the last time you told your neighbor/friend that you had some great fellowship last night? If you answered that question and said (anytime) in the past 2 weeks then you need to check yourself into Christanese Rehab … NOW. Seriously, call this number 1-800-Intervention.
I am not doubting the purpose of building the church. But let’s (explitive) think about the type of people we are attracting and assess. I checked out a website recently, Billionaire Exchange after reading Details magazine. They went on to say that you had to have confirmed $2 million USD in assets before placing any types of exchange. Did you peep that out, confirmed it said, of $2 million. No big deal right? What does this tell you? It tells me my *** ain’t on that website and pretty sure most of you probaby are not either. Why? Well, there is a set of standards in place to eliminate a whole lot of users who want to ACT like they have money and don’t. Sound like anyone you may know? You got the Range but can’t afford grocery’s?
Something to think about. If we are to build the church and build leaders I would take a different approach to what you see in alot of settings today. I think what you will find out is you have a ton of over-hype for something without proper infrastructure. It’s like building the twin towers and only digging 50 feet below. Those bad boys are falling over just as soon as you built them. Growth that is organic, slow and steady is something to look for. The moment you blow up, is the moment when it exponentially adds more difficulty in rebuilding the infrastructure.
Then you begin to Hate Church because your entire strategy relies on cashflow. Build something you love not something you think you love.
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7 Comments
JuliaKate
02.23.2010
great read as always… love the tag lines you use for your blogs! State of the Art is a phrase that should be removed from the church vocabulary asap.
Ausfriend
02.23.2010
Do you not reckon God is in to flashy lights, kickass production and fully sick sound systems in his house?
What do you think God is into? Not trying to be a jerk, just curious…
David was the king of creativity. Jesus blew everyones mind by how he lived. The church should totally freak people out…
holaratcha
02.23.2010
great comment ausfriend :: while i see how flashing lights and spinning balls can be just as incredible as touch free soap dispensers, i continually dig into what kind of infrastructure is in a church?
can you do more with less? can you expand differently and continue to meet the great commission standards?
how can the church use multi front initiatives to engage with culture and communicate christ? maybe there are other ways to blow people’s minds?
Ausfriend
02.23.2010
Are you kind of saying the church shouldn’t be run like a corporation?
It is a fine line between excellence and being in the world but not of it yeah?
I’ve always said that if the church really wanted to blow peoples minds AND bring people in they should swap communion bread for Krispy Kremes…I would totally get me some of that
holaratcha
02.23.2010
ausfriend ::
krispy kremes could be a mind blowing touch, totally agree with that insight. churches will take on many forms/styles based on the leadership, which is an obvious fact. the questions to ask are do we want our church to run like a corporation, or not? some may work better, some may not.
Phillip Anthony
02.23.2010
I think people forget that Jesus walked the earth when the internet didn’t exist. There wasn’t Google AdWords, Facebook, Twitter, copy machines, fax machines, instant messaging, text messaging, BillBoard ads, or even a PA system. Still, He managed to get the message – HIS message out.
I’m not quite sure how His voice carried through an audience of 5,000 people, and I’m not quite so sure how the news of His presence spread through Galilee, Judea, Jerusalem, etc, etc, but His message got through, got delivered, and delivered on time.
Without blogs, million dollar lighting computer-controlled lighting, and worldwide broadcasting and “faith partners,” His message somehow got out there.
It’s a shame that so much is needed today (even) in the church to be relevant (as a pastor), keep people interested, and etch a spiritual point in the minds of us A-D-D community of “believers,” especially since Jesus Himself was the one who said, “…if I be lifted up I will draw all men unto me.”
I guess it goes to show you that now more than ever…we need Jesus – and not all of the fluff, all of the entertainment and circus-like experience of the modern church.
Yeah…me too…I-hate-church.
MikeA
03.02.2010
I think all of those things are nice; not necessary, but nice. What is necessary is Biblical preaching and systematic study. The Bible trumps all; but hey if I can get the word and a cup of joe…why not. If I am training my children at home and it can be re-inforced at a state-of-the-art facility, why not? I guess it all depends on the context of the “stuff”…..
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