RenHoek
What eeeeeez it man?!
But if the bowling alleys are for our own entertainment, then it is probably a waste of resources.
True enough.
The light has to shine, not be hidden.
The bigger the light, the more the shine
A huge congregation can be great for some and provide the balance of experience and anonimity that they need at the time, but at some point in their Christian journey, most people need smaller groups where they can learn together, pray together, have fellowship, and be accountable to one another.
My church is now adding more classrooms to facilitate this type of environment. It is mostly being handled at homes and a nearby Johnson Controls facility that we also run shuttles from.
One of the questions that I have had about mega churches is how do they cater for the different generations - meaning, how do the older people who were not brought up in that tradition fit in?
We are not about traditions, we are about presenting truth in a culturally relevant way. I think this transcends generations. I go to men's breakfasts and there is always a good mix of young and old. No one church can be all things to all people, so if you are not comfortable with the way things are presented, a more traditional church might be in order, just as I would find a traditional church stuffy and irritating.
As soon as you get above about 200, you have a job holding the church family together.
I place little value in the institution holding the members together. The Church is made up of all belivers in the body. A body is so apt an analogy due to its changing nature. If those people are not held together, perhaps it is God moving them.
That said, the larger the organization, regardless of what it is, the more unmanageable it becomes. American government is the best example of this.
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