Within spiritual formation and similar circles, there has been much criticism of worship as found in evangelical Protestantism. Much
of this criticism is aimed at the seeker-sensitive churches with their
push for polished performances, entertainment, and the desire to keep
the seeker (i.e. unsaved people who are attending the services) as
comfortable as possible by offering them an environment and experience
similar to what they would encounter at a secular gathering or concert. The
idea is that people unfamiliar with church life feel more at home and
will be more likely to return if they do not encounter something foreign
or “weird” in the form of worship. This
approach is obviously working, if one evaluates a church on the basis
of nickels and noses, as the largest churches in the world have adopted
this philosophy. But there has
been a considerable push back against this viewpoint within not only
more conservative evangelical churches but also from the emergent and
spiritual formation camps. Mike
King believes the church should offer an alternative experience and
states, “It should be a bit odd and peculiar for visitors to enter our
sanctuaries and engage in worship. This isn’t bad. It’s good. It shows that we are a subculture that’s distinct.”[1]And
Dan Kimball observes that “many of these very things [methods promoted
by the seeker-sensitive movement] are contrary to what emerging
generations value and are seeking in their spiritual experience...The
things that seeker-sensitive churches removed from their churches are
the very things nonbelievs want to experience if they attend a worship
service. So I don’t think
there will be much controversy about bringing back all the spiritual
elements and going deeper with our teaching!”[2]
It would be hoped that many who have grown tired of the splash and show of consumer-oriented, market-driven strategy would seek out biblically-based churches that major on Christ, the gospel and Scripture. There
are many churches throughout the world that are seeking to please the
Lord, not the consumer, and that draw their marching orders from
Scripture and not from the culture. Some reacting to the seeker-model will head for these churches and be discipled according to biblical principles. Continue at Gary Gilley

No comments:
Post a Comment