The New Stereotype

The state of the church today? (ht: marc johns)

The house lights dim, colored gels are illuminated as smoke machines fill the room. The first chord rings out as the drummer lays down a heavy beat. As the rockin’ ends- a video explodes onto the large HD screen with welcoming images of the theme of the day. As it fades to black, the lights come up to a hipster, faded jeans wearing, MTV’esk guy in his mid to late 20′s talking about… love. community. come as you are. welcome to (insert cool name that we have to look up in the dictionary)… church.

This has become the new tradition. The church has traded hymnals and suits for pre-worn jeans and multimedia. Is it bad? Not entirely. The church body at Forefront has many of these same elements involved in our weekly worship gatherings.

Is it sinful? No, it’s not a sin to have these things as part of your corporate worship experience.

Is it relevant? No. Though many would say yes, I’ve been debating the idea of relevance in my head for a few years now. What is relevance? Relevant is defined by Dictionary.com as, “1. Bearing upon or connected with the matter in hand; pertinent. 2. Tending logically to prove or disprove a fact of consequence or to make the fact more or less probable and thereby aiding the trier of fact in making a decision.”

As I see it, in light of this definition; the “church” should aim at being connected to teaching/educating/discipling people towards the truths about God & eternity. That is the matter at hand for mankind. That is what connects them to the message of Jesus. That is relevant.

Now lights, video, cameras, bands, multimedia, etc. are great. They help break down the stereotypes of a generation. A previous generation (not all but some) that focused on money, huge buildings, growing “their” church and not “God’s” church. But, for most of the country, the new stereotype is exactly like the opening paragraph. What is the reason we live and breathe as the local church? How are we relevant to the community and people who need Jesus? It’s not our band, videos, or hipster pastors the church planting organizations are pumping out. It’s connecting people to Jesus.

I think the church has a new image problem. It’s only going to get worse until we step in and make the changes necessary to show the world we’re done trying to “be cooler than your grandmas church” and strive to “be people who simply love like Jesus.” I have some ideas, well more just ramblings. We’ll hit it up next time.

But… what about you?
How do you look at relevance?
Does the local church in America measure up?
How do we change the current paradigm?
Let’s talk it out people…

  • Jon Martin

    I love it! Right on track!

  • http://www.bobbysfam.com BobbyV

    Love it! Someone once told me that if my focus was on trying to get and stay “relevant”, I was already too late to the party. Great stuff!

  • Pingback: The Next Episode | Branded With Love

  • Brandon

    I have been thinking about this a lot lately also. I feel like we get in this rut as a church and we expect or hope that the people will come to us because we have all the coolest new tech. Don’t get me wrong…I love tech, but I think it is more about getting out and meeting the people where they are ( I mean that is what Jesus did…right). Haveing all the new tech. that is out ther is good and it aids us in our ministry, but it should never become the focal point.

  • fletch

    The new church paradigm has to be established OUTSIDE the church – in the community. In order to connect people to Jesus, we are going to have to go to them. They are no longer coming to us (the church) whether we’re ‘cool’ or not. Looking forward to hearing your ideas for loving like Jesus. Great post!

  • chris

    Wow dude. This is great stuff. I’m with you on the relevance thing. That dead horse was beat down a long time ago. Well put.