Teens Don’t Do Church?

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Category : Church, Religion, Soul Survivor, Worship

Sorry for the lack of activity on the site recently. We are all in the middle of a busy busy summer which has left little time to get on-line however, having just returned from Soul Survivor I thought I would ad a few thoughts here in the short time I have.

Aside from making me feel incredibly old (it’s really aimed at 15 year olds) Soul Survivor was amazing this year. It’s the first time I’ve been since 2001 and while I didn’t attended any seminars (the offering was pretty much what it was back then) it was just great to chill out with God; both in the main meetings as well as in the lazy times spent in a muddy field. I’ve come back feeling refreshed and excited about what the next year may bring. Which is great!

At Church at the moment I am involved with a small group charged with the task of looking at what we do on Sunday mornings and making changes in the attempted to increase it’s relevance and aid our times of worship. We have taken a lot of advice and welcomed much comment; especially in the area of getting young people to involved and allowing them to be an active part of our family. However, we have really come up against it as many folk have resigned themselves to a suggestion that teenagers simply don’t do church. I have found this very difficult to reconcile and now Soul Survivor has simply blown this out of the water for me.

For five days, in a muddy filed in Somerset, 12000 teenagers queued an hour before 2 services a day; each of which were between 2 & 3 hours long. The services were not too dissimilar to what we do at church (albeit a lot longer). Firstly the notices (30 mins worth!!!), then there were 3 newer songs, a hymn (lead by the band), 2 or 3 quieter, newer songs, a preach (at least 40 mins worth), followed by an extended ministry time. It was long, it was uncomfortable and yet they were there an hour early to get the best spots.

Not only that but a vast majority attended the three seminar slots throughout the day. These were essentially 90 min sermons. So that’s 2 church services and 3 seminars a day. You cannot tell me that teens are not interested in Church.

Of course, I do understand that this was a festival. There were 12000 of us for a start, which always helps. Also, the music and the worship times we stunning. Very professional, very slick; you wouldn’t be disappointed if you get this level of professionalism from a top gig but I’m not sure that all these young people are so shallow that a big sound and some flashing lights is all it takes to get them interested.

So I’m wondering what is the thing that drives the success of Soul Survivor and similar festivals. When I think back to when I was a teenager the thing that made me interested in Church and hanging out with other Christians was the guys that were around me loved it. They were passionate about going to church. They were excited about it. Not that the Church I became a Christian in was particularly young people friendly. It was a fairly tradition Baptist Church. But the people around me were passionate about that place; what God was doing and what God, with their help, could do.

I think that’s what Soul Survivor has; passion. The guys leading it, love it. They are mad about Jesus and they don’t mind telling you. Every Church isn’t blessed with the gifts and talents that Soul Survivor has at it’s disposal. We can’t all have super slick bands and flashing lights and I’m not sure it’s right that we do. We can, however, all have their passion. If our Churches are full of people that are happy, even excited to be their then we will attract more people; not just teenagers.

As Mike said in one of his many sermons of the week. People are not waiting for a great band, a better light show, a cool new drama or a funny speaker. This country is crying out for people that look like Jesus, sound like Jesus, and smell like Jesus. As we turn into His likeness, others will want to know more.

Jesus of Nazareth?

Category : Bible, Religion

The question of who we worship as Christians is actually not as straight forward as it first seems. And who are we trying to spread the Good News about is another closely related subject.

A couple of months ago I herd a sermon from Tony Campolo (famous preacher, author type guy). In it he told a very entertaining story of how he visited a church somewhere in America and when he went into the youth lounge he was shocked (and somewhat offended) to find a picture of Jesus on the wall that had been painted by one of the young people; the picture depicted Jesus as a black Rasta style guy.

Personally, I find that rather amusing (maybe I shouldn’t) but Tony wasn’t impressed. When he challenged the group with, Jesus wasn’t wasn’t a Rasta (or something like that) they responded with; no, probably not, but he wasn’t white either….

The point of the story was to ask the question; which Jesus is the Church ‘selling’? He was suggesting that the Jesus of most evangelical churches in the U.S. was a white, middle class, republican. I’m not really in a position to comment on that observation but it is a question that I believe is worth asking.

Does the Jesus we worship, and the Good News we spread, match up with the Jesus of the Bible. Are we really sharing Jesus of Nazareth or, as Shawn of Low-Fi tribe drew to our attention, Jesus of Suburbia. Do we even know enough about the Jesus of the Bible to be able to make a comparison?

Lion Chaser’s Manifesto

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Category : Church, Religion, vision

I stumbled upon this today thanks to Shawn at LoFiTribe. I have no idea who Lion Chaser is or was but this is a great motto to live by.

This really stood out to me. As somebody who is desperate to lead people into who God desperately wants them to be; what a great place to start!

“Set God-sized goals. Pursue God-ordained passions. Go after a dream that is destined to fail without divine intervention. Keep asking questions….” [more]