Thursday, 1 November 2007

Willow Creek Repents?



Alex highlighted an interesting blog post in ChristianityToday that I missed. It's about the recent evaluation carried out by Willow Creek on the effectiveness of their programme-driven church. The blog post is reproduced below.

What about us - do we dare to confront our own weaknesses in the way we do church, admit it, then do the necessary and rightful thing? What happen to the "age old spiritual disciplines of prayer, bible reading and relationships...(that) do not require multi-million dollar facilities and hundreds of staff to manage"?


Willow Creek Repents?
Why the most influential church in America now says "We made a mistake."

Few would disagree that Willow Creek Community Church has been one of the most influential churches in America over the last thirty years. Willow, through its association, has promoted a vision of church that is big, programmatic, and comprehensive. This vision has been heavily influenced by the methods of secular business. James Twitchell, in his new book Shopping for God, reports that outside Bill Hybels’ office hangs a poster that says: “What is our business? Who is our customer? What does the customer consider value?” Directly or indirectly, this philosophy of ministry—church should be a big box with programs for people at every level of spiritual maturity to consume and engage—has impacted every evangelical church in the country.

So what happens when leaders of Willow Creek stand up and say, “We made a mistake”?

Not long ago Willow released its findings from a multiple year qualitative study of its ministry. Basically, they wanted to know what programs and activities of the church were actually helping people mature spiritually and which were not. The results were published in a book, Reveal: Where Are You?, co-authored by Greg Hawkins, executive pastor of Willow Creek. Hybels called the findings “earth shaking,” “ground breaking,” and “mind blowing.”

If you’d like to get a synopsis of the research you can watch a video with Greg Hawkins here. And Bill Hybels’ reactions, recorded at last summer’s Leadership Summit, can be seen here. Both videos are worth watching in their entirety, but below are few highlights.

In the Hawkins’ video he says, “Participation is a big deal. We believe the more people participating in these sets of activities, with higher levels of frequency, it will produce disciples of Christ.” This has been Willow’s philosophy of ministry in a nutshell. The church creates programs/activities. People participate in these activities. The outcome is spiritual maturity. In a moment of stinging honesty Hawkins says, “I know it might sound crazy but that’s how we do it in churches. We measure levels of participation.”

Having put all of their eggs into the program-driven church basket you can understand their shock when the research revealed that “Increasing levels of participation in these sets of activities does NOT predict whether someone’s becoming more of a disciple of Christ. It does NOT predict whether they love God more or they love people more.”


Speaking at the Leadership Summit, Hybels summarized the findings this way:

"Some of the stuff that we have put millions of dollars into thinking it would really help our people grow and develop spiritually, when the data actually came back it wasn’t helping people that much. Other things that we didn’t put that much money into and didn’t put much staff against is stuff our people are crying out for."

Having spent thirty years creating and promoting a multi-million dollar organization driven by programs and measuring participation, and convincing other church leaders to do the same, you can see why Hybels called this research “the wake up call” of his adult life.

Hybels confesses:

"We made a mistake. What we should have done when people crossed the line of faith and become Christians, we should have started telling people and teaching people that they have to take responsibility to become ‘self feeders.’ We should have gotten people, taught people, how to read their bible between service, how to do the spiritual practices much more aggressively on their own."

In other words, spiritual growth doesn’t happen best by becoming dependent on elaborate church programs but through the age old spiritual practices of prayer, bible reading, and relationships. And, ironically, these basic disciplines do not require multi-million dollar facilities and hundreds of staff to manage.

Does this mark the end of Willow’s thirty years of influence over the American church? Not according to Hawkins:

"Our dream is that we fundamentally change the way we do church. That we take out a clean sheet of paper and we rethink all of our old assumptions. Replace it with new insights. Insights that are informed by research and rooted in Scripture. Our dream is really to discover what God is doing and how he’s asking us to transform this planet."

5 comments:

Lee Chee Keat said...

O wow..this is a transformation for a megachurch like Willow. But, it takes so many years to get it right!! In my church denominational circles, unfortunately, we have been following the megachurches trends -buy more lands for expansion, retain and persuade more to stay with our denominational, upgrade facilities to make the youths stay, rally and mobilise more evangelism work to get people into the church, rally and give more motivation talks to get people to be committed to the church, get more members into the church and more quantites growth by end of the year. This had led a lot of my church members being starved for the word until they looked elsewhere but unluckily, looked at the wrong places where prosperity gospels is prevalent. On the contrary, we should take heed the essentials which are that is how to help our members to read bible themselves properly and apply them to their realities, how to help our members to learn to relate lovingly to each other and non Christians biblically, how to live more holy in the midst of moral degrading environment and how to help members to help others to grow spiritually which requires time and patience and competence (Eph 4:11-12). WIllow's lesson is timely and hope it's beginning warning to all megachurches and other churches too!!

Anonymous said...

Earth-shaking admission, but courageous too. Willow Creek is a highly influential church with many churches in association with it. Let us pray that the changes it makes within itself will also leaven the whole lump.

Kar Yong said...

Hi Chee Keat,

It's true - since Willow is so influencial, let's hope many other churches will learn from this lesson.

Kar Yong said...

Dear Blogpastor,

Amen to what you said. And may I add that it also requires much humility to make this admission!

Anonymous said...

yes, most of our local churches make confuse between "purpose driven church" and "program driven church". sad that we only realise we had made mistake after so many years...