Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Public Behavior

Church Planting Series, Part thirteen

I went to a movie the other day. I actually saw it in a theater. I regretted every moment. Why? Theater behavior has undergone radical changes.

After the lights finally went down thirty minutes into the movie, and after the focus was adjusted at about the same time, the activity in the crowd began. To my left, a woman in her 70’s was texting someone during the movie. To my right, a man and woman narrated their commentary of each scene. In front of me, several people made multiple trips in and out of the theater for a variety of reasons, some which involved large quantities of snacks. Behind me, the person kept tapping the back of my seat with his foot—tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap. You get the idea.

It was a circus, a fiasco, a disorderly din of sights, sounds, and smells. I wasn’t able to become lost in the story or engrossed by the compelling plot line. I got annoyed because it felt like I invited 100 restless people into my living room to watch a rented video.

Theater behavior has changed.

When my grandparents and parents went to the movies it was a special occasion. People got dressed up. Ushers seated you. They patrolled the aisles for noise and disruption. People stayed quiet. A hush fell over the theater when the previews began.

Now, after the movie is over, I wouldn’t be surprised if many in attendance would say, “What movie?”

Yes times have changed. Public behavior has changed. Restraint is disappearing. Shame is fading. The veneer that once made lives look civil and orderly is wearing very thin. Real life is showing through.

This fact impacts church. It is a new day with new behavior and a new set of expectations for a church planter. Yes, signs abound reminding people to turn off cell phones. Yes, texting and tweeting are being integrated into some teaching. But there’s a bigger issue. Sin, brokenness, addiction, and dysfunction are very evident in people’s lives. Polite conformity to society is vanishing. This brings about some key challenges for ministry:

First, how will you reach and relate to sinners? Jesus dined with them after Matthew’s conversion. In Luke 5:27-32 He outlined His strategy. How will you uphold the integrity of the Gospel while bringing the Gospel to its prime audience: sinners?

Second, how will you address sin, brokenness, dysfunction, and unholy behavior in a clear and balanced way? How will you bring the living Word that changes lives to lives that really need changing, but do so in a way that doesn’t do damage to the mission of God?

Third, how will you not fall prey to a ministry of power and control in the midst of radically changed public behavior, but, instead, move forward in the love, humility, and truth of Christ?

Answers to these questions will help you truly reach the lost with the saving news of the cross of Jesus. Just don’t expect to eliminate coffee spills and stray Cheerios from your meeting place.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Mike - Are we beginning to live life within The Matrix (ref. the movie by that name)? Is this life real, or is it all a text message? It seems that people are more willing to be present wherever they aren't, than where they are. More willing to be with someone else, than the person who is right in front of them. I've observed people in restaurants as they eat at the table with one person while texting another. And what is a church planter to do with people who text during worship and/or during the sermon? Just today, the cashier at lunch was texting while waiting for my debit card approval. Argh! Christopher

Michael Newman said...

You're so right, Christopher. Satan lures us to always strain to the next thing, the next person, the next season of life. We then miss the now--the opportunity of God's moment. It underscores two things. First, our need to engage people with meaning and depth. Second, the confidence we have in the living Word that cuts through the clutter. We've got a weapon more powerful than a cell phone!