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STATEMENT DC249 Pro
And Con Viewpoints: The Seeker-Church Movement (Arguing
with Success article by Douglas Groothuis is below.)
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"Seeker-Sensitive for the
Sake of the Gospel"
by Mark Mittelberg
In 1975 a church was started in Willow Creek
Theater in Palatine, Illinois. Its mission was to reach irreligious
people and turn them into fully devoted followers of Christ. Its
approach was to present an uncompromisingly biblical message in
relevant terms that these people would understand. The founding
leaders of this church felt God was calling them to take this
approach, which they believe God has since blessed.
In 1995 Willow Creek Community Church celebrated
its 20th anniversary in Chicago's United Center with 20,000 in
attendance. Far more important than the number of people who attended
are the changed lives this number represents. Story after story can be
told of previously unchurched men and women who came to understand the
message of the cross, who came to personal repentance, and who came
into discipling relationships and places of service - all as a result
of what God is doing through the ministry of this one church. Over
three years ago the Willow Creek Association began with a mission to
help churches turn irreligious people into fully devoted followers of
Christ. Today this growing network of like-minded ministries includes
over 1,600 churches worldwide from more than 70 denominations. They,
too, are bringing increasing numbers of unchurched people to faith in
Christ.
These churches are central players in the
so-called seeker-church movement. The concept of seeker-sensitivity,
properly understood, is not new and not controversial - because it's
biblical. In fact, the apostle Paul said, "Be wise in the way you
act toward outsiders; make the most of every opportunity" (Col.
4:5). He also said, "I have become all things to all people . . .
for the sake of the gospel" (1 Cor. 9:22-23). That last phrase is
key to the goal of the seeker-church movement, which is for its
teachers to proclaim clearly the gospel while remaining true to the
commitment of pleasing God, not people (Gal. 1:10). One of the primary
ways to please God is to raise the priority of finding lost men and
women, who matter deeply to Him, and to present His message to them in
understandable terms, using relevant illustrations and effective modes
of communication.
All of this is with a view to removing
unnecessary barriers and helping these people in their journey toward
Christ. This is the same principle behind sound missionary efforts.
Missionaries are encouraged not only to articulate the gospel, but
also to study the language and culture of the people they hope to
reach. Their goal is to contextualize the message and present it in a
clear and compelling fashion that will bear fruit and build God's
kingdom in that corner of the world. Unfortunately, we often overlook
the need to do this same thing here in North America. As Christians we
often forget that our own evangelical subculture is growing more
distant from the increasingly secular culture around us. The challenge
for us is to develop a missions-mindset and determine how to crack the
cultural code where we live so we can contextualize the message and
effectively reach people in our own back yards. As always, Jesus is
our model. He went out of His way to get close to those He wanted to
reach. He spent time with them; He spoke their language; He taught
them using illustrations they could understand; and He lovingly
challenged them to follow Him. Jesus took risks for the sake of God's
kingdom, and He was misunderstood and criticized for it. In fact,
opponents accused Him of being a glutton and a drunkard, but this was
guilt- by-association. They disparagingly called Him "the friend
of sinners" - a phrase intended as a put-down, but which He took
as a compliment. Jesus came to "seek and to save what was
lost" (Luke 19:10), and before He left, He said to His disciples,
"As the Father has sent me, I am sending you" (John 20:21).
The challenge is to engage in this outreach
ministry in appropriate ways. It's certainly not easy, and there are
inherent dangers. Jesus said sick people need a doctor who will go and
help them. But there's always the risk of the doctor catching the
disease! And there's the temptation to spend time with the patients
but hold back from telling them the full extent of their problem or
from prescribing a treatment they won't like. That's why we caution
church leaders to communicate to their culture without ever
compromising with their culture. Sometimes, in the thick of ministry,
it's hard to see where to draw that line. It's easy to make mistakes,
and many mistakes have been made under the heading of "seeker
sensitivity." But many lessons have also been learned, progress
has been made, and much fruit is being borne. Almost daily I hear
stories of lives being changed. Not long ago I read a thank-you letter
that was sent to one of our pastors from a former skeptic who recently
trusted Christ. She was one of 300 new Christians whom we had the
privilege of baptizing that month. And the pastor to whom she wrote -
the one who baptized her - was himself an atheist 15 years ago when
his wife first brought him to a seeker-oriented church service. It's
stories like these, combined with the biblical imperative to take the
gospel to the whole world, that continue to motivate seeker-sensitive
churches.
Jesus said, "By their fruit you will know
them." Scrutinize this movement carefully - both its teachings
and its results - without relying on media reports or secondhand
rumors. When you're done, I hope you'll roll up your sleeves and join
with us in finding ways to penetrate the culture with the
life-transforming message of the gospel.
Mark Mittelberg is the Associate Director of
the Willow Creek Association, the evangelism trainer at Willow Creek
Community Church, and co-author with Bill Hybels of Becoming a
Contagious Christian (Zondervan, 1994).
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Arguing with Success
by Douglas Groothuis
You can't argue with success - or so most
Americans believe. But you can argue about the meaning of success. The
church-growth movement is after success: reaching the largest number
of people possible through innovative and culturally relevant means.
Healthy churches are growing churches; and, presumably, growth
requires updating worship, preaching, and church architecture.
We must "become all things to all
[people]" in order to win them to Christ (1 Cor. 9:22). Who could
argue with this? Are not many seeker-sensitive churches thriving while
other churches are dying? Despite its growing congregations and
contagious influence, however, the church-growth movement needs to be
evaluated biblically, especially by those who love the church and want
it to grow. American evangelicals have tended to be populist and
pragmatic in their thinking. They have yearned to win as many souls to
Christ as possible through any biblically permissible means. This
zeal, however, has not always been tempered by knowledge. As Os
Guinness warns in Fit Bodies, Fat Minds (Baker, 1994), though
energetic and inventive, this orientation can lapse into appeals to
the lowest common denominator that sacrifice biblical integrity.
Simply drawing a crowd and giving people what they want is not the
calling of Scripture. In their zeal for converts, seeker-sensitive
churches may convert God's message into a form more likely to impress
but less likely to save the unbeliever. If cultural relevance is our
guiding principle for evangelism and church growth, we can become
irrelevant to God's agenda, for the gospel will always contest,
subvert, and make foolish "the wisdom of the world" (1 Cor.
1:20).
We must engage the culture biblically by
renegotiating its assumptions and calling into question its false
gospels, false securities, and false loyalties. How might some aspects
of the church-growth movement be accommodating the gospel message to
worldliness? These observations are not blanket indictments. There is
a broad range of church-growth strategies - some are compromising to
varying degrees while some are perfectly biblical.
First, in order to reach an
entertainment-oriented culture, many churches are adopting an approach
that dishonors the gravity, depth, and substance of biblical truth.
This is sadly evident in many sermons. One megachurch pastor advises
that seeker-sensitive pastors preach for no more than 20 minutes on
topics taken from the self-help section of the bookstore. These
messages must be "light and informal." Instead of offering
an antidote to the superficial and mind-numbing distractions of a
culture that is addicted to amusement, preachers sometimes resemble
talk-show hosts more than impassioned orators of a holy God (1 Pet.
4:11). The banter of mirth often obscures the glory of the gospel.
This criticism does not apply equally to all seeker-sensitive
churches, but the trend cuts deep and wide.
Second, some church-growth pundits champion the
"marketing of the gospel." This notion often goes
uncriticized, since advertising permeates nearly every square inch of
our culture. If marketing other things works well, why not market the
gospel? Marketing attempts to meet an audience's existing desires or
create new desires for the purpose of selling a product. Marketing
typically appeals to selfishness, covetousness, vanity, and fear. It
is the science of psychological manipulation for economic ends. The
gospel is not merchandise that we can buy or sell (Acts 8:18-23).
Rather, it is a gift to offer, a gift to receive, and a life to live.
Although we must understand the unbeliever's mindset in order to speak
the truth in love to him or her (Eph. 4:15), the gospel cannot be
converted into a commercial for Christ. Marketing never chastens or
offends its potential customers. The gospel repeatedly chastens our
self-sufficiency and offends our pride so that we might humbly rest in
the sufficiency of Christ (Matt. 11:28-30). Christianity has no
customers; it has disciples who are disciples only because they have
been brought to their knees before Christ. Jesus initiated His public
ministry by exclaiming, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is
near" (4:17). Preaching repentance is utterly alien and
antithetical to marketing. Therefore, marketing and evangelism are
antagonists, not allies. A church can be advertised, but the gospel
cannot be marketed.
Third, the use of contemporary music and drama
in worship can diminish the appreciation of God's transcendent
holiness, especially if it is presented as a performance for
spectators instead of as an offering to God.1 One churchgoer
interviewed for a television special said he wished his church
services were longer because they were like "a good movie."
It seems he was more entertained than edified. Of course, older music
is not always better for worship. Nevertheless, because much of
popular culture is intellectually insipid, aesthetically impoverished,
and emotionally vapid, contemporary music's incorporation into worship
should be done with surgical care. The medium must fit the dignity of
the message.
We should thank God for creative ways to
evangelize. Church growth through conversion should be our aim. But we
must not become anything less than biblical in order to reach as many
as possible for Christ (Rom. 12:1-2).
Douglas Groothuis, Ph.D., teaches at Denver
Seminary and is the author of Christianity That Counts (Baker, 1994).
NOTES
1 See Rebecca Merrill Groothuis, "Putting
Worship Back into the Worship Service," in Douglas Groothuis,
Christianity That Counts: Being a Christian in a Non-Christian World
(Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1994), 72-84.
This article first appeared in the Spring 1996
issue of the Christian Research Journal.
CRI, P.O. Box 7000, Rancho Santa Margarita, CA
92688 Phone (949) 858-6100 and Fax (949) 858-6111
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