Thursday, May 24, 2007

Local Boy Makes REAL GOOD

I know Mark Batterson about whom this article is written. He is the son in law to the late Pastor Bob Schmidgall who was my pastor at Calvary Church in Naperville for many years. He married Pastor's Daughter and moved to DC. I hadn't heard how he is doing but when I read this I recognized him. He has a blog which if you're a pastor you must read. He really nails it.

He probably had earned the right more than anyone to say, we don't know how to do church in America. He went there with the A/G to plant. Now he is innovating.

There is a lesson for all of us. When he said, "The coffee shop is the well of today where you meet seekers" I thought what a waste of time we engage in by trying to get people to come to our church.

Let's go to the well and see who needs a drink.


Good on Mark.

Pastor: What the Church Lacks Most is Guts

By

MCLEAN, Va. – The greatest problem in the Church isn't a lack of education or resources or a need for better worship or preaching. But what the church lacks most is guts, says the leader of a flourishing “twenty-something” church.

It's time for a leadership "gut check," said Mark Batterson, lead pastor of National Community Church in Washington.

Over 500 leaders of twenty- and thirty-somethings nodded their heads realizing what they needed wasn't just more information on how to do ministry, but the guts to actually put faith into practice.

It was a Friday afternoon and the second day of the Leadnow Conference, organized by The Rightnow Campaign for the first time in the Washington Metropolitan Area. Conference attendants had already gone through a day and a half of sessions and discussions on the emerging generation and how to build a successful twenty- and thirty-something ministry. By Saturday, when the conference ends, some may be heading back to their churches and doing "ministry as usual" without implementing all the tips and insights they picked up in the past two days.

"What we really need at the end of a conference like this is the guts ... not more information ... just the guts to step out and do what God has called us to do," said Batterson.

"Where [are] my guts to step up and step out in faith?" he asked the crowd.

It took guts for Batterson and his wife to pack their bags and move from Missouri to Washington where they had no guaranteed salary or place to live. Today, Batterson has a church in three locations that draws around 1,200 attendants, most of whom are in their twenties.

The twenty- and thirty-something crowd isn't a major focus group in many churches, noted Dan Kimball, founding pastor of Vintage Faith Church in Santa Cruz, Calif., which targets the emerging post-Christian culture. But there are a lot more church plants that are resonating with people in their twenties, he said.

And church plants geared toward the emerging generation have taken on a lot more creativity in their reach. Creativity in a postmodern or post-Christian world, as some leaders say, requires some guts.

"[T]here are ways of doing church that no one's thought of yet," said Batterson. "God is infinitely creative. We need lots of different kinds of churches because there are lots of different kinds of people."

Batterson set up his church in the marketplace, targeting millions of passer-bys at Union Station and drawing regular crowds at their own coffeehouse – what he called the "wells" of today.

"As long as the Church stays on the periphery, our culture will not experience an epiphany," said the Washington pastor.

"The more we ignore culture, the more irrelevant we become and if the Church ignores culture, the culture will ignore the Church," he said.

But imitating culture can be a form of suicide on originality and can lead to cultural conformity. If we don't shape culture, then the culture will shape us, he continued.

Then there's the option of condemning culture. Condemnation, however, is a cop out, said Batterson. The Church has to start offering better alternatives rather than point the finger. If the Church condemns the culture, the culture condemns the Church.

So there's only one option left – create culture. Criticize by creating, said Batterson, quoting Michelangelo. Engage, create and redeem culture, he added.

Challenging the ministry leaders to step out and redeem the culture, Batterson told them they need more preaching guts, leadership guts, and evangelism guts.

And along the way of revealing some boldness, leaders are also going to have to be willing to look foolish.

"Faith is the willingness to look foolish," said Batterson. "If you aren't willing to look foolish, you won't experience the miracles of God."

3 comments:

goprairie said...

I beleive this is exactly the sort of thing I had in mind regarding getting people involved at LOL via 'ownership' and then use of the outdoors areas, tapping into 'glory of God' issues via "beauty and intricacy of nature" issues. You dismissed it: "We don't market God."

Anonymous said...

People in the Fox Valley are overall well fed and well spent...seems to me you need to challenge their comfortability quotient (ie: Holy Spirit induced).
It's the sins of "omission" we seem to forget the ownership of...a little bit of conviction can go along way to leading a person to a paradigm shift in their priorities. The church (little "c") has disconnected from the mission..."to the Glory of God"...read some John Piper...that happens by souls saved and lives changed because the way, the truth, and the life have been found..."the greatest song of all, is the song of the redeemed"...
does that take guts? ...call it what you want...but it always leads to Jesus
There are plenty of hurting and seeking people in the FV...the fields are ripe...let's be Jesus people who absolutely have the best news in eternity

Anonymous said...

Remember the adage, "no guts, no glory...? Fits here too - "no guts, no Glory"...

I happen to totally agree with Mark. This is exactly why a lot of "churches" die - totally outta touch with who's really there or near. It's not a profoundly deep subject, but one too many "churches" ignore on purpose because of again...fear.

Jesus never said "come in and hear". He said for US to go OUT and preach the Gospel. I only hope our stiff white-collars aren't too much for us to loosen when dealing with the real world, whether it's in Fox Valley or the crack addict on Cicero near the airport,(or whoever else God puts directly in our path). I just don't want to have to explain to God why I had to ignore what He wanted done (because of other people's choices in the "church"), and I was forced to be blinded by everyone elses ignorance.

Don't forget - Jesus met YOU where you WERE at the time....