The “seeker-friendly,” or “seeker-sensitive,” movement
currently taking a host of evangelical churches by storm is an approach
to evangelizing through application of the latest marketing techniques.
Typically, it begins with a survey of the lost (referred to by a leading
church in this trend as the “unchurched,” or “unchurched Harry and
Mary”). This survey questions the unchurched about the things their
nearby place of worship might offer that would motivate them to attend.
Results of the questionnaire indicate areas of potential changes in the
church’s operations and services that would be effective in order to
attract the unchurched, keep them attending, and win them to Christ.
Those who have developed this marketing approach guarantee the growth of
the churches that conscientiously follow their proven methods.
Practically speaking, it works!
Two churches are seen as models for this
movement:
Willow Creek
Community Church (near Chicago), pastored by Bill Hybels, and Saddleback
Valley Community Church (south of Los Angeles), pastored by Rick Warren.
Their influence is stunning. Willow Creek has formed its own association
of churches, with 9,500 members. Last year, 100,000 church leaders
attended at least one Willow Creek leadership conference. More than
250,000 pastors and church leaders from over 125 countries have attended
Rick Warren’s Purpose Driven Church seminars. More than 60,000 pastors
subscribe to his weekly email newsletter.
We visited Willow Creek Community Church not too long ago, and it seems
to have spared no expense in its mission to attract the masses. Looking
past the swans gliding across a mirror lake, one sees what could be
mistaken for a corporate headquarters or a very upscale shopping mall.
Just off the sanctuary is a large bookstore and an extensive
eating area supplied by a food court with five different vendors. A
jumbotron screen
allows an overflow crowd or those enjoying a meal to view the
proceedings in the main sanctuary. The sanctuary itself is spacious and
high tech, complete with three large screens and state-of-the-art sound
and lighting systems for multimedia, drama, and musical presentations.
While impressive, Willow Creek is not unique among mega-churches with a
reach-the-lost-through-whatever-turns-them-on mindset. Mega-churches
across the country have added bowling alleys, NBA regulation basketball
courts with bleachers, exercise gyms and spas, locker rooms, auditoriums
for concerts and dramatic productions, and Starbucks and McDonald’s
franchises—all for the furtherance of the gospel. Or so it is claimed.
Although it’s true that such churches are packing them in, that’s not
the whole story in evaluating the success of this latest trend in “doing
church.”
The stated goal of seeker-friendly churches is reaching
the lost. Though biblical and praiseworthy, the same cannot be said for
the methods used in attempting to achieve that goal. Let’s begin
with marketing as a tactic for reaching the lost. Fundamentally,
marketing has to do with profiling consumers, ascertaining what their
“felt needs” are, and then fashioning one’s product (or its image) to
appeal to the targeted customer’s desires. The hoped-for result is that
the consumer buys or “buys into” the product. George Barna, whom
Christianity Today calls “the church’s guru of growth,” claims that
such an approach is essential for the church in our market-driven
society. Evangelical church-growth leaders are adamant that the
marketing approach can be applied -- and they have employed it --
without compromising the gospel. Really?
First of all, the gospel and, more significantly, the
person of Jesus Christ do not fit into any marketing strategy. They are
not “products” to be “sold.” They cannot be refashioned or
image-adjusted to appeal to the felt needs of our consumer-happy
culture. Any attempt to do so compromises to some degree the truth of
who Christ is and what He has done for us. For
example, if the lost are considered consumers and a basic marketing
“commandment” says that the customer must reign supreme, then whatever
may be offensive to the lost must be discarded, revamped, or downplayed.
Scripture tells us clearly that the message of the Cross is “foolishness
to them that are perishing” and that Christ himself is a “rock of
offense”
(1 Cor 1:18; 1
Pt 2:8).
Some seeker-friendly churches, therefore, seek to avoid this “negative
aspect” by making the temporal benefits of becoming a Christian their
chief selling point. Although that appeals to our gratification-oriented
generation, it is neither the gospel nor the goal of a believer’s life
in Christ.
Secondly, if you want to attract the lost on the basis of what might
interest them, for the most part you will be appealing to and
accommodating their flesh. Wittingly or unwittingly, that seems to be
the standard operating procedure of seeker-friendly churches. They mimic
what’s popular in our culture: top-forty and performance-style music,
theatrical productions, stimulating multi-media presentations, and
thirty-minutes-or-less positive messages. The latter, more often than
not, are topical, therapeutic, and centered in self-fulfillment -- how
the Lord can meet one’s needs and help solve one’s problems.
Those concerns may be lost on increasing numbers of
evangelical pastors but, ironically, not on some secular observers. In
his perceptive book This Little Church Went to Market
(see resource
materials),
Pastor Gary Gilley notes that the professional marketing journal
American Demo-graphics recognizes that people are
...into spirituality, not religion….Behind this shift is the search for
an experiential faith, a religion of the heart, not the head. It’s a
religious expression that downplays doctrine and dogma, and revels in
direct
experience of the divine -- whether it’s called the ‘Holy Spirit’ or
‘cosmic consciousness’ or the ‘true self.’ It is practical and personal,
more about stress reduction than salvation, more therapeutic than
theological. It’s about feeling good, not being good. It’s as much about
the body as the soul….Some marketing gurus have begun calling it ‘the
experience industry.’” (pp. 20-21)
There’s another item that many pastors seem to be missing
in their excitement over “growing your church through attracting the
lost.” Although numbers seem to rule in this seeker-friendly mania (an
amazing 841 churches in this country have reached the “mega” category,
with 2,000 to 25,000 weekend attendees), few have realized that the
sizeable increase in church attendance is not due to the influx of
the unchurched. During the last 70 years, the percentage of this
country’s population attending church has been relatively constant at
about 43 percent. A spike of 49 percent in 1991 (years prior to today’s
initial seeker-sensitive enthusiasm) gradually declined, returning to 42
percent in 2002
(www.barna.org).
From where, then, do those mega-churches, which have outfitted
themselves to accommodate the unchurched, get their members? Mostly from
smaller churches that aren’t interested in or that can’t afford the
fleshly attractions. And what of the supposed horde of unchurched Harrys
and Marys who have been assembled? They constitute a very small part of
mega-church congregations. During his year of researching Willow Creek,
G.A. Pritchard, in his book Willow Creek Seeker Services
(Baker Book
House, 1996),
estimated that the targeted unchurched made up only between 10 and 15
percent of the 16,000 or so who attended weekend services!
If this percentage is
typical among seeker-friendly churches, which likely is the case, a
rather disturbing situation has developed. Thousands of churches here
and abroad have completely restructured themselves as outreach
centers for the unchurched. This, by the way, is not biblical. The
church is for the maturing and equipping of the saints, who then go
out to reach the lost. Nevertheless, seeker-sensitive churches have
turned to entertainment and conveniences in order to attract Harry and
Mary and make them feel comfortable in their new church environment. In
order to keep them coming back, they have avoided the thorough teaching
of Scripture in favor of positive, uplifting messages designed to make
them feel good about themselves. As unchurched Harry and Mary continue
to attend, they get only a vague hint of biblical truth that might bring
conviction of sin and true repentance. Worse yet, they get a
psychologized view of themselves that undermines that truth.
However, as grievous as that situation is, it doesn’t end there.
The vast majority of
those who attend seeker-friendly fellowships profess to be believers.
Yet most were drawn to those churches by the same worldly allurements
that were meant to entice the unchurched, and they continue to attend,
being fed the same biblically anemic diet created for the wooing of
unbelievers. At best, they receive the skimmed milk of the Word; at
worst, pablum contaminated with “profane and vain babblings, and
oppositions of science falsely so called” (1 Tm 6:20). Certainly a
church can grow numerically on that basis, but not spiritually.
Furthermore, there is no
opportunity for believers to mature in the faith in such an environment.
In defense of seeker-sensitive churches, some have argued that mid-week
services are set apart for discipleship and getting into the meat of
Scriptures. If that indeed is the case, it’s a rare exception rather
than the rule.
As we’ve noted, most
seeker-friendly churches focus much of their time, energy, and resources
on accommodating unchurched Harry and Mary. Consequently, week after
week, the entire congregation is subjected to a diluted and leavened
message. Then, on Wednesday evening, when a fellowship is usually
reduced to quarter or a third of its normal size, would it be reasonable
to assume that this remnant is served a nourishing meal featuring the
meat of the Word, expositional teaching, and an emphasis on sound
doctrine and discipleship? Hardly. We’ve yet to find a seeker-friendly
church where that takes place. The spiritual meals offered at mid-week
services are usually support group meetings and classes for discerning
one’s spiritual gifts or going through the latest psycho-babble-ized
“Christian” bestseller such as Wild at Heart rather than the
study of the Scriptures.
Perhaps the most
insidious aspect of the seeker-friendly approach to doing church is an
attempt to impress the unchurched by looking to and quoting those
regarded as the experts in solving all their mental, emotional, and
behavioral problems: psychiatrists and psychologists. Nothing in the
history of the church has undermined the truth of the sufficiency of
God’s Word for “all things that pertain unto life and godliness” (2 Pt
1:3) more than the introduction of the pseudo-science of psychotherapy.
Its thousands of concepts and hundreds of methodologies are unproven,
contradictory, unscientific, and thoroughly unbiblical, as we’ve
documented in our books and in previous articles. Pritchard observed
that at Willow Creek “Hybels not only teaches psychological principles,
but often uses the psychological principles as interpretive guides for
his exegesis of Scripture….King David had an identity crisis, the
apostle Paul encouraged Timothy to do self-analysis, and Peter had a
problem with boundary issues. The point is, psychological principles are
regularly built into Hybels’ teaching” (p. 156).
During my own visit to
Willow Creek, Pastor Hybels gave a message that began with Scripture and
addressed the problems that result when people lie. However, he mustered
his chief support regarding the harmful consequences of lying from
psychiatrist M. Scott Peck, the author of The Road Less Traveled
(Simon & Schuster, 1978), who declared in that book (pp. 269-70), “God
wants
us to become Himself (or
Herself or Itself)”!
Saddleback Community Church like-wise is entrenched in
the psychotherapeutic. Although claiming to be Christ-centered rather
than psychological, it has one of the largest conglomerations of
Alcoholics Anonymous-based 12-Step recovery programs in the country. The
church sponsors more than a dozen support groups, such as Adult Children
of Chemically Addicted, Codependency, Co-Addicted Women in a
Relationship with Sexually Addicted Men, Eating Disorders, and so forth.
Each group is
normally led by
someone “in recovery” from the “addiction,” and the resource materials
for understanding the “disorder” include books mostly authored by
psychiatrists and psychologists
(www.celebraterecovery.com).
Although “in denial” about his use of “pop psychology,” much of it
permeates Rick Warren’s work, including his seven-million
bestseller, The Purpose Driven Life, which is largely about
self-fulfillment, promotes Celebrate Recovery, and is sprinkled
with psych references such as “Samson was co-dependent” (p. 233).
The overriding message from psychologically driven Willow Creek and
Saddleback is that the Word of God and the power of the Holy Spirit are
insufficient for delivering a person from a habitual sin and for
transforming his or her life into one that is fruitful and pleasing to
God. Again, what these churches say and do is exported to hundreds of
thousands of church leaders around the world.
A large part of the evangelical church has developed a pleasure-laden,
cruise ship mentality, but it will result in a spiritual Titanic.
Seeker-friendly church pastors (and those tempted to climb aboard) need
to get on their knees and read the words of Jesus to the church of the
Laodiceans (Rv 3:14-21). They were “rich, and increased with goods,” yet
failed to recognize that in God’s eyes, they were “wretched, and
miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked.” Jesus, standing outside
their church, where they had unwittingly displaced Him, offers them
His counsel, the truth of His Word, which alone will enable
them to live their lives for His pleasure. There can be nothing
better here on earth, and for all eternity.