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Tag Archives: Church

I’m Headed to the Olympics! (Well, maybe not.)

27 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by Nephos in Church, Contemporary Christianity, Humor, Pastoral Ministry, Sports

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

2012, athletics, Church, London, Michael Phelps, olympic preaching, Olympics, preaching, seeker-sensitive, Sports

Tonight is the Opening of the 2012 Olympics in London, England. I’ll be watching the ceremony with my family and dreaming of the day they accept my petition for a new Olympic sport: Olympic Preaching.

Olympic Preaching?

I’m here to speak for a revolutionary idea. Preaching should be considered a sport. Now before you angrily hit that x in the upper right corner, allow me to present the case.

Consider preparation time. Preparing a quality sermon requires hours of diligent study. Sure, you can download a hot one from Sermon Central or some other “pastor help” website (and don’t tell me you haven’t considered it!) but for an oratorical masterpiece, you need TIME.

It might be argued that preaching requires no athletic ability. I humbly disagree. Just ask any pastor how physically exhausted they are at the end of a Sunday. Besides, is athleticism necessary? You certainly do not need it for chess, pool, or auto racing, all of which have achieved the designation “sport.”

Some will contend that a sport requires an “achievable goal.” While it would be challenging to keep an objective score for sermons (after all, much of the effectiveness is long-term and spiritual), just remember that some events considered sports do not have an objective outcome. Figure skating, gymnastics, and snowboarding are all in the eyes of the judges, and if you think sermons do not get judged, try preaching to the average Baptist congregation.

With preaching firmly established as a sport, a few appropriate changes would improve the average worship service. The worship minister could lead the congregation to begin the service with the “wave.” This will wake everyone up and help wary visitors feel at home. Of course, some will not participate, but that will make the sleepers more obvious.

Another idea whose time has come is training the ushers in the techniques of the refreshment vendors. Having them pass up and down the aisle throughout the service will increase the opportunities for giving, and their chatter will entertain those bored by a low-scoring sermon.

A long-standing problem in churches is getting someone to sit on the front row. Let’s give those willing to sit in the “spit pit,” numbers to score the sermon. This will keep them interested in the service and give the pastor immediate feedback as to how he is doing. A low score should alert him it’s time to throw in a gnarly illustration to try and save the routine . . . I mean sermon.

After a particularly good sermon, it would encourage any pastor to have the choir/worship team/staff douse him with a cooler of Gatorade. Communion wine would work, or if you’re a Baptist, just throw him in the baptistery.

There are many sport concepts that could be incorporated into a worship service. Commentators (“Well, Dan, Pastor Cameron got off to a slow start, but he’s been building up steam since he threw that humorous anecdote in. Let’s just hope he can stick that conclusion soon. The judges down front are getting restless.”), half-time, and a bullpen (a surprisingly fitting term considering some sermons I’ve endured and preached) could all become a part of our church parlance.

With today’s “seeker-sensitive” trends, I’m surprised some have not already implemented this. Give it time. We may all soon be packing our scorecards in our Bibles! I’m sure you have more suggestions for this. I’d love to discuss them, but I have to go find something that will remove Gatorade stains.

What other sporting events/activities could be integrated with church?

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Weekends are for Worship: Can Worship and Sorrow Co-Exist?

09 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Nephos in Church, Theology, Worship

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Church, pain, sorrow, worship

Have you ever considered that church can be an uncomfortable place for those going through difficult times?  The joy (or expectation of it) can be overwhelming.  Where is the opportunity to lament and grieve and express sorrow?

Instead, we demand constant rejoicing and celebration.  We mask our pain with smiles and laughter, manufacturing the joy we’ve been conditioned to expect and display.

Trust in God is NOT always rejoicing. Worship is NOT always exultation. Being at peace is NOT always about feeling joy.   It is accepting the fact that we can trust even when our feelings don’t match our faith.

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Christianity: Bride or Business?

03 Friday Jul 2009

Posted by Nephos in Church, Contemporary Christianity, Reading Excerpts

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

American Christianity, Church

Dan Burrell shares an article that is a powerful indictment of American Christianity.

Christianity started in Palestine as a fellowship; it moved to Greece and became a philosophy; it moved to Italy and became an institution; it moved to Europe and became a culture; it came to America and became an enterprise adding that an enterprise was a business.

After a few moments Martha, an 18 year old, the youngest student in the class, raised her hand. Acknowledging her she asked, “A business? But isn’t it supposed to be a body?” I responded in the affirmative. She continued, “But when a body becomes a business, isn’t that a prostitute?”

You can read the article in entirety here.

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A Question Revisited

18 Tuesday Nov 2008

Posted by Nephos in Church, Contemporary Christianity, Culture

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Christians, Church, poverty, social activism

I posted this piece almost two years ago, and subsequent events have demonstrated that this transition is (or has been) occurring.  The news article linked is dated (and many more could now be added as further proof), but I think the final question remains valid.

Civic or Social?

Is there a trend developing? After a couple of decades of civic activism among Christians, are we now moving to social activism? It seems so. Christian leaders are becoming increasingly vocal about issues such as poverty, fairness, labor, etc.

Are they genuinely trying to reclaim important moral issues from the left? or is this the backlash from a perceived futility of civic reform?

Read this and let me know what you think.

Is this a legitimate transition, and if so, what can be done to prevent social activism from failing as dramatically as civic activism seems to have.

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No one since Jesus has gotten it ALL right.

03 Monday Nov 2008

Posted by Nephos in Church, History, Random Thoughts

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Tags

Church, church history, error, Jesus Christ, truth

Studying Church history is like watching a 15 year old learn to drive.  Over time the church heads toward the excesses of one ditch.  Then someone comes along and adjusts the course.  This trajectory, however, points us toward extremes on the other side.  Just before crashing into another heresy, God uses another reformer to correct the direction and prevents a collision.

Somehow, weaving through history, Christ has kept His Church between the ditches of error on the road of truth.  I’m glad it’s His Church and the gates of Hell will not prevail!

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