A while back I came a cross a story that said that megachurches like Willow Creek were closing for the summer because it was bad for people’s schedules. Turned out the story was a satire by The Holy Observer but many of us bought because it sounded so incredibly plausible.
Well, satire has become reality. If you haven’t seen it, some megachurches have announced that they will not hold Christmas Day services this year. The reasons vary – to allow people to travel to be with families, not having enough volunteers to staff a Sunday morning designed for 8,000 people, they just had worship the night before.
You can check out one version of the story here on ABC News.
What do I think? I come out of tradition where we normally did not hold Christmas Day services and the only time we cancel a Sunday service is because of blizzard (up here in NW Ohio) or a hurricane (growing up in Florida).
I guess what bothers me is the convenience factor, the message that worship or really any spiritual practice is a matter of convenience rather than lifestyle. Considering that Superbowl Sunday is a day when attendance goes down noticably, perhaps cancelling would be a good idea. Better yet, put the game up on the worship projection screen (actually, since I don’t have a widescreen TV…).
The other bothersome part is that by their sheer size, the megachurches become slaves to their facility. Cost effectiveness is more important than people and relationships, which may explain why most postmoderns tend to stay away from these places. They are more about boomer entertainment than real relationship and interaction, which you can’t do as a face in theater among thousands. Better to find a small gathering that offers a decent latte than that.
Worship is not about a doctrinaire imposition of worship on Sunday alone, blue laws, and that old custom. But setting aside time to gather with others on the journey, to put God and matters of the spirit first in life one block of time out of the week, makes much more sense then the usual “what I do is between God and me” and “I can worship anywhere, anytime”. That all kind of smacks of making God into my image, which in the end is really no god at all. Just a thought.