The Church Where the President Speaks
A look at the modern mega church.
The Church Where the
President Speaks
by Geoff Thomas
The Willow Creek Church is in a suburb of
Chicago, one of the ten most wealthy and powerful cities in the world.
It is a booming educational, medical, cultural, legal and economic center
with a hinterland of 6 million people. It is the 'Bible button'
of the Mid-West, the city of Moody Bible College, Wheaton College and
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. If some Christians were thinking of
locating a theological seminary then Chicago would be an obvious place
to choose. So the Mid America Reformed Seminary has been newly situated
in that dynamic conurbation. It has scores of churches which have more
than a thousand people in the congregation. This has been part of
Chicago ecclesiastical history: for example, throughout the 1920s more
than 5,000 churchgoers packed the Gospel Tabernacle every week.
The Willow Creek Church is 25 years old,
and every week-end 17,000-plus people attend six services, two
exclusively designed for young non-church-goers, and so programmed with
music and drama. The services are characterized by 50 vocalists, a
75-piece choir, seven rhythm bands, a 65-piece orchestra, 41 actors, a
video production department. and an arts center with 200 students that
serves as a farm club for future talent.
William J. (Bill) Hybels is the founding
pastor. He was raised in the Christian Reformed Church. He has signed
the statement entitled "Men, Women and Biblical Equality"
which promotes the ordination of women. Hybels speaks for Robert
Schuller's school of evangelism and church growth. The US President,
Bill Clinton, recently visited the Willow Creek pastors' conference and
spoke to the men and women there about his fall and restoration.
Willow Creek has been designed like a
large attractive shopping mall. There is no cross or any religious
symbol on the outside of the building, nor on the inside either. The
'worship' area is an auditorium with theatre seats, and a stage and
podium but no organ. One enters to the sound of popular rock-type music
played by the 20-piece group on stage. One strolls past TV monitors with
lists of church-related activities on the screens. On the platform there
is someone signing the service for the deaf contingent.
The event begins with a drama sketch. For
example, a man and a woman are waiting to be called up yonder. The man
has a duffel bag of good works. The women does not. She goes to heaven.
The man does not. Somebody then sings, "Only by grace through
faith." The message might seem to the stranger present to be
saying, "As long as you profess faith in God you are sure of
getting to heaven, no matter how you live." A Christian would have
understood the confused drama spot, but not an unbeliever.
Then a couple might sing the complete
version of "Only by grace through faith." They are good
singers, as Americans are. The congregation is invited to sing just once
in the service and it might be a little chorus like, "Hallelujah.
Sing hallelujah. For the Lord is good and his mercy endureth for
ever:" 'endureth' - interesting. Not 'endures.' No one will be
impressed with the quality of the congregation's singing. It is
pathetic. Unbelievers, it is said, are not used to going somewhere and
singing (though every big game begins with the crowd singing the
National Anthem) so that is made the reason why there is no
congregational singing in Willow Creek. It is quite unlike the
charismatic renewal movement's emphasis on 45 minutes of singing.
Bill Hybels does the announcements. They
can include an expert slide presentation of all the ministries of Willow
Creek especially if there is a ministries fair and they need more
volunteers. At the end of the intimations the collection is taken but
visitors are told they are not expected to make a donation. The
offertory might be taken to the song, "Down by the river
side." This apparently has religious lyrics as well as the more
folksy, "I met my little bright-eyed girl, Down by the river side,
Down by the river side, Down by the river side."
The message is usually given by Bill
Hybels. When an acquaintance was there he heard Hybels begin by saying
to the congregation that they could be divided up into three groups:
those who came to drink in his wisdom; those who were 50/50 giving him
three minutes to hook them with something interesting; and finally those
who hated him and his mother ... Odd beginning. He was on that occasion
clear and precise in preaching the demands of God but not so lucid and
winsome in presenting the gospel. He rebuked the seekers present that
few of them were coming on Wednesday evenings to the weekly 'sacrament
of communion' where they would worship and praise God.
The last duet was introduced and people
were urged to stay for these 'last two and a half minutes' instead of
heading for the car park. Hybels went down from the stage to sit in the
front row and made some notes. A prayer ended the service, and Hybels
and the singers were gone.
The congregation can stay and eat an
expensive lunch at the food court and then walk around the ministry
fair. No one will speak to you. That is part of the vision of Willow
Creek. "Unchurched Harry" is considered to want to be left
alone.
What does one make of it all? Whatever
might be said to the contrary, the intent of Willow Creek is to aim
Sunday's meetings at the crowd of unbelievers present, not at the Lord,
and that is what you get. One of the beneficiaries of this approach is
going to be the liturgical churches. Worship as evangelism, or therapy,
or entertainment is bankrupt. It will not feed the soul. Worship in
which we read, preach, pray and sing the Bible will alone sustain and
nurture Christian faith and piety. As Terry Johnson says, "There we
have order without suffocation, freedom without chaos, edification with
entertainment, reverence without unthinking routine. Reformed worship
aims at the glory of God alone, and so provides a format in which true
worship may take place. God's word alone rightly orders his worship -
not the inventions and traditions of man. The glory then goes to God
alone." |