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Church Cancelled Today

By Jeremy Myers
26 Comments

Church Cancelled Today

Church Closed TodayI have previously suggested that one of the best things a pastor could do for their church is cancel all church services. The reason would not be to shut the church down, but liberate the church to actually be the church in the community. People are so busy attending church, they don’t have time to be the church. So cancelling the services would free up their time.

But it is easy to predict what would happen if your church did this. Most of the members would go down the street to another church. And then the pastor would get fired by the few who remained.

So before canceling everything all at once, some small steps toward freedom might be necessary. For example, a church could cancel one Sunday service per month. And initially, to really surrender control and give the people freedom, nothing should be scheduled to replace the canceled service. On these Sundays, the people are simply given permission to not attend church. The pastor could tell the people that they are being given the Sunday off. They can sleep in, go golfing, or have an enjoyable morning with their family.

When that Sunday comes, the church doors should remain locked and a sign can be posted which says,  “Church service cancelled today. Enjoy your day and see you next week!”  Later, if the leaders feel they must plan something for the people do, they must first ask themselves if they are having control issues.

Then, once they are assured they are not, they should take a deep breath, and schedule something  unchurchy.  Tell the people that there are no requirements, but if they want to join you at the beach next Sunday, they are welcome. Or fishing on the lake. Or watching football. Or whatever. Just don t do anything with the Bible, singing, sermons, and prayer. Whatever you do, don t take attendance or an offering.

Cancelling a church service, of course, is done with purpose. It is to show the people that attending church is not what church is really about. Cancelling a service or two per month provides the church the opportunity to put the service back in church service. I’ll post about this later.

What do you think? Is this doable? What would happen if your church tried something like this?

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

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Money, Missions, and Megachurches

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Money, Missions, and Megachurches

I was reading a book recently by a pastor of a megachurch in California. He said that their church committed from very early on to give 50% of their annual budget to missions.

That is quite commendable. I’m glad they took such a stand, though it would be interesting to see how they define “missions.” (For example, is Youth Group missions? Is the annual Missions Conference missions? How about when the pastor takes a a two week fishin’ trip…I mean mission trip…to Alaska? But we’ll leave all those questions aside.)

The funny thing is that I hear this sort of thing from several megachurches. It seems they have a desire to justify their big buildings, stained glass windows, and fancy choir robes by saying they give 50% of their budget away.

But that’s like multi-millionaires saying they give away 50% of their income in order to justify spending the other 50% on a house with 50 bathrooms, 7 Lamborghinis, a personal airstrip and golf course, and weekly jaunts to Greece and Italy. The generosity is commendable, no doubt about it. But they’re still spending millions of dollars on themselves every year.

And then yesterday, it hit me. Most house churches I know give away nearly 100% of their church “budget.” They don’t have paid staff, mortgages, electric bills, or any of the other things that traditional churches have.

But since these churches are so small, they don’t equal the “missional” force of a megachurch giving away 50% of it’s income, right?

Wrong.

According to some studies, there are at least 1.4 million people involved in house churches in the United States. Some place it as high as 50 million, but we’ll keep with the much lower figure of 1.4. It looks like the average attendance in mega-churches might be around 3000 people, and very few of those are giving away 50% of their budget. So the 1.4 million people involved in house churches equals about 467 megachurches, and almost 100% of the money that these 1.4 million people give to their home groups goes straight to some sort of missions activity. To equal the same amount of giving power, you would need over 900 megachurches giving 50% or more of their annual budget. When you realize that there are only about 1400 megachurches in the US, it seems unlikely that two-thirds of them are giving away 50% of their budget.

It seems then, that there might be more mission and tithing power in house churches than megachurches.

What do you think about all this? And does anyone have any better statistics?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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Let My People Go!

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

Let My People Go!

I am a big believer in giving people freedom from church buildings and front-led church meetings. So it was encouraging today to read what Paul Leader at his Perspectives blog wrote today:

If there was one message I had for pastors and leaders of congregations, churches and gatherings it would be this. It is time to let my people go!!! People need to have freedom to express and discover their own paths in life, their own gifts and abilities.

As leaders it is time to let go of insecurities and let our people go. Send them. Let them follow dreams even if they get it wrong. Be there for them. Love them. Equip them for living and not for maintenance. Be like the eagle that realises that the young have to learn how to fly or die. Take away the dow and feathers. Take away the twigs and the nest. It is time to soar. Too many eagles have become domesticated chickens, cooped up for life laying eggs just for eating and not for growth. It is time for freedom.

Preach it, Paul! Lead away!

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

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Is Your Church Hateful?

By Jeremy Myers
39 Comments

Is Your Church Hateful?

Have you ever heard of a church that thought of itself as unloving, or bad for families?

Of course not. Every church in the country would probably describe themselves as a warm and loving family church. But is it possible that all churches truly fit this description? Not likely.

So what truly is a loving church? How do you know if a church if good for families? What does it look like? What do they do?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Theology of the Church

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Full Contact Christianity

By Jeremy Myers
4 Comments

Full Contact Christianity

I met with my friend and fellow blogger Tim Nichols last night. He writes over at Full Contact Christianity, and is a professor at Rocky Mountain Bible College & Seminary.

We talked about a variety of topics, but mostly about the process of redeeming culture in a missions environment. When a missionary takes the gospel into a foreign culture, it is not just a matter of transplanting American Christianity into this foreign setting, although this is the way it has most often been done. Most often, American missionaries take our hymns, buildings, clothing, and leadership structures and tried to get foreign believers in the new culture to adopt these customs.

This results in foreign churches that are dependent upon American churches and missionaries for most of the things related to Christian life and practice. This is extremely destructive and debilitating for these new Christians and new churches.

So Tim Nichols is working to develop a way of teaching foreign churches how to “find their own way,” and even, in a sense, develop their own theology. It is exciting what he is doing, and I cannot wait to hear more.

One of the things he said near the end of our conversation was something he finds himself praying as he gets involved in church practices that he doesn’t quite agree with. This is what he prays: “Lord, I believe this is wrong. Bless it anyway.”

I like that. I think I’m going to incorporate it into my philosophy of ministry. It may even be the key idea which eventually allows me to pursue ministry within a traditional church setting.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Blogging, Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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