Saturday, November 22, 2008

Within the walls of a megachurch...

Well, we aren't a megachurch yet. We're one of the area's biggest churches having just added a several million dollar sanctuary with daycare, crying rooms, book store, etc. When I first immersed myself into the Christian path we were attending a rather exclusive, "Jesus only" church that longed to be a megachurch, hyping up its doctrine and its head pastor, envisioning a megachurch with resort-like facilities. That was ten years ago. It still hasn't come to pass. We haven't been there for almost ten years.

So we drifted, floated, in and out of a few churches of a smaller, more intimate nature we really grew to love. The "church" was the body of believers, not the body. We are currently at a church that believes the same. Yet we've seen it grow over the past five years and the spirit hasn't changed.

I now see why a church grows. It isn't intentional, it's not in the plan of the governing body, it's not some slick marketing or preaching. People come because they want to be there.

So I've had to eat my cynicism about the "megachurch" movement to an extent. I still can't help but feel that this trend has parallels in the early days of the Church/Empire when the Church became the largest landholder, somewhat of an oxymoron if you read the early book of Acts.

The church sends people out on a regular basis, missionaries go almost weekly and there are many small groups, all facilitated by members, not driven from the top down. There are five campuses under its umbrella. And giving and giving is a regular activity. Members have freedom. And it keeps growing. It is a natural progression, like any organization, that it had run out of space.

So now I sit in what may become a "megachurch".

I remain watchful, however, as sometimes organizations tend to take on a life of their own as they get larger. I've been in a company that grew from about 40 employees to hundreds and watched the distance between the head to the toe grow.

But I remain hopeful that if the church maintains its spirit, then not all megachurches are like those we hear about on teleivion, with the private jets, the multiple mansions and exotic vacations of the heads of the organization, where "blessing" is the equivalent of "material wealth." We are not at such a place.

And I pray that what we see in the media are the anomalies and thus the reason they generate interest. I'd rather be in a church that is all but invisible to "the world" but is quietly and intently doing the Lord's work. We are at such a place.

No comments: