Light of the World, a City on A Hill
…thinking out loud about living missionally in the city of Sydney so that the city will come to know Jesus…Archive for attractional
What to do when Church Programs aren’t sucking your time
I posted a while ago here regarding what I saw as one of the downsides of an Attractional strategy, namely that the time taken in pursuing this approach meant less time for connecting with people and building relationships.
Well opinion was divided with some contending that even if some time was liberated, most people wouldn’t use it for connecting with people anyway, and in the meantime the churches program quality starts to suck.
This may well be true, but let me relate a story…
Some friends of mine are looking for a new church, and in the interim are not doing any “church ministry” i.e. no service involvement, no after hours meetings/sessions etc. My mate tells me that they now have so much extra time available which they are largely directing towards relationship building.
Now not everyone is as motivated as my friends (I love these guys, they are my model for building relationships), but surely we should think seriously about over-programming our people?
Its Church Jim, but not as we know it
Now I’m not a Trekky by any stretch of the imagination, but the quote came to mind as I reflected on Neil Cole’s most recent book, Organic Church.
I ploughed through the book over the recent Australia Day long weekend, mainly as the content compelled me to keep reading.
In a nutshell Cole, who has previously been a “normal” church pastor as well as a denominational church planting leader, puts forward the view that in this post-modern age, the most effective way of spreading the gospel is via what he calls organic church planting movements.
The book starts with a parallel to the Matrix (which seems like a popular thing to do with Christian writers). Cole suggests that the info that follows is a bit like ‘taking the red pill’, which, if you haven’t seen the movie, is something Neo (Keanu Reeves) does in order to be freed from the blissful ignorance of the matrix and exposed to the stunning truth of the real world.
I don’t know that Cole’s revelations are on the same scale as the revelations about the Matrix were to Neo (that his whole existence was a complete ruse), but in many ways I felt like my eyes were opened to some profound possibilities.
Like many, Cole is not a fan of “Attractional” church, and his alternative very much focuses on taking the gospel to the people. One of the key start points is frequenting places where people gather and and then building relationships. The places he mentions are cafe’s, coffee shops, sporting venues, parks & playgrounds - wherever people congregate. For Cole, the local coffee shop was his venue of choice (to which I say, amen) and he recounts the story of developing a faith community out of the caffeine-addicted regulars, which then went on to start another faith community in the next coffee shop.
After six years of this process of ‘injecting’ the gospel into these normal, everyday places and passing it on from place to place, Cole claims that there are over 600 functioning faith communities comprising over 10,000 people.
Now you may not be impressed by numbers (I keep seeing comments suggesting success is not measured by converts), but how ever you see it, there now seems to be 10,0000 more people who know Jesus thanks to the Holy Spirit and Neil Cole’s approach than before.
I see both strengths and areas for caution in Cole’s discipleship approach.
One key strength is reproducibility. This is an area the “Attractional” church model really struggles with as it requires a lot of energy, money, and talent to run this type of church to a standard that people are used to in the regular world. Anyone who has started a new church plant will know this. The “Organic” approach, on the other hand, requires very little resource, and in fact funnels a large part of the most available resource -time- into relationship building.
Another strength is that those groups of people who would never even consider the Christian Church as a place to meet their spiritual yearnings are within reach. By going to them, tribes like Tradies, Goths & Emo’s, Atheists and hardcore metal fans can all fall into the relationship circles of Christians and therefore the gospel.
The main areas for caution are that of leadership development and maintaining sound doctrine. In reading the book you very much get the sense that new believers become leaders of these new faith communities pretty quickly, raising obvious questions around spiritual maturity and wisdom. I am in two minds about this. On one hand, leadership of a church (regardless of size) in my tribe (Anglicans) is predicated on at least 4 years of full-time theological training. On the other hand, when Paul and Co were starting churches in the new testament they “appointed elders for them in every church, with prayer and fasting they committed them to the Lord” so says Acts 14:23 [ESV]. They didn’t send them off to bible college for 4 years before they were counted worthy to lead. If it was good enough for Paul, should it also be good enough for us?
On balance, if you could ensure sound doctrine underpinned each new faith community being developed, I reckon Cole’s approach has real merit.
The seekers are looking, but not in the Church
This article flashed up from the SydAng ‘vaults’ today, and Jodie McNeil proposes cancelling all evangelistic events (craft nights, sporting nights etc) in favour of ploughing the time & money released by doing so into upping the quality of the Sunday church service. The theory is that even the Christians don’t like church (which is probably true), so surely those non-attenders will also not like it, so let’s make it better.
I completely disagree (sorry Jodie).
I contend that most people (yes most, not a few or some) are not all that impressed with super slick church with all the artistic bells and whistles, wonderful cakes and glorious coffee. The result is that a large proportion of the community is not going to step foot into a church (aside from the occasional wedding or funeral) no matter how many times you ask them. Never.
The Kevin Costner approach (build it and they will come) simply will not cut it and is a poor use of resources.
So how do people meet Jesus? By God’s people showing Jesus to them, where they are (not on our ‘home turf’), through a missionally lived life. This will take a massive re-orientation of people’s perspectives and views of being the church (which was never about Sunday if you read the NT), but once you get ‘it’, thinking of the Sunday gathering as the locus of sharing Jesus just does not make sense.
9 Marks vs Willow Creek
I mentioned the so called “Willow Creek Confession” in a previous Post.
If you’re interested in some analysis on their “answer” to the problems Willow discovered, check out Jonathan Leemans blog over at 9 Marks where he analyses Willows new program - Reveal.
Very interesting reading…particularly if your church is a Willow devotee…
Sometimes the truth hurts
In my attempts at understanding the different demographic profiles of my area I thought I’d do some research on Sydney’s Sub-Cultures. In my search I came across a site of a so called ‘Religious Academic’ from Sydney. I’m not sure if he has anything particularly interesting to say, however, I found this blog comment which I thought was very pertinent.
http://teusner.org/2006/10/18/sydney-anglicans-new-site/
I have reproduced the comment here in it’s entirety as it’s worth reading. I’ll give you a minute…
As for Sydney culture and what/how is it misunderstood by some Sydney Anglicans … that could almost turn into a book project! On the one hand these folks are on the side of the angels in their desire to pass on the gospel of Christ to others, and whatever eccentricities and failings there may be found, God works out the details. Now with that in mind, I would frame my observations and/or criticisms around several topics.
A). The cultural exegesis of Sydney is hampered in general by the social stratification of the Diocese - it is largely populated by those who hold to conservative middle-class values and lifestyles. Now they are not peculiar in this stratification as other churches suffer from similar problems. The difficulty is that in a middle-class dominated network of congregations, social stratification occurs as “like attracts like”. It is very hard for the church ethos and style and theology espoused in these networks to effectively translate beyond the bubble — it does not really reach very well into the lives and experiences of blue-collar working class people (and the suburbs that are characterised by blue-collar values).
B). Another correlative is that its success is found among certain clusters of young adults many of whom have undergraduate degrees (Uni of Sydney, Uni of NSW, Macq Uni — but poorly under-represented in UWS). Out of that talent pool come younger lay leaders as well as many who pursue theological training (and become ordained to the ministry). These networks tend to also be shaped and reinforced by shared experiences and shared values and shared techniques in conducting lay ministries. The end result is “like attracts like”, and those outside the general mould either are marginalised or never come within the orbit of contact. So the assumptions about Sydney culture (be it Anglo-Celt stock or conservative East Asian stock) tend to be limited by their own horizons and spheres of contact.
C). The exegesis of culture tends to yield a certain sameness in perspective about how Sydneysiders behave and think, which works fine in limited boundaries (like on uni campuses, in lower north shore suburbs etc). The strength they possess is being able to engage with specific patterns of thought held by fringe dwellers of the church (those who occasionally attend a church) or those who essentially hold to a fairly dogmatic way of viewing reality in the first instance (imagine a hard-boiled fundamentalist atheist who hands out tracts promoting the Humanist Manifestoes and Origin of Species). It is generally easier for someone whose personality traits and experiences of life fit into fixed patterns of thinking about “right/wrong; true/false”.
D). The tremendous weakness of the exegesis is that anything that stands outside a certain box - that which is largely unfamiliar to the Christian - is negated as marginal, fringe, irrational, and insignificant. I have noted this problem in attitudes manifested about the trends within Sydney where many have gravitated to experimental and do-it-yourself approaches to non-Christian spiritualities (new age, neo-pagan, Goth, neo-Buddhist etc). So “new age” for example is superficially understood as mystical and non-rational, and the response to it is one of debunking beliefs and pointing to the “rationality” of christian beliefs. The emphasis is often on cognitive faith with little appreciation for the intuitive and experiential nature of these alternate approaches to life. The outcome, no serious or sustained interaction takes place with these networks. Instead the assumption is that disbelief in Christianity is coterminous with humanist, atheist and formal agnostic philosophical thinking.
E). There is not a great deal of appreciation for the subtleties entailed in cross-cultural exegesis, cross-cultural communication especially as it pertains to the history of missions. So there is not much interest in looking at Sydney culture(s) anthropologically, sociologically etc. Since the main aim is to persuade people to hear the good news and repent and become discipled, the need to differentiate how social networks and groups form, sustain and maintain themselves is largely not comprehended, let alone acted on. In its simplistic form, a set menu of evangelistic tools are relied on as the primary way for initiating discourses (or monologues).
F). Even when some aspects of popular culture are identified as issues, the exegesis and response tends to be partial or incomplete. For example, the folks have correctly noted the momentum surrounding the novel and film The Da Vinci Code. Various seminars and booklets have been produced that analyse the claims and identify serious misinformation contained in the story. The response is one that offers basic information as to why the novel is unreliable on Christian origins, beliefs and history, complemented by evidences to positively show the gospel records are primary sources alongside a restatement of “believe and repent”. The primary shortcoming is that no refection takes place: what does the Da Vinci Code say back to the church about its “unpaid bills”? There is little recognition of the manner in which people mistrust institutions like Churches, and the suspicion that information has been suppressed (e.g. secret gospels suppressed and recently recovered). Alongside that is how the Da Vinci Code has helped to inform people who have already begun a spiritual journey into non-Christian pathways — none of this engaged with let alone acknowledged as issues that need to be addressed in dialogue.
G). Curious and sad gaps also emerge in ministry efforts. For example one of the major congregations (in Centennial Park) is located next to the suburb of Sydney best known for its male gay population. The congregation has been big, courtesy
of its university-student base, but hardly any exegesis of the gay culture, the spiritualities being explored in gay culture (goth, vampire, neo-pagan, neo-Buddhist, new age), and very little response except by way of common rejection of homosexuality as a moral problem. Other examples could no doubt be brought forward, but I think this illustrates the point of either having a narrow understanding or a narrow sphere of interaction with the culture(s) of Sydney generally.
H). The problem ensues further where some individuals emerge as expert voices on specific topics, but the underlying unanswered question is to what extent is the individual credentialled and recognised as an expert in the first place? For example, a novel has been composed about Islam but it is unclear if the author has studied Islamic studies at university, is conversant in the sacred language (Arabic), or has had any cross-cultural training in ministry with Muslims. The difficulty as I see it is a reified picture of Islam arises and others untrained in the field rely in part on it as a guide to knowing and understanding (or simply dismissing) the various communities in Sydney (Turk, Lebanese, Chinese, Paksitani etc) that are Islamic.
I). If one can speak of a “general Aussie outlook” in Sydney (a dangerous idea I know), I do not see how the Diocese can meaningfully interact with it on a widespread scale. We are in a culture where many people have found themselves
in self-sufficiency in career and material acquisitions and manage on their daily routines without the imperative to belong to a congregation that gathers every week. It is not necessarily “godless”, but the “theory of God” just does not figure high on the richter scale for people unless severe personal crises compel a lot of soul-searching. If one is in “survival mode” trying to just make ends meet from week to week with a basic pay-packet there is not a lot of time to be philosophical or theological. What benefit is there then, asks the Aussie, in commuting to a church and affiliating with people with whom I have next to nothing in common? As basic sociological studies show capitalism has been the single greatest eroder of traditional social structures especially relative to family units, and churches tend to idealise certain modern middle class versions of family that are unrelated in many ways to the experiences of many Sydneysiders. Life is exceedingly busy and sociologically the Diocese is unable to compete with the trends let alone change the behaviour and attitudes in the community relative to work obligations, material comfort and recreation. To add in Sunday meetings is to add yet more onto an already overloaded schedule for most people — even assuming they were the least bit interested in what happens at church.
J). Stories of success in some parts of the Diocese are often not probed deeply for a mature grasp of what is happening in Sydney generally. A relative of mine by way of marriage told me how the congregation he is part of is bursting at the seams. Multiple church services are needed, attendance rates are high, and programmes are booming. I asked, “and out of this remarkable growth in numbers how many have come from a non-Christian and non-church background?” After a moment the reply came “none that I know of”. The “success” was achieved by people already in the fold commuting from other gatherings (Anglican or otherwise). Now in citing that anecdote I merely point to the veneer of seeming success. I am not claiming that all efforts fail to ever reach non-Christians, there clearly are people who convert to faith in Christ and join these congregations. However, what is touted as success is not
necessarily always a case of adding in some of that targeted 10% of the Sydney population by 2012. And it would be possible to go on with more observations. I trust God blesses their efforts, but I feel some sober reflections are honestly needed.
If you’re in Anglican circles, that should sting, at least a bit. I personally reckon most of what this guy says has truth to it, though, to be fair, there are no doubt various exceptions within the diocese.
I was already thinking about some of the issues raised. He mentions people from a blue-collar socio-economic background i.e. the Tradies, labourers and factory workers. It turns out that (according to the 2006 Census), 36% of Stanhope is blue-collar. I can say pretty confidently that these guys are not going to be comfortable turning up to church, or at least church in the way it is generally conceived. Our churches generally suit middle/upper-class, professional, highly literate people. Singing songs together, listening to a talk etc is so out of this groups experience that it’s no wonder “attractional” methods won’t cut it.
Clearly we need to be bringing the gospel to them and then probably explore some alternative form of corporate gathering.
Man, so much to think about.
Missional Practice: Removing Barriers
The family and I started at our new church on Sunday.
WIP Book Review…The Attractional Compromise?
I am 3/4 of the way through the Stetzer book…it is very, very good.
One interesting challenge posed is the question of time and effort put into the corporate worship service. Specifically are we asking so much from our members in putting on a slick, all-singing, all dancing (for the Charismatics) event that time building relationships with the un-churched is compromised. Stetzer challenges that it would be better to achieve excellence in much simpler ways and free up people’s time for connecting outside the church.
As someone who has served in Music Ministry (a hugely time intensive endeavour), this makes perfect sense to me.
Report back soon.
Jeff
It’s Raining Men, Hallelujah
I really do feel sorry for those poor hacks auditioning for Australian Idol who can’t hold a tune. Fortunately for many of them they are oblivious to their own dearth of vocal talent and hence suffer little embarrassment. I can actually sing in tune and so singing in public doesn’t usually cause me shame…usually.

A few years ago I was at a work function for a few days which included the obligatory “evening activities” (translation…lots of people getting hammered and doing things they normally wouldn’t with their work colleagues). Anyway, one of the activities was Karaoke. Being someone who could sing equalled automatic nomination for me from my work team, which would have been OK except the song in question was ‘It’s raining men’…hallelujah.
If you went to public school like me, I’ll spell it out…this is bad.
Round 37: Attractional vs Missional
There’s no doubt that for many American and Australian megachurch’s, the 90’s was all about attractional ministry strategies. Ultra-professional, age-tailored programs and events being run out of increasingly larger, multi-million dollar facilities.
The emerging and missional conversation is, in part, a reaction and dissatisfaction with the perceived slickness and commercial-ness of the attractional mega-church approach.
The big news recently, of course, has been the admission by Willow Creek, America’s megachurch darling, that much of it’s attractional, program driven strategy has been ineffective, or at least much less effective than hoped. Their response to this, unsurprisingly, has been another program!
And so the debate rages…Attractional or Missional.
Missiologist, Ed Stetzer contends that attractional strategies have become largely ineffective in reaching contemporary culture. He speaks within the North American context, however the question begs whether his observation rings true for Sydney.
My observation is some of our churches do have a skewed emphasis on attractional strategies - well oiled Sunday worship services with funky kids programs, men’s and women’s events, evangelistic rally’s etc. Not that any of these things are bad. Many are good and some are helpful. The general feeling, however, is that, like the States, attractional strategies are not producing results.
So what’s the problem?
The first problem is attendance - getting people to come along to these events is a struggle. Reasons are many, however, I think two key ones are church members being reluctant to invite and the un-churched being sceptical of organised religion.
The second problem is effectiveness. In his book, Radical Reformission, Mark Driscoll likens many of these events to a shot-gun wedding, only the groom in this case is Jesus. His point is that many in our communities lack even a basic understanding of Christianity and Jesus, and thus giving a gospel presentation followed by a call to faith is like getting married during a first date.
Some evangelistic programs, like Christians in the Media’s “Introducing God” recognise this and take several sessions to bridge this knowledge gap. Most though do not.
So to the question, Attractional or missional?
It think this round goes to missional, but stay tuned for the next round in this fight…
On mission
Jeff

