A
friend received a mail-out this week, obviously part of a mass mailing. It
advertised a new church start up in a community a few miles from where I live. Actually,
it’s a church that’s been around for a little while—the name isn’t
important—but has recently partnered with a Texas mega-church to become one of
their satellite campuses.
What
this means is that the new church will have its own congregation, band, campus
pastor and ministries. But the main pastor back in Texas will bring the sermon
each week, broadcast live via the Internet. They won’t be an independent local
church anymore but instead will be a part of the Texas church (this of course
begs the question of what possible interest a mega-church a thousand miles and
four states away could possibly have in planting a satellite campus in suburban
Columbia, but we’ll leave that topic for another day).
Simulcast
services are the fastest growing venue for modern churches, and many
congregations are finding them indispensable in reaching new people. There are
several in our own state, with New Spring Church—the state’s largest
congregation and one of the largest in America—being the most obvious example.
We do the same thing on a much smaller scale at my church, where we have a
simulcast service across campus to another building that goes on at the same
time as one of our main services in the worship center.
The
point of my ramblings isn’t this new mode of doing church. If anything is
obvious by this time in American church life, it’s how essential technology is in
order to get the gospel across to our culture. Facebook, Twitter, television
and the Internet are as necessary for today’s churches as horses were to my
circuit-riding forebears in the nineteenth century.
What
really caught my attention was the mail-out itself, and how it interfaced with
modern culture. The more I looked at it, the more I realized that as churches
continue to wrestle with effective means of communicating with lost people, the
more we’re apt to do, well, dumb things. In today’s confused and confusing
environment, it’s easy for churches to lose their way.
The
mail-out advertised a new sermon series preached by the main pastor back in
Texas. It apparently was sent out to tens of thousands homes in our area to gin
up attendance for the new church’s grand opening. I posted the thing at the top
of the blog and, as you can tell, it’s a take-off of Leonardo De Vinci’s famous
painting, “The Last Supper,” that portrays Jesus the night before his
crucifixion, gathered with his disciples for a final meal. For Christians, that
supper sets the pattern for our most sacred worship event.
In
the mail-out, though, it’s not the twelve disciples who surround the Lord.
Instead, the faces of several well-known celebrities are superimposed on the
bodies of the disciples. And this is where things start to get weird.
To
the left of Jesus, for instance, instead of James spreading his arms in
supplication of the Lord, there’s Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys NFL
football team, with a stern look on his face as he plans how to make his next
billion dollars. Beside him is Kim Kardashian, replacing Philip, with a vacant
look on her immaculately made-up face. To her right, Labron James spins a
basketball on his finger where Thomas used to sit.
Closest
to Jesus, on his right side, is Ellen Degeneres instead of the beloved
disciple, John. Peter has morphed into Lance Armstrong in full cycling gear. Finally,
Katy Perry’s smiling face with that adorable pageboy ‘do sits atop Judas’
shoulders (I don’t know how she feels about that).
Thankfully,
they didn’t replace the face of Jesus with the image of the Texas pastor,
although surely they must have considered it.
The
title of the upcoming sermon series is “What would Jesus say to…” with the
implication that the Lord would have some special message to these celebrities.
I guess the thought was that in our celebrity-crazed country, non-believers
would be hooked into this kind of sermon series and want to come to the new
church in order to find out what Jesus would say to them, too.
Maybe
they will. I guess I can see how a non-believer might just do that. And in
fact, the Texas mega-church has a track record of reaching tens of thousands of
people with the gospel with just this kind of approach. Maybe there’s so little
knowledge of the Bible today compared to so much immersion into our
reality-TV-show-culture—where we have the illusion that the lives of the famous
people on TV somehow have something to do with how we live—that presenting Katy
Perry alongside Jesus will lead someone to trust Jesus as their Savior. Maybe.
But
instead of lifting someone’s attention from Kim Kardashian to Jesus, wouldn’t this
approach be just as likely to drive down someone’s possible interest in Jesus
to Kardashian’s level of spiritual emptiness? I mean, the dynamic would be just
as likely to work its way down as up, wouldn’t it? Maybe even more so, since our
neo-pagan culture has much more familiarity with Kardashian than with Jesus.
And
in my middle-aged, curmudgeonly brain, I just wonder if the visual imagery of
Jesus with this crowd of celebrities doesn’t subtly communicate something that at
best trivializes the gospel. At worst, you have to wonder if it doesn’t in fact
demean the Lord.
So
how exactly can we in churches effectively engage the culture for the sake of
the gospel without losing our way? If anything, the “What Would Jesus Say To…”
sermon series at least offers the opportunity, for some of us at least, to ask
ourselves some questions. I’m really not trying to focus too much on this
single situation. The fact is, every pastor I know is dealing with the same,
urgent situation. We all want to do whatever it takes to reach the lost people
around us. So here are the questions I’m asking myself, as I reflect on “What
Would Jesus Say To…”:
·
In
our rush to be relevant to the culture, how far are we willing to go in
blending cultural values with the biblical gospel?
·
As
the church engages the culture, where is the line that, if we cross it, we’ve
gone too far?
·
At
what point does the gospel lose its distinctiveness when we try to package it so
that it’s more accessible to our culture?
·
Does
good taste matter anymore?
·
Does
reverence for Christian truths, symbols and figures matter anymore?
·
How
do we do effective evangelism in a culture so secular that it has little
familiarity with biblical truth?
·
In
a culture that believes all truth is relative, what’s the practical difference
between a sermon series that asks, “What would Jesus say to…” with one that
asks, “What would the Buddha say to…” or “What would Muhammad say to…”?
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