ie:missional teaching. glocalizing. living. serving. repenting. incarnating. loving. repeating.

May 5, 2008

The Impending Disintegration of American Denominationalism

Ten months ago when I began this blog, I purposed not to engage in discussion about the denomination in which I have pastored, the Southern Baptist Convention, unless it crossed paths with a subject about which I was writing. This is one of those times.

A recent report from missiologist Ed Stetzer of Lifeway Christian Resources indicated that the Southern Baptist Convention, once characterized (because of its cultural dominance) as the Roman Catholic Church of the southern United States, has entered a downward trend of growth which, he predicts, may not turn around. If you are among those who haven’t yet, you can read the initial report here and the follow up article here.

As would have been expected, the report was hailed in some places (see Ed’s comment threads) and questioned in others. The question that does not seem to have been asked during this is simple: Has the time for heavily organized, bureaucratically inefficient denominational structures passed? My thesis is a simple one and flows from what I see happening:

The era of denominationalism is ending, therefore, time and energy spent attempting to revive them is not redeemed time.

Rather than reviving them, we should be having a planned euthanization. I will not be arguing “post-denominational” in the sense of personal preference or lack thereof, but “Post-Denominationalism” in the sense of no SBC, UMC, PCUSA, etc.

Though Stetzer’s commentary is specific to growth patterns in the SBC, all other denominations in the United States are and have been in decline with the single exception of the Assemblies of God which counts but 2.8 million members (2005). Even the respected National Association of Evangelicals has lost some of its luster since the fall of Ted Haggard, though, as we will see, it never had quite as much luster as was thought. Regardless of the denomination none have matched, via conversions, the growth rate of the population (excepting possibly the AoG), so in percentage of population terms all American denominations have been in decline for decades. At best, a few denominations have grown at the expense of others, the common scenario known as “swapping sheep.”

Is the motivation to “save the denomination” a good enough motivation to go into hyper-drive in funds promoting or doomsday scenarios? I don’t think so. When Jesus said to the people of Jerusalem, “Behold, your house [the temple] has been left to you desolate,” He was warning them that there system of belief was coming to an end. There were no more sacrifices needed, no more pouring out of animal blood, no more Day of Atonement; it was over. Their mistake was that they continued to cling to a structure that God Himself had abandoned. Shall we repeat the same mistake?

Writing with an eye to the Southern Baptist Convention, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary prof, Nathan Finn, recently asked:

So does the SBC have a future? It depends upon what you mean by â??future.â? I suspect the name will be used by some Baptists until Christ comes back. I also think the people called Southern Baptists will always have denominational entities that they financially support. So in one sense, I remain confident that Southern Baptists are here to stay. But if by â??futureâ? one means a vital existence in Godâ??s economy, I have my doubts. Collectively, I fear we are too insular, too sectarian, too pugnacious, too â??Southern,â? too reactionary, too pragmatic, and for sure too proud to have any real future.

While I appreciate Nathan’s balanced thinking, I, for one, am not convinced that any denomination is here to stay and am convinced that the era, like the telegraph, is passing into the historical record and that we have entered the Post-Denominational (PD) era.

Commenting on Ed Stetzer’s original post, SEBTS prof Alvin Reid noted,

For several semesters I have asked our students “how many of you came from an SBC church?” The vast majority. Then I ask, “How many of you want to go back and serve a church just like that?” Almost none. These are seminarians, the ones we still have, and they see a serious need for change. Again, this is anecdotal and simplistic, but here is another idea–have someone do a survey of current seminarians to find out who they listen to on podcasts? Might be revealing.

This is not merely true of the SBC as other denominations are dealing with the same issues. No one is important enough to have cornered the market here.

Also responding to Stetzer was SEBTS president, Danny Akin, who said,

I could not agree with your assessment more! I go to bed thinking about this every night and wake up the same.We are in serious trouble. Our denomination is at a crisis moment and we will either repent, seek the forgiveness and mercy of God and perhaps experience a true and genuine revival from our Lord, or we will continue our present course and simply fade away with the Lord Jesus justly removing His hand of blessing.

But what if no amount of repentance and seeking of forgiveness will bring revival and revitalization to the SBC or any other denomination? What if, like the sacrificial system, their time has run it’s course and God is preparing a new thing? I pray that it will be embraced rather than feared.

Over the next few posts, I will be exploring why I think we will continue down the road toward a Post-Denominationalism world. We’ll see that the SBC and evangelicals have not had either the numbers or the power that we’ve thought and will continue to lose both in the US; that the Kingdom of God is shifting again (as it has before) this time from dominance in the West; and that technology has rendered the need for heavily bureaucratic, densely centralized, financially profligate organizational structures obsolete and that the lessening of the influence of denominations in culture will be inversely proportional to the influence of local churches networking in culture.

March 31, 2008

Richard Mark Lee shoots and scores.

Filed under: Church,Culture,Gospel,Missional,News — Marty Duren @ 3:03 pm

My friend Richard Mark Lee at First Baptist Sugar Hill, GA, (“The Family Church”) lit it up yesterday with a message seeking forgiveness from those in society for the church’s judgmental attitude. It was called, “We’re Sorry, Really.”

You can read about it here, from Joe Westbury of the Christian Index, or listen here.

Great job, Richard!

February 26, 2008

Stetzer Speaks Today

Filed under: Books,Communication,Misc,Missional,News — Marty Duren @ 9:03 am

One eighth of the GBC Evangelism Conference is today at Midway-Macedonia Church in Villa Rica. LifeWay research guru Ed Stetzer co-author of Breaking the Missional Code and the soon to be released Compelled by Love (co-authored with Philip Nation) will be speaking this afternoon.

Check the GBC site for times.

December 17, 2007

A Christmas Tale Report

Filed under: Gospel,Missional,Music,Photos — Marty Duren @ 8:52 pm

A while back I wrote of our opportunity at Lake Lanier Islands Magical Nights of Lights. All the performances are now behind us, so I can reflect on them in hindsight.

The first weekend had weather that could not have been more perfectly ordered. The Saturday night performances (there were four each night) had short-sleeved audiences as the temps stayed in the mid-50’s until about 9:30. It was amazingly comfortable for the second week of December. It had also been dry the entire time which made stage construction and rehearsals go well.

Friday of the second weekend was picture perfect again for weather. The forecast in the first part of the week had not been encouraging, but God gave us fair weather again. Saturday night was when He chose to answer all those prayers for rain…again. It rained from the late afternoon virtually all through the performance times, so we were forced to cancel. Sunday was very, very cold, but we were able to do three performances before it dipped into the 20’s with a strong wind making it simply unbearable.

All in all we think we had somewhere north of 1,000 in attendance even with the cancellations and the bitter cold of the last night. Remarkably, some of the most encouraging comments came from the park employees themselves with whom we were able to interact repeatedly. We’ve been told that Lake Lanier Islands has received a large number of calls commending the performances and we’ve now been asked if we can do something for Easter Sunday.

I’m very, very grateful for such an amazing church–it is humbling to be in partnership with such a people. I’m also eternally thankful that God allows His people to be in partnership in the missio dei. Below are a couple of photos from a dress rehearsal (sunglasses notwithstanding) and you can check out my flickr slideshow–A Christmas Tale 2007. (If you’ve never viewed a flickr slideshow, click the “i” in the middle of the slide to activate any comments on the photo.)
DSC01250

Michael Chassner as a shepherd. You’ve never had chills until you’ve heard a Jewish believer in Jesus sing, “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel and ransom captive Israel! Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel has come to thee O Israel.”

DSC01259

Abigail Duren in performance costume standing in front of the “Christmas” banner.

December 3, 2007

Missional Office Parties

Filed under: Missional — Marty Duren @ 2:51 pm

It’s the most wonderful time of the year, etc, etc.  Actually for many is the most busiest time of the year with shopping, planning, ministry, giving and getting.  And, on top of it all is the annual church Office Party: a group of co-workers (who are constantly telling people that we are spending too much money on gifts), exchanging gifts (between themselves) that few need and fewer can enjoy because most suspect that it really does not need to be done.

This is where we were about 3 years ago when we decided to do something different.   We had already changed from everyone buying gifts for everyone to drawing names.  That cut the gift buying to one per person (with a price limit).  Then we had, what we believe, was a better idea:  no exchanging of gifts at all.  Instead, we would use our money to bless another group outside the office.

So, two Christmases ago we held our annual Office Party and invited all our single moms to attend.  Each of them received a gift from the staff.  Last year we invited our senior adults and each of them received a gas or grocery card (those gifts were actually rebate awards from our church credit card).  Each time the staff provided the eats and drinks.

This year we’re going outside the body.  We’ve invited the business owners from our general locale (there are about 35 such places).  Each business can bring as many as two employees.  We printed invitations on regular Christmas stationery and hand delivered them today.  There were several people very surprised that we were asking for nothing and were not going to receive a collection, but we simply wanted to thank them for being in our community and give them a chance to meet the other business owners on us.

Realistically we’re expecting about 25-30 but if we have a lot more RSVP’s then we’ll bring in the reserves and get some help with the food!  I’m looking for a great time.

Any other ideas on making office parties missional?

November 27, 2007

A Christmas Tale

Filed under: Culture,Gospel,Missional,Music — Marty Duren @ 12:10 pm

Each year the resort known as Lake Lanier Islands, which is a mere 1 mile from our campus, hosts a very popular Christmas attraction called, “The Magical Nights of Lights.” Thousands upon thousands of people pack into cars, vans and buses and pay a hefty amount to drive through a million light display commemorating partridges in pear trees, elves, and the birth of Christ among other things. One feature of recent years has been a living Nativity Scene sponsored by a local church about 10 miles from us. I think that they do it nightly for about 3 weeks leading up to Christmas.

Last year for our New Bethany Christmas presentation, we did a musical drama called, A Christmas Tale, which won rave reviews from our church. The house was pretty full for the three nights that we held it. This year, as a result of the vision of our Worship Pastor, Dan Brothers, we will be doing 24 performances of A Christmas Tale at the Magical Nights of Lights–four performances a night for two consecutive Fri-Sun weekends. A total of three casts, a choir and live band (not to mention sound and lighting personnel and more than 30 volunteers for greeting and inviting). Our performance area will be across from the area known as, Santa’s Workshop, the home of shops, eats and the Holiday Carnival which is a small amusement ride area. Performances have been promoted both in the local news paper and yesterday on the morning show of on of the major Atlanta news channels.

This type of ministry opportunity is exactly what we are regularly hoping to do–it’s outside the walls, it’s different from what people expect and it speaks the cultural language.  We really don’t have any idea what to expect as far as crowds go; we could play for as few as 25 or to a full house (about 300 portable chairs) at each performance.  Our hope is that by being where people are that the glory of God will be displayed and the gospel declared in a way that breaks down barriers, overcomes disillusionment and plants seeds in the lives of many.  Who knows, we might even get to experience a harvest!

November 19, 2007

Kudos

Filed under: Culture,Mission,Missional,News — Marty Duren @ 11:12 am

If you haven’t read Art Rogers’ post today entitled, Maybe this will help…, I would encourage you to do so. Good job, Art.

October 29, 2007

Education, Kids and The Kingdom

Filed under: Family,Mission,Missional — Marty Duren @ 1:19 pm

So, this whole education thing has been bothering be for a while. It seems that there is a tremendous misplacing of emphasis in the Christian community on the value and prominence of education in life and I’m not talking theological education. There is an appearance that many Christian parents value a good education (both middle and high school as well as college) over their child’s place in the kingdom. Probably this results from the parents concern that their child be able to gain a good employment and a steady means of income so that they do not have to live with the parents for the rest of their days. But, which kingdom holds sway in the end?

It is not uncommon for Christian parents to give their children a choice about participating in kingdom activities, while insisting that the child be in school and attend college. I’ve known many a parent who would restrict a child from a church activity (even student worship) because of poor grades, but never known a single parent who refused their child the Friday night football game because they had neglected their daily devotions. Many parents ask Little Johnny or Little Suzy if they want to go to the church’s youth retreat, but force them to go to band camp. And what is to be made of the parent who assents to the child’s not wanting to go to church, but would never assent to the same excuse made about school on Monday morning? Yes, I’m aware that there is some exaggeration to make a point, but it isn’t much.

Of all the excuses that I have heard, the one that has always just killed me is, “Well, if I force them to go to church now, they will not want to go when they are older.” If there needs to be one single example of the spirit of the age invading the church, this is it.

Scripture is explicit that it is the responsibility of the parents to raise children in the nurture and teaching of the Lord. The Lord informed the children of Israel that He desired “Godly seed.” It has never been God’s plan that Christian parents give their children an option toward Godliness, but that Christian parents lead and train in that respect. There are more than enough temptations abounding in the public school and college arenas through which kids have to negotiate on their own without the weight of inconsistent parents who don’t have a spiritual clue themselves. I’ve long believed that kids, rather than rejecting God and church, are actually rejecting the God and church of their parents, a quasi-religious Christian faith that was only exercised 1 hour of the week, never being witnessed in the home or in any practical sense. (This is not to say that all kids who abandon the faith have unfaithful parents, only that that particular diagnosis seems to be overlooked.) Several years ago I spoke with a high school junior who, up until that point, had been as faithful in attendance as her unfaithful mom would allow. She was really struggling with the the reality of faith, when she looked at me and said, “If what my Mother has is Christianity, then I don’t want it.” Case closed.

When our going-on-23 daughter was fifteen, she informed Sonya and I that she wanted to spend the summer in Canada doing missions. Not with a church trip, mind you, but she wanted to go and be a part of something that anyone was doing that would impact the kingdom. So, at the tender age of 16, she boarded a Northwest Airlines flight alone out of Atlanta to spend 7 weeks in Calgary to participate in Crossover Alberta and whatever else she was requested to do. She did the same thing for 7 or 8 weeks the summer of her 17th year. I’m praying now with out son that he, now 16, will spend some time this summer immersed in a kingdom opportunity somewhere.

It seems that there are too many kingdom opportunities that parents are letting slip through the cracks in relation to their kids. Do we remember that they are not our kids after all? Before our kids were even born, we had offered them to the Lord for His service to do whatever He desired. If He want to place them nationally, internationally or locally that is His business. If He wants them married or single, that is His business. I think that churches may be facing an ongoing situation where parents are so flagrantly living according to the priorities of the world that pastors are assuming too much to think that they have any kingdom knowledge at all.

I have a growing concern that the willingness of Christian parents to consistently prioritize the educational realm unwittingly pushes their children into an environment where philosophical naturalism has the upper hand.  It is as if parents, with the constant push for “good grades” are setting their kids up for spiritual failure, if education is not taught within the total framework of Christian living.  My hope would be that parents would awaken to the fact that kingdom living, not Phi Kappa Beta, is the priority of God’s economy.  That knowing God, not knowing trig, is the bearer of eternal fruit and that the missio dei trumps summa cum laude every time.

October 3, 2007

Kept, Book Review

Filed under: Books,Missional — Marty Duren @ 8:58 am

Kept cover Pastor, helper, friend, thinker, innovator, student, prolific source of IT information and unofficial tech support for many bloggers across America, David Phillips has added a new title to his resume: author. The recently published Kept is a devotional commentary on the book of Jude. Very readable at a scant 80 pages, Phillips uses a mix of scholarship and easily accessible teaching to explore this sometimes enigmatic penultimate book of the canon.

Included is David’s own translation of the book of Jude, which, paragraph by paragraph, also serves as the intro to each chapter. I would recommend this book to any lay person as a short intro to Jude or to a pastor looking for a supplement to his own study series. It is available at Missional Press Story for a mere $7.49 through the end of October.

As an aside, Publishing Mogul should also be added to the list of David’s titles as Missional Press is his own brainchild. If you are considering publishing an academic work, commentary or book otherwise missionally aligned, but have been put off by the daunting prospect of a bunch of money up front, consider Missional Press. The book that I am co-authoring, Journeys, will be released by Missional in the upcoming months and I have been very impressed with the process and the product. Check it out.

September 22, 2007

Great Songs for Missional Churches, 1

Filed under: Missional,Music — Marty Duren @ 8:32 am

Have you ever purchased a CD or downloaded it and played it through a few times only half way listening? Have you ever had the experience of hearing a song for the first time after hearing it many times? Perhaps because of sermon prep or a book you’d been reading or a conversation, but something about the lyrics of the song grabs you and demands your attention. That recently happened to me on the song, “Tears of the Saints,” by the group Leeland. It is a song that we will be doing in church soon.

The song is available on iTunes. If you want to watch a video of it being performed at Creation 2007, there is a link on the above site and you’ll need to endure a 30 second registration at MonsterPod. Here are the lyrics:

Tears of the Saints

There are many prodigal sons
On our city streets they run
Searching for shelter
There are homes broken down
Peopleâ??s hopes have fallen to the ground
From failures

This is an emergency!

There are tears from the saints
For the lost and unsaved
Weâ??re crying for them come back home
Weâ??re crying for them come back home
And all your children will stretch out their hands
And pick up the crippled man
Father, we will lead them home
Father, we will lead them home

There are schools full of hatred
Even churches have forsaken
Love and mercy
May we see this generation
In its state of desperation
For Your glory

This is an emergency!

There are tears from the saints
For the lost and unsaved
Weâ??re crying for them come back home
Weâ??re crying for them come back home
And all your children will stretch out their hands
And pick up the crippled man
Father, we will lead them home
Father, we will lead them home

Sinner, reach out your hands!
Children in Christ you stand!
Sinner, reach out your hands!
Children in Christ you stand!

There are tears from the saints
For the lost and unsaved
Weâ??re crying for them come back home
Weâ??re crying for them come back home
And all Your children will stretch out their hands
And pick up the crippled man
Father, we will lead them home
Father, we will lead them home

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