Willow Creek: "We've Really Upset the Christ-Centered People"
9 comments | PermalinkFrom the Our of Ur:
Today, Greg Hawkins, executive pastor at Willow, recapped the study and then shared some changes that the church is now making in response to the research. He said they’re making the biggest changes to the church in over 30 years. For three decades Willow has been focused on making the church appealing to seekers. But the research shows that it’s the mature believers that drive everything in the church—including evangelism.
Hawkins says, “We used to think you can’t upset a seeker. But while focusing on that we’ve really upset the Christ-centered people.” He spoke about the high levels of dissatisfaction mature believer have with churches. Drawing from the 200 churches and the 57,000 people that have taken the survey, he said that most people are leaving the church because they’re not being challenged enough.
Because it’s the mature Christians who drive evangelism in the church Hawkins says, “Our strategy to reach seekers is now about focusing on the mature believers. This is a huge shift for Willow.”
One major implementation of this shift will occur in June when Willow ends their mid-week worship services that had been geared toward believers. Instead the church will morph these mid-week events into classes for people at different stages of growth. There will be theological and bible classes full of “hard-hitting stuff.” Hawkins said most people are very enthusiastic about the change.
On the seeker end of the spectrum, Willow is also changing how they produce their weekend services. For years the value people appreciated most about the seeker-oriented weekend services was anonymity. This is what all their research showed. People didn’t want to be identified, approached, confronted, or asked to do anything. But those days are over.
“Anonymity is not the driving value for seeker services anymore,” says Hawkins. “We’ve taken anonymity and shot it in the head. It’s dead. Gone.” In the past Willow believed that seekers didn’t want large doses of the bible or deep worship music. They didn’t want to be challenged. Now their seeker-sensitive services are loaded with worship music, prayer, scripture readings, and more challenging teaching from the bible.
Willow has been wrestling with the research from REVEAL since 2004. Hawkins said, “We’ve tried incremental changes for four years, but now we know we have to overhaul our whole strategy.” Small steps are no longer the method; Willow is revamping everything. “It would be malpractice for us to not do something with what we’re learning."
Read the whole thing.
HT: Z



9 Comments:
It sounds like a good direction for Willow to take...trouble is, if apostasy and luke-warmness return to the church (and I think history shows that all churchs need to be on guard against those things all the time) it'll mean that a future survey will indicate that the church is to Biblically focussed and Christ centred so out that'll go.
If you live by the poll, you'll die by the poll.
God help them.
Daryl raises a good point.
It seems they are changing their methodology (and I applaud their humility in admitting they were wrong), but their core for decision-making remains the same: key off of people. And that will always be, at its absolute best, a moving target. At its worst -- contrary to Scripture.
Daryl and Luke make good points. The basic premise of their worship is that it is about man and his edification and salvation. To make a real change they're going to have to turn the corner and understand that worship is about God and pleasing Him.
Daryl and Luke and Joshua make good points...
(Sorry I couldn't resist keeping that thing going....)
I was going to write, Daryl,Luke, Joshua and Daryl have a good point, but then I decided not to.
rileysowner,
If you change your mind, please come back and say it anyway. You'll make a good point.
[ducking, running, and grinning]
All the great points notwithstanding...
thanks Justin. Great catch! We'll be running it shortly.
P.S. Looking forward to Louisville next week. See you there, Lord willing.
They are still "going with what works", rather seriously trying to apply what the Bible commands. Now, these efforts are closer to what the Bible commands, but that seems to be by coincidence, not by principle.
Might this be closer to what the Bible says simply because they are asking the mature Christians whose opinions are informed by the Bible?
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