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Gimme That
Showtime Religion
By
John MacArthur
Can the church fight apathy and materialism by feeding people's
appetite for entertainment? Evidently many in the church believe
the answer is yes, as church after church jumps on the
show-business bandwagon. It is a troubling trend that is luring
many otherwise orthodox churches away from biblical priorities.
Church buildings are being constructed like theatres. Instead of
a pulpit, the focus is a stage. Some feature massive platforms
that revolve or raise and lower, with colored lights and huge
sound boards. Shepherds are giving way to media specialists,
programming consultants, stage directors, special effects
experts, and choreographers.
The idea is to give the audience what they want. Tailor the
church service to whatever will draw a crowd. As a result,
pastors are more like politicians than shepherds, looking to
appeal to the public rather than leading and building the flock
God gave them. The congregation is served a slick, professional
show, where drama, pop music, and maybe a soft-sell sermon
constitute the worship service. But the emphasis isn't on
worship, it's on entertainment.
Underlying this trend is the notion that the church must sell
the gospel to unbelievers. Churches thus compete for the
consumer on the same level as the latest TV reality show or a
major motion picture. More and more churches are relying on
marketing strategy to sell the church.
That philosophy is the result of bad theology. It assumes that
if you package the gospel right, people will get saved. The
whole approach is rooted in Arminian theology. It views
conversion as fundamentally dependent on an act of the human
will. Its goal is an instantaneous, superficial decision rather
than a radical change of the heart.
Moreover, this whole Madison-Avenue corruption of Christianity
presumes that church services are primarily for recruiting
unbelievers. Many have abandoned worship as such. Others have
relegated conventional preaching to some small-group setting on
a weeknight. But that misses the point of
Hebrews
10:24-25: "Let us consider how to stimulate one
another to love and good deeds, not forsaking our own assembling
together."
Acts 2:42 shows
us the pattern the early church followed when they met: "They
were continually devoting themselves to the apostles' teaching
and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer." Note
that the early church's priorities clearly were to worship God
and to edify the brethren. The church came together for worship
and edification; it scattered to evangelize the world.
Our Lord commissioned His disciples for evangelism in this way:
"Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations" (Matt.
28:19). Christ makes it clear that the church is not
to wait for or invite the world to come to its meetings, but to
GO to the world. That is a responsibility for every believer. I
fear that an approach emphasizing a palatable gospel
presentation within the walls of the church excuses the
individual believer from his personal obligation to be a light
in the world (Matt.
5:16).
We have a society filled with people who want what they want
when they want it. They are into their own lifestyle,
recreation, and entertainment. When churches appeal to those
selfish desires, they only fuel that fire and hinder true
godliness. Some of these churches are growing exponentially
while others that don't entertain are struggling. Many church
leaders want numerical growth in their churches, so they are
buying into the entertainment-first philosophy.
Consider what this philosophy does to the gospel message itself.
Some will maintain that if biblical principles are presented,
the medium doesn't matter. That is nonsense. Why not have a real
carnival? A tattooed knife thrower who juggles chain saws could
do his thing while a barker shouts Bible verses. That would draw
a crowd. It's a bizarre scenario, but one that illustrates how
the medium can cheapen and corrupt the message.
And sadly, it's not terribly different from what is actually
being done in some churches. Punk-rockers, ventriloquists'
dummies, clowns, magicians, and show-business celebrities have
taken the place of the preacher--and they are depreciating the
gospel. I do believe we can be innovative and creative in how we
present the gospel, but we have to be careful to harmonize our
methods with the profound spiritual truth we are trying to
convey. It is too easy to trivialize the sacred message.
Don't be quick to embrace the trends of the high-tech
superchurches. And don't sneer at conventional worship and
preaching. We don't need clever approaches to get people saved (1
Cor. 1:21). We simply need to get back to preaching
the truth and planting the seed. If we're faithful in that, the
soil God has prepared will bear fruit.
This article originally appeared
here at
Grace to You.
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