Worship & the Consumer

The Apple Newton is a forgotten, often maligned, example of Apple getting it wrong. Debuted in 1993 it was the first Personal Digital Assistant. You could write notes (it had handwriting recognition), print, email, and even send faxes from this tablet. Yet it never really caught on, in part because it was large with a short battery life. So it was more of a curiousity than a full throated tool. Thus, it was pulled from the market.

That is a common practice for businesses who want to succeed. When a product isn’t selling, it is often redesigned, improved, or simply replaced by something that does sell. In this way manufacturers respond to their audience—the consumer. The manufacturer who responds quickly with a product the consumer wants will succeed. The manufacturer who insists on selling something no one buys will go out of business.

Sadly, many churches follow this same practice. Over my 14 years of Pastoral ministry I’ve been to all manner of conferences about church growth. From worship styles, to sticky ministry, to building plans, these conferences promise to attract new families, keep old families and help the church grow. They do so by following the market. They ask what people want in a church and try to help you provide those desires. Sounds good, right? But what if the congregation isn’t the audience?

Now, when Apple or Microsoft or Amazon adapt to the consumer it is a good thing. They have identified their audience and they are tailoring business to meet that audience’s needs. But they have to rightly identify their audience. If Apple misidentifies their audience, they will build the wrong products and won’t stay in business too long. Imagine a $500 Apple Watch tailored for the unemployed. So Apple, and any business, must invest the time in identifying their audience.

So must the church. But not the way we have been. Like Apple, we do demographic studies about the key target audience for our religious goods and service. The problem is this: the church’s audience is not the consumer of religious goods and services. The Church’s audience is God. Consider Sunday morning worship. Despite the complaints of disgruntled churchgoers, the congregation is not the audience for Sunday morning worship. We play a role, but we are not the audience. The audience is God. When we misidentify our audience, when we fall for the consumer demand model, we neither worship God nor encourage one another.

We don’t worship God because we have made the service about the congregation. We are not concerned about whether the music is Christ-centered or if the Preaching honors Him. We aren’t concerned whether the prayers, the benediction, or even passing the peace will point hearts toward Christ. We become consumed with ‘did they like it?’ and ‘will they come back?’

In turn that fails to encourage the flock. As I look at the New Testament, it seems to me that our modern conceptions of worship, many of which stand or fall on personal preferences, are quite shallow. Peter and John worship after they’ve been beaten, yet we can’t worship if the song is more than a few years old. Paul worships in prison, yet we can’t worship if the sermon is too long. Steven worships as he is being murdered, yet we cannot worship if the music doesn’t ‘speak to me.’

Apparently worship is not something that music gives me. Worship is not something that only happens in ideal settings. Worship is not dependent upon my comfort. Worship is the overflow of my joy in Christ. When that joy overflows, I worship with bad music, boring preaching, and monotone prayers. But if that joy is not overflowing then even the best music, preaching, and prayers can only entertain. But when worship is built upon the demands of the religious consumer, he never learns to really worship. Moreover, as we adapt our styles to suit their demands we also reinforce the same selfish conception of worship.

Now, we should not ignore the concerns of the flock. We should carefully listen to every concern. The brother or sister who indicates something is wrong with our worship may have valuable insight. Perhaps we’ve unwittingly ruined worship by making it about the musicians, the elders, the pastors or even the setting. Maybe we’re unintentionally drawing hearts and minds onto ourselves instead of our Lord. In such cases we need to hear that feedback, repent and alter course. But when the concerns are selfish, we have a duty to teach them to really worship.

Stories of Christian Persecution | Fatima of Saudi Arabia – YouTube

So, I just came across this video from Open Doors. It’s a year old, but a powerful message nonetheless.

via Stories of Christian Persecution | Fatima of Saudi Arabia – YouTube.

The story revolves are Fatima, a martyred Christian woman in Saudi Arabia, who said she was a ‘unto death a Christian.’ That leads into exploring the idea of risky Christianity and the observation that Christianity is always risky. I wholly support that idea and the conclusion. But, that got me thinking.

What does it look like to be a ‘unto death a Christian’? Is it even possible, when American Christianity is built upon making people comfortable, to be ‘unto death a Christian’? Is Christianity really risky in America?

Let me tell you the story of Daria. Continue reading

What do ya’ know?

When I read this:

Or even a happy one. Not long ago, an enterprising professor at the Harvard Business School named Mike Norton persuaded a big investment bank to let him survey the bank’s rich clients. (The poor people in the survey were millionaires.) In a forthcoming paper, Norton and his colleagues track the effects of getting money on the happiness of people who already have a lot of it: A rich person getting even richer experiences zero gain in happiness. That’s not all that surprising; it’s what Norton asked next that led to an interesting insight. He asked these rich people how happy they were at any given moment. Then he asked them how much money they would need to be even happier. “All of them said they needed two to three times more than they had to feel happier,” says Norton.

I thought:

“One’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions,” Luke 12:15 (ESV).

What do ya know? Jesus was right all along.

White Privilege or Just Privilege?

Much has been said lately about white privilege. The rise in racial tensions brought about the revelation that WASPs have an invisible advantage over minorities. When I hear this I immediately think of some questions from my own life:

  • Was it privilege to grow up in a converted attic?
  • Was it privilege that I couldn’t afford to go away to college so I stayed home, worked, and earned a general studies degree at a community college?
  • Was it privilege that my wife and I both worked while I earned a Master’s degree?
  • Was it privilege when my parents went bankrupt starting their own business?
  • Was it privilege when that business survived through hard work and determination?
  • Was it privilege when my wife’s Popou came to the US with nothing in the 1930s?
  • Was it privilege when my father-in-law put food on the table by shoveling coal into blast furnaces at U.S. Steel?
  • Is it privilege that I work three jobs to feed my kids?
  • Is it privilege that making ends meet includes no date nights, rare family outings and even rarer vacations?

While privilege of various kinds does exist, the privilege being attacked by some evangelicals today isn’t actually white privilege. It is privilege that has more to do with socio-economic factors than it does with the color of one’s skin. If we are ever to put race problems behind us, it may be wiser to stop attributing every difference to race and look for other, plausible explanations for differing outcomes.

A Great Commandment Advent: Use this Advent to grow in love for God and others.

With November upon us, it won’t be long before Advent commences. The season of Advent, not commonly observed in modern, evangelical churches, begins the 4th Sunday before Christmas and runs until Christmas. This season of the church calendar encourages Christians to prepare for the celebration of Christmas. Advent is a call to treat Christmas as more than a reason to exchange gifts and visit loved ones. This Advent season, I encourage you to prepare for Christmas via a Great Commandment Advent. Continue reading

TGC | The Gospel Coalition

My interactions with this guy gave me the feeling of being pursued without the reality of pursuit.

via TGC | The Gospel Coalition.

In the linked article, Rachel Cohen addresses the issue of virtual relationships and the need for real, face-to-face relationship. While she speaks to youth, specifically, I share her concern for the Church at all ages. The proliferation of social media gives us the appearance of relationship with out real relationship. However, God clearly designed us for interpersonal relationships. In fact, authentic discipleship, in my view, cannot be done over the internet. It requires investment in face-t0-face, life-on-life relationships.

What do you think?

Christmas as Christian or Cultural Event

Part of the explanation is simple: Christmas in the United States has become a cultural event about food, family and gifts.

via – The Washington Post.

via – The Washington Post.

One of many articles written about the 10% of churches that cancelled Sunday Worship on Christmas.  But, I think this quote really gets to the heart of the matte:  culture.  Which raises the question:  when should we (Christians) capitulate to culture and when should we stand firm?

How Charity Can Be Toxic, Just in Time for Christmas | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction

The point is, let’s examine the outcome of care. When I talk about the progression of one-way giving, first you elicit appreciation. You do it twice, you elicit anticipation. What’s more, you do it three times and it becomes expectation that he’s going to do it again. Four times and it’s an entitlement. By the fifth time it’s dependency. They’ve done it every year and we count on it. If anybody has been doing this kind of work, they begin to see that pattern.

via How Charity Can Be Toxic, Just in Time for Christmas | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction.

via How Charity Can Be Toxic, Just in Time for Christmas | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction.

A timely conversation about the real costs of certain types of benevolence.  As the Church, we are called to use our plenty to meet the needs of others.  Doing so, without the unintended consequences mentioned about, does require a certain amount of wisdom.

Anyway, read the whole thing and feel free to add your 2 cents.