Oasis of the Sea (2009) |
Throughout the first half of the 20th century, New York
harbor bustled with ocean liners transporting thousands of people between North
America and Europe every week. Great ships like the Queen Mary and Normandie
were celebrated as floating palaces, but very few passengers enjoyed their
luxuries. Most who sailed on them were poor immigrants and refugees relegated
to third-class accommodations.
These ships served a highly utilitarian
purpose—moving passengers and cargo from point A to point B. That’s why they
were called “liners.”
But the glory days of the ocean liners began to fade in
1953 when a Comet roared across the Atlantic. The De Havilland Comet was the
first commercial jetliner. The distance covered by an ocean liner in six days
was traveled by a jetliner in six hours. Virtually overnight, the vast Atlantic
ocean became “the pond.” By the 1960s, the great ships were being laid up or
sold for scrap. Many predicted the passenger shipping business would never
recover. They were wrong.
A handful of innovative ship owners developed a new way
for their fleets to produce revenue: cruises. Rather than crossing the Atlantic
from point A to point B, cruises sailed in a circuit, embarking and
disembarking passengers from the same port. And their goal was not to transport
passengers, but to get tourists to buy and consume more of the products and
services onboard the ship. The shift from crossing to cruising was really a
shift from transportation to consumption.
Because of this, over time, cruise lines sought to
increase the number of entertainment options onboard their ships. This
triggered a rapid increase in the size of vessels being built, each one
incorporating more of the features vacationers wanted. As a result, many of
today’s gargantuan cruise ships dwarf the ocean liners of the past—something no
one would have predicted 50 years ago when passenger shipping was believed to
be on its deathbed.
The ocean liner Titanic (1912) compared to the cruise ship Oasis of the Sea (2009). |
Why am I talking about the history of the shipping
industry? Well, I think it’s a helpful parallel for what’s happened in the
American church over the last 40 years. Around the same time that jetliners
were causing waves for the shipping industry, cultural changes were also
rocking the church. Prior to the 1960s, most churches in America were small
with a very utilitarian function—they transported people into communion with
God by providing the basic necessities for living a Christian life.
But by the 60s and 70s, the Baby Boomers grew up and many
stopped going to church. The culture had changed—secular values, youth culture
and entertainment had taken root and the church could no longer compete.
Traditional churches, built for utility, struggled. But like some ship owners
at the time, entrepreneurial pastors began tinkering to see if a new purpose
for the church could be found.
What these “pastorpreneurs” found was that people would
still attend church in a post-Christian culture if it appealed to their felt-needs.
Rather than viewing the church as simply a means to an end (connecting people
with God), they made the church an end in itself. The logic was simple: If the
masses did not feel the need to connect with God, then perhaps another “felt
need” could draw them into the church: the need for community, or
entertainment, help with their kids or marriage. While they consumed the upbeat
music, support groups, dramas and therapeutic sermons, they will hopefully find
God too.
But by starting with consumers' desires, they were
mirroring the shift in passenger shipping away from liner voyages to cruising.
They were making the church itself the destination rather than the vehicle. New
jargon was even developed to articulate this shift. The goal was no longer connecting
nonbelievers to God, but rather connecting the “unchurched” to our ministry.
Reframing the church as the destination triggered
explosive growth in the size of congregations. Logic dictated that larger
churches, like larger cruise ships, could offer consumers more choices to
address their needs and desires. As a result, church growth went from a
byproduct of the mission to its goal, and the programs and facilities churches
incorporate today would have been unimaginable a few decades ago. Coffee shops,
bookstores, health clubs, recreation centers, even auto mechanics and
production studios. Just as modern cruise ships have redefined passenger
shipping, today’s megachurches have redefined our understanding of ministry.
And like the cruise industry, megachurches have flourished.
Today, half of all churchgoers in the United States
attend the largest 10 percent of churches. What rarely gets reported, however,
is that on average, 50 smaller churches close their doors every week in the
U.S. The church-as-destination model hasn’t advanced the church in America, it
has consolidated it.
Skye Jethani is an author, editor, speaker, consultant
and pastor. He occupies numerous roles at Christianity Today, a leading
communications ministry launched by Billy Graham in 1956. Since 2004 Skye has
served on the editorial team of Leadership Journal and is currently the group’s
Executive Editor. He is also the Senior Producer of This Is Our City, a
multi-year, multi-city project telling the stories of Christians working for the
common good of their communities.
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