There's No Pulpit Like Home
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1167737-1,00.html
Some Evangelicals are abandoning megachurches for
minichurches--based in their own living rooms
On a Sunday at their modest, gray ranch house in the Denver
suburb of Englewood,
Tim and Jeanine Pynes gather with four other Christians for an evening of
fellowship, food and faith. Jeanine's spicy rigatoni precedes a
yogurt-and-wafer confection by Ann Moore, none of the food violating the
group's solemn commitment to Weight Watchers. The participants, who have pooled
resources for baby sitting, discuss a planned missionary trip and sing along
with a CD by the Christian crossover group Sixpence None the Richer. One of the
lyrics, presumably written in Jesus' voice, runs, "I'm here, I'm closer
than your breath/ I've conquered even death." That leads to earnest
discussion of a friend's suicide, which flows into an exercise in which each
participant brings something to the table--a personal issue, a faith
question--and the group offers talk and prayer. Its members read from the New
Testament's Epistle to the Hebrews, observe a mindful silence and share a hymn.
The meeting could be a sidebar gathering of almost any church in the country
but for a ceramic vessel of red wine on the dinner table--offered in communion.
Because the dinner, it turns out, is no mere Bible study, 12-step meeting or
other pendant to Sunday service at a Denver
megachurch. It is the service. There is no pastor, choir or sermon--just six
believers and Jesus among them, closer than their breath. Or so thinks Jeanine,
who two years ago abandoned a large congregation for the burgeoning movement
known in evangelical circles as "house churching," "home
churching" or "simple church." The week she left, she says,
"I cried every day." But the home service flourished, grew to 40
people and then divided into five smaller groups. One participant at the
Pyneses' house, a retired pastor named John White, also attends a conventional
church, where he gives classes on how to found, or plant, the house variety.
"Church," he says, "is not just about a meeting." Jeanine
is a passionate convert: "I'd never go back to a traditional church. I
love what we're doing."
Since the 1990s, the ascendant mode of conservative American faith has been
the megachurch. It gathers thousands, or even tens of thousands, for
entertaining if sometimes undemanding services amid family-friendly amenities.
It is made possible by hundreds of smaller "cell groups" that meet
off-nights and provide a humanly scaled framework for scriptural exploration,
spiritual mentoring and emotional support. Now, however, some experts look at
groups like Jeanine Pynes'--spreading in parts of Colorado,
Southern California, Texas
and probably elsewhere--and muse, What if the cell groups decided to lose the
mother church?
In the 2005 book Revolution, George Barna, Evangelicalism's best-known and
perhaps most enthusiastic pollster, named simple church as one of several
"mini-movements" vacuuming up "millions of believers [who] have
stopped going to [standard] church." In two decades, he wrote, "only
about one-third of the population" will rely on conventional congregations.
Not everyone buys Barna's numbers--previous estimates set house churchers at a
minuscule 50,000--but some serious players are intrigued
The Maclellan Foundation, a major Christian funder based in Chattanooga,
Tenn., is backing a three-year project to
track Colorado
house churching. The Southern Baptist Convention, with more standard-church pew
sitters than any other Protestant group, has commissioned its own poll and
experimented in planting hundreds of its own house churches. Allan Karr, a
professor at the Rocky
Mountain campus of Golden
Gate Baptist Theological Seminary who is involved in the poll, guesses that
three out of 10 churches founded today are simple and that their individual
odds for survival are better than those of the other seven. House churches are
not known for denominational loyalty. That doesn't bother Karr, however.
"I want the denomination to prevail," he says, "but I have an
agenda that supersedes that: the Kingdom
of God at large."
House churches claim the oldest organizational pedigree in Christianity: the
book of Acts records that after Jesus' death, his Apostles gathered not at the
temple but in an "upper room." House churching has always prospered
where resources were scarce or Christianity officially discouraged. In the U.S. its last
previous bloom was rooted in the bohemian ethos of the California-bred Jesus
People movement of the 1970s. Many of those groups were eventually reabsorbed
by larger congregations, and the remnants tend to take a hard line. Frank
Viola, a 20-year veteran Florida house churcher and author of Rethinking the
Wineskin and other manuals, talks fondly of pilgrims who doctrinairely abjure
pastors, sermons or a physical plant; feel that the "modern institutional
church does not reflect the early church"; and "don't believe you are
going to see the fullness of Jesus Christ expressed just sitting in a pew
listening to one other member of the body of Christ talking for 45 minutes
while everyone else is passive."
More recent arrangements can seem more ad hoc. Tim and Susie Grade moved to Denver a year ago. They
had attended cell groups subsidiary to Sunday services but were delighted to
learn that their new neighbors Tim and Michelle Fox longed for a house church
like the ones they had seen overseas. Now they and seven other twenty- and thirtysomethings
mix a fairly formal weekly communion with a laid-back laying on of hands,
semiconfessional "sharing" and a guitar sing-along. Says Tim:
"We have some people who come from regular churches, and were a little
disenfranchised. And people who joined because of friendships, and people who
are kind of hurting, kind of searching. My age group and younger are seeking
spiritual things that they have not found elsewhere."
Critics fret that small, pastorless groups can become doctrinally or even
socially unmoored. Thom Rainer, a Southern Baptist who has written extensively
on church growth, says, "I have no problem with where a church meets,
[but] I do think that there are some house churches that, in their desire to
move in different directions, have perhaps moved from biblical
accountability." In extreme circumstances home churches dominated by
magnetic but unorthodox leaders can shade over the line into cults.
Yet the flexibility of simple churches is a huge plus. They can accommodate
the demands of a multi-job worker, convene around the bedside of an ailing
member and undertake big initiatives with dispatch, as in the case of a group
in the Northwest that reportedly yearned to do social outreach but found that
every member had heavy credit-card debt. An austerity campaign yielded a
balance with which to help the true poor.
Indeed, house churching in itself can be an economically beneficial
proposition. Golden Gate Seminary's Karr reckons that building and staff
consume 75% of a standard church's budget, with little left for good works.
House churches can often dedicate up to 90% of their offerings. Karr notes that
traditional church is fine "if you like buildings. But I think the reason
house churches are becoming more popular is that their resources are going into
something more meaningful."
Evangelical boosters find revival everywhere. Barna says he sees house
churching and practices like home schooling and workplace ministries as part of
a "seminal transition that may be akin to a third spiritual awakening in
the U.S."
Jeffrey Mahan, academic vice president of Denver's
liberal and institutionally oriented Iliff School of Theology, doesn't go that
far, but he does think the trend is significant. American participation in
formal church has risen and fallen throughout history, he notes, and after a
prolonged post--World War II upswell, big-building Christianity may be exhaling
again in favor of informal arrangements.
If so, he suggests, "I don't think the denominations need be anxious.
They don't have a franchise on religion. The challenge is for people to talk
about what constitutes a full and adequate religious life, to be the church
together, not in a denominational sense, but in the broadest sense." Or as
Jesus put it, "For where two or three are gathered together in my name,
there am I."