MYTH #9--Jesus prefers mega-Churches and mega-ministries!
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We live in an age of mega-sizing! Bigger is
better! Whatever is mega ought to be better
than what is small-especially is this true
with respect to ministries. The killer
question that is always asked of a church or
a ministry is: "How many?" The living myth is
that Jesus is pleased with these numbers and
the masses, too.
One of the great leaders within the
mega-church movement, Bill Hybels, has
acknowledged that he has been asking the
wrong questions. One of those wrong questions
is the "How many?" question. It just hasn't
produced the transformational change within
the church fellowship and has robbed us from
asking the right questions. Now, after having
participated as pastor of one of the early
mega-churches in the US, as a staff member of
one of the largest para-church ministries and
as a speaker on the largest corporate seminar
platform, I have come to understand the great
limitations of working with the masses.
The damage of buying into this myth of
mega-sizing is threefold:
FIRST-The mega-sizing of the Church hasn't
brought about cultural transformation within
the US. Rick Warren posed a question that
ought to haunt anyone who is concerned about
advancing the Jesus movement: "Tim, why is it
that, even though we have trained thousands
of pastors and now have more mega churches in
our country than ever before, we are not
making any significant penetration into our
culture?" We basically remain at the same
numbers within the Church in the US, year
after year.
SECOND-The mega-sizing myth of the Western
Christian culture serves as a bad example to
the followers of Jesus around the world. If
we are essentially failing in our country,
why export this thinking to the many cultures
of the world?
THIRD-The mega-sizing myth has produced
thousands upon thousands of spectators who
believe they are doing the will of God on
planet earth. Spectators-not participators!
Ministries then become like the football
game-50,000 spectators in the stands, badly
in need of exercise and 22 people on the
field, badly in need of rest. When you serve
as a spectator, it's too easy to substitute
attendance for participation-watching and not
doing-hearers of the word who delude
themselves rather than doers of the word.
I want to make three observations in order to
debunk this myth that Jesus prefers the
mega-church and mega ministries. FIRST-Jesus
spent most of His time and energy with the
few and avoiding as much as possible the
masses. Now, to be clear, Jesus spoke and fed
the masses, but His more common practice was
not in that kind of venue. One of my mentors
really worked me over on this. I was
continually referring to the masses, but he
kept correcting me to focus on the
individuals. He said, "You don't change the
masses; you change individuals one at a time."
SECOND-Jesus spent most of His time with the
poor and disenfranchised rather than the
powerful. There were powerful people who came
to Jesus and were changed, however Jesus
tended to seek out the leper, the lame and
the blind. When you're into the mega-sizing
of your ministry, there will be a tendency to
show off the celebrity-the actor, the
athlete, the rich and successful as examples.
There is nothing wrong with the powerful and
influential, but the crowds may not flock in
the direction of the poor and
disenfranchised. Jesus went there!
THIRD-Jesus was into the power of the few!
Instead of going on CNN and seeking to
produce mass seminars, mailers and email
blasts, Jesus sought out three religious
rejects to come and be with Him. And, from
this relationship with the three, then the
twelve and the seventy-two, the Jesus
movement rippled throughout the world and the
revolution is still on today!
We are seeing this play out in our ministry.
We are focusing on the few and as those few
really get it, the message of Jesus spreads
like a wildfire. You see, within the context
of the few, you are able to really get to
know one another and put the principles and
teachings into practice. This kind of
experience is the taste of reality everyone
is longing for. This is the Jesus movement at
its best!
Jesus taught: "Where two or three are
gathered together in His name, He will show
up." This is what we want. This is what
we desperately need. We need Jesus to show up
among us and lead out with His orders and
opportunities. You see, Jesus won't be found
within the mega-church or mega-ministry as
easily as within the context of the few.
There's nothing wrong with the mega-church or
mega-ministry, but there is something far
better that Jesus had in mind.
Jesus prefers showing up when a few are
gathered together in His name. If you knew
Jesus was going to show up some place this
week, wouldn't you want to be there, too?
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