Thursday, January 24, 2008

Finding a Church to Call Home

“When men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear" (2 Tim 4:3)

Since my move to Milwaukee, I’ve been looking for a church to call home. I value the Lutheran doctrine and tradition I grew up with, however I’ve also been looking at local non-denominational churches as well. In my experience, non-denominational churches have great support for believers, and many ways to be fed beyond weekly worship whereas the LCMS churches (in my humble experience) do not. At my church in college, Hope CC, there were many ways to get involved beyond 1 hour a week, and many of the classes and small groups were designed to get to the meat of God’s Word. I get excited at the thought of finding such a place in Milwaukee.

Since my search began I’ve visited a few LCMS congregations that are mirror images of the one I grew up in: church on Sunday, Ladies’ Aid, and Sunday School. That’s it. Sermons being preached off a synod-wide printout, and little to no way of being more involved or delving deeper into scripture. Needless to say, I’m a little disappointed. Not that there aren’t great LCMS churches for mature Christians where we can grow in our faith, just that I haven’t gotten to them yet. But that isn’t the purpose of this post.

What I’ve come across lately are Mega Churches, also known as Seeker Sensitive churches. You know the ones I’m talking about: they purchase billboard ads to promote their latest “relevant to your life” message, they have videographers and worship teams that make you think you’ve walked into Hollywood, and they focus on creating an “experience” that will drive in traffic and reach more unchurched people.

So what’s wrong with reaching the unchurched? What’s wrong with using your talents at videoediting, singing, or playing guitar to help fellow Christians worship God? The problem is when the noise of the experience drowns out the Holy Spirit.

I feel that my knowledge is not adequate to fully explore this issue and argue my point, nor do I want to plagiarize another man’s work, so I will direct you, faithful reader, to a site that discusses this problem using Perry Noble as an example of a pastor committed to the Church Growth Movement (where the success of a church is defined by number of congregants, not quality of faith and teaching). Read Perry’s thoughts here, his rebuttal to the negative feedback from those thoughts here, then a series by Scott Oliver that explores Perry Noble’s statements and compares them to biblical teachings here.

1 comment:

Jim from OldTruth.com said...

Hi Mandi:
Thanks for the link to my Old Truth blog. In case your search for a good Lutheran church falls through, feel free to contact me, as I attend a Reformed Baptist church here in Milwaukee. I know it's not the same thing as Lutheran, but you are sure to hear a good message out of the bible every week. We are right now preaching through John, a couple of verses at a time; it will take us a few years to complete. Anyway, my contact link is on my website. May the Lord bless you with a good church to attend.
--Jim