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Bill Hybels...I attended Willow Creek twice while in the Chicago area. A lot of entertainment. They had TV monitors throughout the back portion of the auditorium so you could see what was going on up front. The only people to speak to me were the "official" greeters and the parking attendants. No personal greeting or conversation of any kind with any of the "regular" people who were in attendance.DiscipleOfIAm said:I think the mega church idea was being spread recently by Willow Creek. I can't recall the pastor's name there
Saddleback.DiscipleOfIAm said:One author wrote about attending Warren's church, Saddlebrook or something like that
That sounds like Joel Osteen (he's on TV)...Discover the Champion in You.DiscipleOfIAm said:The Sunday messages were all about how God can make you feel good about yourself and make your life better, etc. All things to make the person feel good about themselves.
Church is a gathering of family and we want to know our family really well. It helps us in our Christian life to have many people who we can call on, depend on and who know us like a real family.Monica02 said:I gather from several posts on on this thread that many of you feel that knowing everybody at your church is very important. I have maybe eight people from my church that I know very well, and twenty or so that I know well enough to say "hi" to at the grocery store. The other three thousand or so I guess I don't know and I don't really care that I don't know them. It could just be my personality. Why is is knowing all the people at your church so important?
The projections in technology are "virtual 3-D" Here's a picture of how it looks. The image is projected onto a transparent flat screen, but it is not real 3-D. First hand accounts say it is not much different from watching a TV image on a screen, the only difference being better resolution and the clear background.fluffy_rainbow said:Actually, the OP wasn't a joke. This was in the Atlanta Journal-Consitution's Spirituality section a few weeks ago and the church was the North Point Community Church.
I didn't think actual 3-D holographic technology was at that level yet, but this "virtual 3-D" technology is pretty interesting. It is rare that churches are actually on the cutting edge of any type of technology.lambslove said:The projections in technology are "virtual 3-D" Here's a picture of how it looks. The image is projected onto a transparent flat screen, but it is not real 3-D.
I'm their pastor. It's very important to me that I know each one of them so that I can pray specifically for them and care for their spiritual needs in a personal and meaningful way.Monica02 said:I gather from several posts on on this thread that many of you feel that knowing everybody at your church is very important. I have maybe eight people from my church that I know very well, and twenty or so that I know well enough to say "hi" to at the grocery store. The other three thousand or so I guess I don't know and I don't really care that I don't know them. It could just be my personality. Why is is knowing all the people at your church so important?
Well, they're not really yet. The article she was speaking of in the ACJ says that the church plans to obtain the teleportec system when it becomes available at a price they can afford. Right now they are using a closed circuit TV system on a large rear-projection screen that can make the pastor look lifesized or can enlarge his face to make the sermon more like a TV program. I can't find the link again or I would post it. Interesting article about one mega church, mostly extolling it's virtues without looking too hard at the drawbacks.Gold Dragon said:I didn't think actual 3-D holographic technology was at that level yet, but this "virtual 3-D" technology is pretty interesting. It is rare that churches are actually on the cutting edge of any type of technology.
What if your church grew to three times its size and you could no longer have such a close relationship with your parishioners? Would you hire another minister, turn people away or move to a smaller church?rural_preacher said:I'm their pastor. It's very important to me that I know each one of them so that I can pray specifically for them and care for their spiritual needs in a personal and meaningful way.
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I know all 60 in the church. We are a family, not just church goers. We don't go to get some lesson and leave we hang out, we talk we get to know each other. I would not be in a mega church where you are just a number on a tithing envelope. But that is just me.Monica02 said:Why is is knowing all the people at your church so important?
I was part of a church where this happened (byzantine catholic) and they simply formed a sister church on the other side of town. Everyone who was a member of one was a member of both! Most people participated in both at one time or another.Monica02 said:What if your church grew to three times its size and you could no longer have such a close relationship with your parishioners? Would you hire another minister, turn people away or move to a smaller church?
Actually, for my church, if we grew to three times the size that would still be a manageable size congregation for me. I'm a 24/7 kind of guy anyway. However, if enough growth happened that an associate pastor was necessary, then we would probably call one. Another alternative would be to plant a new church in a nearby community to accomodate the growth and call a pastor to shepherd that flock.Monica02 said:What if your church grew to three times its size and you could no longer have such a close relationship with your parishioners? Would you hire another minister, turn people away or move to a smaller church?
Well, this is just my opinion but I feel that one can easily have personal and quality relationships with others in a mega-church. Of course, you'll probably never know everyone but that honestly isn't that big of a deal to me.Uncle Bud said:I know all 60 in the church. We are a family, not just church goers. We don't go to get some lesson and leave we hang out, we talk we get to know each other. I would not be in a mega church where you are just a number on a tithing envelope. But that is just me.
I think that is important, too. I hate when a pastor of a church you attend doesn't even know your name. How can he lead a flock if he doesn't know who is in the flock?rural_preacher said:I'm their pastor. It's very important to me that I know each one of them so that I can pray specifically for them and care for their spiritual needs in a personal and meaningful way.
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Holly, you have a point. There are a couple of pros and cons. For someone who is beginning to spread her wings and figure out her own beliefs, a small church can be too confining. Some young adults experience diversity on a college campus, but a mega-church may be a place to do that, too. It can certainly help, for example, at some point to get a little distance from parents and their friends, or the old friends who want to keep you the way you always were as a kid and not help you become the person you want to be as an adult. Especially in an urban area, you will usually find a lot more diversity in a mega-church. Smaller churches tend to be more homogeneous.Holly3278 said:Well, this is just my opinion but I feel that one can easily have personal and quality relationships with others in a mega-church. Of course, you'll probably never know everyone but that honestly isn't that big of a deal to me.![]()
lambslove said:I was part of a church where this happened (byzantine catholic) and they simply formed a sister church on the other side of town. Everyone who was a member of one was a member of both! Most people participated in both at one time or another.