We all know
an exclusive diet of Big Macs isn’t just a bad idea—it’s more like
suicide. But it’s even worse to gobble down the half-eaten burgers and
cold rubbery fries you find under the back seat of your car. Repulsive,
right? But Christians are doing the very same thing.
It wasn’t that long ago that Bill Hybels stood in front of his
church—Willow Creek, one of the early pioneers of church growth
theory—with his mea culpa. (I’d link to the video of Hybels saying, “We made a mistake,” but they’ve apparently pulled it from their website. But here’s a link
to an early newsflash.) After decades of practicing church growth
principles, Hybels said, “Some of the stuff that we have put millions of
dollars into thinking it would really help our people grow and develop
spiritually, when the data actually came back, it wasn't helping people
that much.” Yeah, kinda like fast food.
Today’s church-growth gurus have repackaged the same church-growth theories in cool-sounding, ministry buzzwords like incarnational, missional, and attractional.
After a few bites, it becomes apparent that it’s nothing more than
half-eaten burgers and cold fries. And it’s not a meal that gets better
with age.
One of the more distasteful aspects of the contemporary version of
church growth is the franchising, the brand propagation. Cookie-cutter
churches are popping up everywhere, powered by church-growth principles,
launched with shrewd marketing strategies, legitimized by impressive
stats, and stamped with the brand of the celebrity leader and his church
franchise. In some cases, you’ll even find the evangelical version of a
PlayPlace and a clown. It’s a pattern that works, established by
corporate, coming to a church near you. Keep Reading >>>
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