Is it Adrenaline or is it God? #3

Thoughts on Sane Church Life


The Adrenaline of the Music

Music has become ear dope for our generation, and musicians have become the dealers for the addicted. I know, I'm a musician. I hang out with other musicians, and I love well done music.

I have heard people say, that worship (speaking of the musical participation time in a church service) was the most important time of the service, because it makes way for God to move among His people. I have heard others say, that you cannot build a strong church, without a strong music ministry.

I certainly don't plan on cutting off my fingers, or purposely playing poorly during our times of gathering together, but I do wonder where these strange ideas come from. I don't remember reading in the Gospels about the musical skills of those 12 disciples. Nor do I find some apostolic injunction requiring each church to establish a "hot worship team." I am not sure where we got the idea that good music was required to have good church. Unless perhaps, we are still hooked on the drug of choice for our generation.

I will continue to make my worship music as engaging, and as musically skilled as possible, but I know that there are others who will be left behind in the race for the hottest worship around. I am not convinced that there must necessarily be a lesser degree of God's glory in their times of fellowship. There certainly will be fewer musically induced adrenaline rushes, but that might not be so bad. Of course, the addicted, who need to learn to experience God without the trappings of a rippin' worship team, probably won't be there to discover that God doesn't need skilled musicians to make Himself known to us.

 

The Adrenaline of the Crowd

Recently, I've had some discussions with fellow pastors about the disappointment of low attendance at church services. We've had discussions about the tendency to be less prepared, to do less work, and to show by our actions that we have less excitement when there are fewer people.

We should ask ourselves, why is it this way? Are people only important to us when there are a lot of them together? Or could it be that adrenaline is a greater motivator for us, than the gentle, loving Spirit of God?

If we are driven to excitement by numbers, it just might be a sign that we are addicted to the adrenaline rush of the crowd. The negative impact of this addiction to numbers is bad, whether we have a growing church, or a diminishing church. If our church is growing, we assume that God is at work in a mighty way, and we may be blind to the possibility that the crowd could be the result of a whole lot more adrenaline, and a whole lot less of God's doing. If we are a shrinking church, our own need for the crowd (which we are losing) handicaps our ability to minister in love, and in the power of the Lord.

This issue of numbers, may be the most devious of all tricks which our corrupt human nature plays upon us in the church gathering times. Everyone from the pastor to the visitor has a tendency to judge a service by the numbers.

The Pastor and the leaders of the church see "the hand of God" in a growing attendance. Jesus drew multitudes to hear Him preach and watch Him heal. We should do the same. That is the reasoning we follow, and if we somehow fall short of drawing the crowd, it is our heartfelt assumption, that we must also have missed the mark of ministry. Even when a Pastor says that he does not believe a crowd is the indicator of true fruitfulness, the haunting feeling that it just might be lingers. After all, numerical church growth often is a sign of fruitfulness. This is like selling seats at a theater, or filling the stands at the sporting event. If the filled seats are the most accurate basis for determining a minister's success, then like the owner of the sports team, or the director of the play, his reward will be those filled seats.

The church member looks around each Sunday morning, and notices filled pews, or empty seats, and makes a determination on the success of the leadership based upon the numbers. Some people go so far as to determine whether they will remain faithful to a church on the basis of attendance. Others remain faithful, but they lose their joy in fellowship when the numbers are down, and may even begin to question the competency of the Pastor.

The visitor is impacted by the numbers as well. Society has taught us that crowds are fun, and bigger is better. A small group means vulnerability for the visitor. They may be forced to meet someone. Rather than simply watch the show, they may become necessary participants in the service. As soon as the visitor walks in the service, they determine what they think about the church, and numbers are part of the evaluation. As a Pastor, I've had Sundays with small attendance, and first time visitors have asked questions like, "Where is everyone?" or, "Is the attendance always this small?" Naturally, I have to respond, "Well, a number of people are away this week. You know, sometimes that just happens." Of course, I don't tell them that it happens more often than not, and that the number of people who are away is a fairly small number. Why do we play this dishonest game? Because the lack of numbers is a discouragement to the Pastor, the member, and the visitor.

Unless we are somehow made to feel comfortable with a smaller group, and we are taught that numbers are not a factor in experiencing the presence of God, we will continue to limp along in our spirituality, and just might find ourselves thinking that we have God's answer to human dilemma in our adrenaline filled crowds.






Archived Musings

To Call    To Teach     To Heal    To Reach    Home