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Exit Signs

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

Exit Signs

Close Your Church for Good, Chap 4, Sec 3. Whether we like to admit it or not, many of us pastors are pragmatists at heart. We want to do what works. So in a chapter about cancelling your church service, I wanted to include a section on the practical aspects of cancelling the service. And no, it’s not so you can save money on electricity.

And don’t forget, please provide feedback on my blog posts. When the book is finished, I will send a free e-book version to those who helped me out in this way. Thanks!

* * * * *

Practically speaking, canceling the service is a wise move anyway. People are leaving the church in droves. At least, they’re leaving the Sunday service part of it. According to recent studies, less than 20% of people regularly attend church, and of those who do, 2.7 million more leave the church annually.  During the previous decade, the combined membership of all Protestant denominations declined by almost 5 million people, while the US population increased by 24 million during the same time period. The church is declining in numbers even as the population numbers expand.

And it’s not just attendance. Exit signs are everywhere. Along with attendance, giving and involvement are also down. If church is a numbers game, we’re down by three touchdowns with two minutes to go. The suggested reasons for this widespread decline are numerous and varied, but the ultimate reason, I’m convinced, is not apathy or disillusionment on the part of the people. It’s not that people don’t care about God or serving others. The truth is that people are leaving the church because they do care about such things, and they feel that in many ways, the church is just getting in the way.

George Barna, in his book Revolution, indicates that while numbers and involvement in traditional “brick and mortar” churches is declining, people who are committed to following Jesus in their lives, at their jobs, and among their friends, is expanding exponentially. The church is not dying. For those who have eyes to see what God is doing, His church has never looked better!

And that’s why giving people permission to leave church is so important (many of whom will eventually leave anyway). Since many people are thinking of leaving, why not shock the socks off them and tell them to not come! Rather than make them sneak out the door, and come up with lame excuses as to why they “missed church,” why not show them the door, giving them permission to not “attend church.”

In fact, “missing church” and “attending church” should not even be in the church’s vocabulary. Such terminology reveals a tendency to view church as a function and a place, rather than the people of God who follow Jesus into the world. If we really want to help the people of God follow Jesus out into the world, we need to put up big Exit signs on all our doors, and lead people out of the building where we have them trapped and out where God can work in and through their lives to the hurting people of the world. If people are exiting the church anyway, let’s guide them on their way. Let’s invite people into the adventure of loving God and loving others outside the brick walls and stained glass of a church building. But this adventure begins with cancelling the church service.

In this way, canceling the church service may very well be God’s will for your people. More on that in the next post.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, Close Your Church for Good, Theology of the Church

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Out of Control Church – Part 2

By Jeremy Myers
6 Comments

Close Your Church for Good, Chap 4, Sec 2. In the previous post, I suggested that the main reasons pastors do not want to cancel their church services is a fear of losing control and power. At least, this was my fear when I was a pastor.

Oh, and note that I am going to start including some questions at the end of these posts to encourage your feedback and interaction. One of the reasons I’m writing a book online is so that I can get input and suggestions (even criticism) as I go along.

For people who are helpful in this process, I will send them a FREE digital copy of the book once it is all finished. This free book will work in your iPad, Kindle, or any other digital reader.

* * * * *

I don’t pretend to know the hearts and minds of all pastors and church leaders around the world and throughout time. But from my own observation and from my reading of church history, it seems that my experience is not unique. Generally, our motives are sound; we want to help people. But many of us believe, deep down in our core, that the best way to help people is to control them. And the easiest way to do this is to get them to come to church on Sunday morning. We tell people they must attend church because we want to control what they believe and what they do.

If you want to assess your own heart in this matter, all you have to do is look at what feeling emerge when it is suggested that you cancel your Sunday service. What thoughts immediately pop into your mind? What are your objections? What are your fears? If they are fears of losing your job, thoughts of losing prominence in your town or among your peers, or objections that people need you to guide them, it may be that you are afraid of losing your power and control.

In such cases, we must begin to practice what we preach. We tell people that to defeat the power of money, they must give it away. To overcome eating, practice fasting. To begin working out, start slow. The same advice goes for the areas of power and control. If we are addicted to power and control, we must give it up. We must get out of control.

* * * * *

What do you think?
If you are a pastor, what are your concerns with cancelling your church service? If you attend church every week, what do you think would happen to you emotionally and spiritually if you did not attend church every Sunday? Would this be liberating or damaging? Why?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Theology of the Church

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Out of Control Church

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Out of Control Church

Close Your Church for Good, Chap 4, Sec 2. Cancelling your church service is scary. But it seems that the main objections are not theological, but personal issues related to power and control.

* * * * *

Thinking about cancelling the church service is terrifying to most church leaders because we depend on the people to fill the pews and pay the bills, one of which is our own salary. But what if the church didn’t have buildings or paid pastors? Would you feel free to let your people go? The answer by most pastors would again be “No.” The reason is that we not only need people to pay the bills, but we feel responsible to protect the people God has put under our care, and help them know what to believe and how to live.

As a former pastor myself, that is how I thought. I viewed the relationship between the people in the pew and the pastor in the pulpit as mutually beneficial. The people should attend services and give of their time and money to support the budget and programs of the church. In return, I would do my best to provide for their spiritual needs and guide them through the hazards of life.

Looking back, especially at some of the disputes I had with certain people, and some of the struggles and problems we faced as a church, I now believe that my ultimate concern was for my own prominence and power, and that I would get a paycheck. When it came to the people, I wanted to control them. I thought that if they believed what I taught, and did what I said, everybody’s life (including mine) would be better. I also believed that greater attendance on Sunday morning would provide greater power, prominence, and influence for the church (and myself) in the wider community. I even remember watching with great interest some of the internal feuds of other local churches, hoping that some of their people would leave and start attending my church.

All of this, I believe, does not reveal a heart focused on incarnation and principles of the Kingdom of God, but rather, a heart focused on Satanic influences of power, prestige, recognition, and control. I fully confess that these were characteristics in my heart and life.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Theology of the Church

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Cancel Your Church Service

By Jeremy Myers
11 Comments

Close Your Church for Good, Chap 4, Sec 1. I finally begin to share some practical ways you can close your church for good. The suggestion in chapter 4 is to cancel your church service.

* * * * *

If your church is going to die, you’ve got to go for the guttural. Strike without fear. Make sure the first blow is the only blow. Aim for the center. One bullet; one kill. The heart of the typical church is the Sunday morning service. If you want to kill your church, the best place to begin is by cancelling the church service.

I can already hear the Bible pages beginning to turn, so let’s face the music and deal head-on with a favorite verse of pastors who are trying to boost Sunday attendance.   

Do Not Forsake the Assembling
Generally, when someone suggests that Christians don’t need to attend church, a pastor or other church leader is quick to quote Hebrews 10:25. This verse warns believers against forsaking the assembling of themselves together. But let’s be clear. Nowhere does the passage say how often believers should meet, where, or with whom. Nor does the text does state what should be done when they meet, other than encourage one another. Aside from this, it is questionable whether the passage can directly be applied to believers today since the original recipients of the letter were former Jews who were now being pressured through persecution to return to the customs and laws of Judaism.

Which raises an interesting possibility. The word that the author uses in Hebrews 10:25 for “assembling together” is episunagōgē, which could possibly be an allusion to the Jewish Synagogue. Maybe the author is telling his readers that even though they face persecution at the Synagogue, they should continue to go. It is just as likely, of course, that these Jewish believers in Jesus had started their own “Christian Synagogue” patterned after the Jewish traditions, and it was this they should not abandon, even in the face of persecution (cf. Jas 2:2; 5:14). If either of these theories are true, we must be careful about using the verse to guilt people into “coming to church.”

Having said this, however, I do not believe the verse is referring to a synagogue. The word used in Hebrews 10:25 is also used in 2 Thessalonians 2:1 where Paul is writing about the ingathering of believers for the Day of the Lord, after which time we will spend eternity with Jesus. Many take the term in 2 Thessalonians 2:1 as a reference to the rapture, but this is not necessarily so. Instead, this word (like the term for “church,” ekklēsia) refers not to a time and place where believers gather together on a regular basis for singing and sermons, but rather to the activity of God in gathering together a people for Himself to accomplish His will. Therefore, both 2 Thessalonians 2:1 and Hebrews 10:25 remind believers that God has gathered the church out of the world for a purpose. Some people are in the habit of forsaking this purpose, and this we must not do.

So what does Hebrews 10:25 teach? It is telling believers to fulfill their God-given purpose, and encourage others to do the same. And what is this purpose? Each person has their own unique purpose in God’s plan, but the general purpose of us all is to live life and love others like Jesus. Sitting in a building for two hours on Sunday morning may not be the best way to accomplish this purpose. This may be helpful for some, but not for all. To allow people to fulfill their purpose, we must set them free from the manmade requirement of “attending church.” One way to do this is simply to cancel the church service.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, Close Your Church for Good, Theology of the Church

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Vision Casting to Death

By Jeremy Myers
3 Comments

Close Your Church for Good, Chap 3, Sec 7. This is the concluding section in a chapter called “Your Church Must Die.” So far we have seen that the church seeks honor and glory, but in all the wrong places. This final section in the chapter shows how Jesus, through His incarnation gained glory, and how we can too.

* * * * *

Incarnation within a dying world also requires identification with the world in its pain, fear, rejection, sorrow, and ultimately, death. There is no truly human existence without such things. Therefore, a desire to be incarnational requires a headlong race toward death. However, embracing pain and death takes vision.

Many churches talk about vision casting, and this generally means envisioning how big and influential the church can be in ten or twenty years, and then deciding what steps need to be taken to get there. While it is true that “Without vision, the people perish” it is also true that the wrong vision leads the people astray. The vision of most churches focuses on imagining a glorious future where they grow and expand their ministries, programs, building size, and Sunday attendance. Maybe the church needs a new vision—the vision of Jesus.

The vision of Jesus for His earthly ministry can be summarized in one word: death. What was the way forward for Jesus? It was away from glory, away from riches, away from honor and fame. From very early in His ministry, Jesus began talking about His death as the reason why He came.

Of course, it must be recognized that the death of Jesus was not the end of the Incarnation, but the ultimate expression of it. It was in the death, the shame, the horror, and the pain of the cross that Jesus revealed another aspect of the character of God. Jesus revealed that God is a God who dies for the sake of others.

And so death was not the end, either of Jesus or the Incarnation. It was just the beginning. After three days, Jesus rose from death, and after appearing to and encouraging many of His followers, ascended into heaven and was glorified to the right hand of God the Father. This also was part of the incarnation.

The church sees the glory of the resurrected Savior, and cries out, “Yes! That is what we want! That is our vision! May the glory of God cover the earth in and through the church!” But we have forgotten that glory for Jesus only followed humiliation and death. And so it will be for the church. To go forward to glory, we must go back to death. To reach glory, we must die. Like Jesus, we must spread out our arms in victorious defeat, let out a trembling sigh, and utter those words which make the devil shudder to this very day: “It is finished.” Only then, once we die, can we hope for resurrection.

So remove your life support. Turn off the iron lung. Pull the plug. Your church must die. 

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, Close Your Church for Good, Theology of the Church

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