Less is More
Still thinking quite a lot about the Church, and the church, and
the church. Give me your reactions to this idea:
George Barna says it's 20 million strong, anecdotal evidence suggests it's pretty strong, and my own current hunch is that it is very strong—this movement among committed Christians away from church as we've known it and in search of something more—no, strike that—something
less.
The old saw I'm hearing locally, and reading in reviews of Barna's
Revolution nationally, is that our problem is American Individualism and Consumerism. We're not
committed Christians. We're self-serving church shoppers. We want our options open, and we're always looking for
more. We want our spiritual needs met, but we also want
more convenience,
more comfort,
more programs tailored to our needs and
more attractive venues. And so, we tend not to commit ourselves to any one local church, and we shop around.
My premise, whether it applies to Barna's 20 million, or just to me and a few of you, is the opposite. If we're shopping, we're actually shopping for
less. In a nutshell,
less corporate-style management and marketing,
less emphasis on programs and strategies,
less hierarchy and focus on human leadership, and probably
less expense. What is essential and must remain after the excesses are pared away is even more important, but we'll hammer that out later.
C.S. Lewis (who else?) nailed our dilemma in the first chapter of
Letters to Malcolm, Chiefly on Prayer where, in commenting on the church's tendency to innovate and wander, he gently goads human leadership: "The shepherds go off, 'every one to his own way,' and vanish over diverse points of the horizon. If the sheep huddle patiently together and go on bleating, might they finally recall the shepherds? (Haven't English victories sometimes been won by the rank and file in spite of the generals?)"
I'll start the list, you correct it, comment on it or add to it—the list of things
without which, the church might be more attractive to some of us weary, huddled sheep.
I'll bet we can do without:
1. Banners
2. 5 Year Strategies
3. Acronyms
4. Colorful Brochures (unless contracted with TDDesign)
5. Growth Projections
6. Mission Statements
7. Consultants
8. Emerging Generation Emphasis
9. Really Cool, Expensive Buildings
10. Leadership Retreats and Seminars
11. 10 Year Strategies
12. Corporate Management Models
13. Vision Casting
14. Pastor and Leader Workshops in S. California or Orlando (where else?)
15. The Willow Creek Association
16. Any Other Association
17. Hype
18. Career Paths Within Church Structure
19. Multiple Venues
20. Facility Needs Analysis Task Forces
21. Any Other Task Forces
22. State-Of-The-Art Media Technologies
23. Choreographed Banner Waving
24. Nepotism
25. John Maxwell Book Studies
26. Reminders by Leaders of How Much Leaders Love Each Other
27. 20 Year Growth Strategies
28. Anything Serendipity (maybe that stuff has already disappeared)
29. Carefully Managed Church News
30. Mentoring Programs
31. Symbolic, Token Community Involvement
33. Congregational "Input" When Decisions Have Already Been Made
34. Biblical Focus on Stewardship During Fundraising Efforts
35. Church Management Team Workshops in S. California or Orlando (my guess is that's
where attendees learn how to pull off #33 and others)
Any church even 50% free of these features starts looking attractive, doesn't it? I'm really not quite this cynical and sour, just trying to get the "conversation" going! Have fun...