T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
133.1 | one neighbor to another | FRETZ::HEISER | raise your voice in shouts of joy | Fri May 07 1993 17:26 | 17 |
| Hi Rich! Going by your numbers, the church I currently attend is a
mega (>2000). The MOST positive reason is the excellent expository
teaching we're receiving from the pulpit. There's no question in my
mind that this is why this church has quadrupled in size over the last
5 years.
This is the largest church I've ever attended on a regular basis. I
never regularly attended a church over 400 before this. So naturally,
my only negative is not getting to know as many people and feeling like
one big family that small church atmospheres have.
Another problem, that is usually shared by all churches of all sizes,
is having enough volunteers to handle all the duties of the church
(i.e., Sunday school teachers, nursery workers, music ministers, etc.).
hope this helps,
Mike
|
133.2 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | My God Is OK, Sorry About Yours | Fri May 07 1993 17:32 | 8 |
| I attend a small church of 450, but came from a mega church of 4000. I
visit the mega church now and then and vow that I will never return to
a mega church if I can help it. The small church I attend is in a small
town. The community is tighter than the big church. Financial difficulties
are handled easier in the smaller church and there is less politics
involved in getting things done.
Jim
|
133.3 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Revive us again | Fri May 07 1993 17:36 | 21 |
|
I presently attend a church that has about 350 members. I'm there because I
like the preaching and teaching, the fellowship, the sheparding, the soul
winning focus and the preaching and teaching (or did I say that?). I
have attended smaller churches (immediately before this one I briefly attended
one that had about 30 members) I believe this is the largest church I have
attended, and I believe we are about to embark on major growth.
I never thought I could be a part of a church of >500 people, but visiting
Nancy's church taught me different.
I find the church I am in now is the one I've been looking for for a long time
as it appears all of my spiritual needs can be met, as well as there is plenty
of opportunity for me to serve in various functions.
Jim
|
133.4 | | DPDMAI::HUDDLESTON | | Fri May 07 1993 17:42 | 9 |
| I attend a small church now, with no more than 100 people. I used to
belong to a mega church, and found that I got lost in the crowd very
easily. Its just more impersonal, to me. I like the smaller churches
(of course it depends on the church I guess) because I feel more like a
part of it. Its hard to explain, but I don't think I'll ever go back
to a mega church again. Its just rush rush rush.
Donna
|
133.5 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Fri May 07 1993 18:01 | 12 |
| My church has about 200 families (around 300 to 600 members). That's
as big ours get because when units get much bigger than that they are
typically split up into smaller units. My main reason for going to
this unit is because I'm LDS and it's the closest to where I live.
Typically, an LDS chapel serves a well-defined area. Usually (not
always) if you want to attend at a different LDS chapel you move to the
area it serves. This is not as much of a problem as it might seem
because the units are pretty consistent as far as meetings and quality
of services. And, typically it's easy to make friends as a newcomer
(or as a non-member -- perhaps especially as a non-member :)).
Steve
|
133.6 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Search Me Oh God | Fri May 07 1993 19:41 | 33 |
| Praise Time and may as well do it here..
We had 3123 people in church last Sunday, 525 people saved, 143
Baptized !!!!! :-) :-) :-)
You know no matter what size church you go to, the average amount of
close relationships you'll develop in a church is about 30. The larger
the church, the more opportunity to serve. The part that is so hard
about being in a large church... is that everybody things everybody
else is doing the work and therefore the harvest is plenty the workers
are few [for the amount of work that needs to be done].
We have the same core 300 doing literally every job in the church that
needs to be done and to be honest we need at least another 200 workers
to do the job really well! On Sunday Morning, in Jr. Church for
instance, we could use at least 5 more workers. My Sunday School class
averages 30 girls... and all our classes are that large, we need
helpers in our classes and we are solo in this effort. I currently am
mentoring a woman to become a teacher, and it has been such a blessing
to have her in there.
I love my large church, I love its vision of growth [we are in the
midst of a building project], oh yeah, we have only 1 acre of land, and
no parking at our church.. we shuttle people to church.
We use a local elementary school lunch room for Jr. Church, a local
Business has given us for $1000 per month a 23,000 square foot building
for our use.. which is where the parking lot is, and Jr. High school
gym has been given for our use at no charge... amazing what God is
doing on 1 acre of land in Santa Clara.
Nancy
|
133.7 | | USAT05::BENSON | God's Love's Still Changing Hearts | Mon May 10 1993 12:23 | 9 |
| I do not attend church! I attend a mission where Elaine and I are
members 19 and 20, but we're up to 29 members now. What do I like
about our mission - its size right now and the opportunity to make a
major contribution.
I have attended all size churches and can feel at home in any size
congregation. I guess I prefer the 300-500 level ideally.
jeff
|
133.8 | | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Mon May 10 1993 12:47 | 33 |
| Whew, Jeff... Thought mine was going to be an odd-ball, thinking mine was
big...
My church is thought pretty big by UK standards. We have about 320
members, but anticipate it growing. On Sunday morning there was a
thanksgiving service for 7 new babies. Not all of them were exactly *new*,
but they were all under a year old. And we have a couple more ready-born
awaiting their slot for a thanksgiving too. Recently our pastor tried his
first multi-thanksgiving with two simultaneously, and stalled on one of the
parent's names, so we were all agog (you know him?) to see what would
happen this time, but he'd done his homework...
I believe that there's a place for large and small churches. And even for
mega... But each serve a different purpose. It's tremendous to worship in
a large congregation together, to benefit from warm ministry, and the
overflow of the Spirit together. But also we need to be in situations where
we can share more personally, where individuals have the opportunity to
grow etc... I think you may use adult Sunday School for that (we don't
have these, but I wish we did. I've appreciated my experience of them).
We do have our fellowship split down into area groups, which meet in homes,
and have a fellowship awareness there which helps us to relate in the
larger context.
Meanwhile, I know of a lot of fellowships over here which are very small -
less than 20 people, most (if not all) of whom are elderly (even by *my*
standards ;-), and it's sad to see these struggling.
Most places here would form a daughter church if they got much bigger than
our's....
Andrew
|
133.9 | Correction... | ENDTMS::CZARNECKI | Rich Czarnecki 566-4818 Psalm 1:1 | Mon May 10 1993 13:03 | 11 |
| re: .7
Whoooops..... you got me. Ok, ok WE are the church and we
gather together for worship and fellowship. OK.
The comments so far have provided a lot of encourgement for
me. I will respond as to why when I have a few free minutes today.
Thanks all,
Rich
|
133.10 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon May 10 1993 13:10 | 19 |
| How do you really figure out the "size" of a church?
The Church of the Advent is "the second largest" Episcopal Church in Boston.
Average Sunday attendance is around 450. Easter attendance is over a
thousand (but typically only about half come forward to receive communion).
There are over 1200 people on the mailing list, but many of them are just
occasional visitors; members of other parishes or just music lovers.
Trinity in Copley Square has about three times the average attendance; the
cathedral, though able to seat as many as The Advent, has about 1/5th the
attendance. Yet by a different reporting mechanism (members of record,
maybe?), The Advent and the Cathedral are both "500-600" and Trinity is
"2400-2500".
There are a lot of Episcopal churches in downtown Boston; there are
five all within a five minute walk.
/john
|
133.11 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Mon May 10 1993 13:15 | 23 |
|
Our church is small, with an average weekly attendance of 40.
The one thing that keeps us there (and brought us back when
we searched for a new church last year) - Pastor Rose! (Namely,
her Spirit led teachings!)
There are a few things I'd like to change, but they're small.
(In descending order: An earlier start time, lower volume for
the music, and closer to my home (Hey guys, whaddya think about
moving this here church 20 miles south ??? ;-) )
Like I said, they're minor things.
Interesting that a church of over 2000 can't get enough volunteers!
We could use more, but manage ok with those we have.
We did not select our church for it's size. We were led there,
and that's the size it happens to be. I like it as it is, but
wouldn't mind some growth, not just to have X members, but to
see that many more people blessed each week!
Karen
|
133.12 | bigger is better.... for me | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Mon May 10 1993 13:36 | 36 |
| By the definition in .0, I attend a mega church. I've been going there
for the last 14 years. The earlier 14 years I attended a small church.
Comparing the mega church with both the church I grew up in as well as
the other non-mega churches in this area, I'm pleased to be with the
mega church.
Besides the fact that it's a conservative inerrant-Bible-based church
(which has nothing to do with its size) I'm most pleased with the
opportunities a mega church offers - both to the membership as well as
to the community. There is so much opportunity for service that I could
literally be doing Bible teaching and involved in aspects of the music
ministry 7 days a week.
As for the community, the bigger you are (provided that it's managed
properly) the more impact you can have on your community. For example,
last year our special speaker for the July 4 service was Oliver North.
This year it will be Dan Quayle. A small church may have more
difficulty attracting notaries. We can also offer many help groups
(e.g. recovery from divorce, substance abuse help, etc.) and community-
visible events that a small church wouldn't have the resources to
offer.
The negative about it is in relation to how visitors may not be made
to feel welcome. Since no one knows everyone, no one can be sure if
someone is a visitor or not. Since it might be embarrassing to "welcome"
someone who has been a member longer than you, the tendency is to
assume that someone you don't know is a member, and you leave them
alone.
Let me close by stating that I think the church one should attend is
the one where God would have them attend. From where I sit, bigger is
better, but I doubt that God wants nothing but mega churches. The
important thing is that believers gather together for doing His work in
whatever capacity He provides.
BD�
|
133.13 | I'm content with my relationship w/ my pastor, but... | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Mon May 10 1993 13:42 | 6 |
| I just thought of another negative to a mega church. The pastor cannot
do pastoring for so many people. If you need to be "connected" (as in,
when you're in the hospital you want your pastor there, etc.) with the
(senior) pastor, you probably won't make it in a mega church.
BD�
|
133.14 | Thanks Karen, this note was not directed at you | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Search Me Oh God | Mon May 10 1993 13:53 | 42 |
| >Interesting that a church of over 2000 can't get enough volunteers!
>We could use more, but manage ok with those we have.
That's because when folks see a church that size, they come, join and
sit in a pew thinking they're not needed. When Pastor pleads from the
pulpit for workers, we'll see a small increase. Also, here in
California, it just seems folks prefer to be to themselves and don't
bond to very well or closely with others, even in the Christian circle.
Now you take a church like First Baptist Church of Hammond, and well,
it's down home, let me make you apple pie for the next week, cuz youse
my new neighbor!!! :-)
>We did not select our church for it's size. We were led there,
>and that's the size it happens to be.
Amen!!! That's exactly as it should be.
>I like it as it is, but
>wouldn't mind some growth, not just to have X members, but to
>see that many more people blessed each week!
The Bible says in ACTS that the church was added to daily. We are
commanded to win the lost and baptize them into the churches, if your
church is growing, then something's wrong. I just happen to be in an
intense study of ACTS right now, and the more I read and learn, the
more I realize that evangelism isn't a ministry that is part of a
church, but it is the directive of the church and IS the MINISTRY.
Small churches are great if they're new, but if they're small and just
kept that way because that's how we like it... this isn't a New
Testament church. It is an ecclesia or called out assembly, but it's
not alive.
Sorry if this offends some, but this is Bible through and through, I
challenge you to read and study the book of Acts.
Nancy
|
133.15 | | EVMS::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Mon May 10 1993 14:26 | 38 |
| I attend a church of about 200 members. Again, it's where we were led. It was
only about 100 members when we joined 9 years ago. I really love the sense of
family that is present there.
But much more than that, I love the ever-growing sense of the presence of the
Holy Spirit. The Spiritual growth we have been experiencing for the past 6
years or so is phenomenal, and the pace just keeps picking up. I really love
the pastor of the church. He's not a flashy leader type. His sermons are
wonderful, deep, and challenging, but he's not the sort of preacher that holds
people spellbound on every word. What he is, is a true shepherd. He's said:
"The message of every sermon of mine is the same, at the root: 'Move deeper in
your relationship with Christ,'" and everything he's done here has been in
support of that.
This focus on true shepherding has caused an interesting growth pattern. For a
couple of years after he came, we didn't experience a very large growth in
numbers. We gained some, but our community is very mobile, and we lost some to
job transfers. There actually was concern for a while that we weren't growing
as we should be. But what we didn't notice at first was that while we weren't
growing in numbers very much, we were growing in depth tremendously. There is
now somewhere between 60-70% of our active members in at least one weekly bible
study group in addition to Sunday worship, and an ever-growing committment among
more and more members to truly make Christ the center of our lives, not just
a piece of our lives.
And in the last two years, the numbers growth has begun to take off. I can't
count the number of times in the past two years I've heard new people say things
like "I've never been to a church like this before." There's just an infectious
joy in the body that grabs people when they just come to visit. We probably
have a dozen families in the past year alone who just came to bring their kids
to Sunday school, or just came because they ought to "do church," and are now
putting Christ in a central place in their lives for the first time.
It is one exciting place to be right now. There's been a growing sense too that
we've only begun the journey that God has set before us. There's a constant
wonder of "What is the Holy Spirit going to do here next?"
Paul
|
133.16 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Mon May 10 1993 17:37 | 17 |
|
Nancy,
I know you weren't directing your reply to me, but since it came up...
My church is relatively new. We've been in this location for two years,
and I'm not quite sure how long before that the church was started.
We've had lots of new members, but have also lost some members. Our
Church is near Fort Devens, and as that base was slated for closing,
people were relocated. We've also had some people leave (myself
included, for a time!) on their own, but new members have come in,
so the number of members held somewhat constant.
FWIW.
Karen
|
133.17 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Search Me Oh God | Mon May 10 1993 17:47 | 22 |
| Aw geez Karen,
I really didn't mean to indicate anything negative about *your* church.
I hope you weally beweeve me.
My church has grown relatively slow the last 3 years, the first 12
years was enormous growth, but the last 3 has been very small, the
numbers of added members have been incredible, but the numbers of
attrition have been incredible too.
With the economy of California [Silicon Valley] hitting some pretty low
numbers, people have sold the real estate, taken their equity and moved
to more economic areas to purchase homes. In one year we lost 123
members, we added however, 134 members [or thereabouts], the growth was
more then the loss, but for a year that makes growth look relatively
small.
To sum, when looking for a church, like Karen said, go where the Holy
Spirit leads you and go to a church that is true testimony of a New
Testament Church, which is evangelical.
Nancy
|
133.18 | Your comments have REALLY helped. | ENDTMS::CZARNECKI | Rich Czarnecki 566-4818 Psalm 1:1 | Mon May 10 1993 19:15 | 27 |
|
Thank you to all thge brothers and sisters who replied to my basenote.
I have been struggling with some things regarding the fellowship I had been
associated with and have recently left. I was having feelings that my move had
been based on just my own feelings. I am blessed to see that no matter whether
the assembly is small, medium, big, giant or whatever, there is a common
mind as to what 'makes a good church'. I have always believed that a growing
church was a healthy church. The New Testament bears witness to that!
I thank God that His Word is so clear as to what makes up a GOOD fellowship.
I don't want to get into any details in an open forum. Suffice it to say that
even though the church I was attending had more than 8000 members and could seat
6500 people at one time, there were some things being taught which clearly didn't
square with the Word of God. Growth indicates health but it can also provide a
comfortable breeding ground for questionable teachings. It's easier to get lost
in a crowd when the crowd is REALLY huge!
The Lord has already lead me to another fellowship. It will be a while before
I meet some people and begin to fit in, but the teaching is ROCK SOLID and that
is what will make the difference in the long run.
Once again, thanks for providing the 'sanity check'.
In Jesus' Name,
Rich
|
133.19 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Tue May 11 1993 10:03 | 6 |
|
Nancy,
I beweeve you!
|
133.20 | | USAT05::BENSON | God's Love's Still Changing Hearts | Tue May 11 1993 10:54 | 8 |
| Rich,
I wasn't intending to be a contrary by my statements in .7. I really
do not attend a church (it is not consituted with by-laws and such). I
attend a mission of the Southern Baptists. If we grow and constitute
we will formally become a church someday.
jeff
|
133.21 | | ENDTMS::CZARNECKI | Rich Czarnecki 566-4818 Psalm 1:1 | Tue May 11 1993 13:20 | 12 |
| Hi Jeff,
I didn't take your comment as contrary. You reminded me that
_we_..._us_... the people of God, are the church. I have been let down
by man and his attempt at religion. I have told other people that
Religion is what man tries to do for God while Christianity is what God
has already done for man. I am starting to take my own advice. Take
care.
May the Lord be with you, my brother,
Rich
|
133.22 | parking is a headache | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Wed Sep 28 1994 20:12 | 7 |
| I was just looking over some old topics and noticed this one started by
Rich. I saw him at church the other day and he said to tell everyone
"Hi!"
BTW - Our church is now at 3,000 and counting...
Mike
|
133.23 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Sep 28 1994 20:18 | 3 |
| ha! You think your parking is a headache, my church runs close to 2000
every week and we only have 40 parking stalls at the church! Ask Jimbo
it's quite an operation.
|
133.24 | physical exercise for spiritual food | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Wed Sep 28 1994 20:28 | 1 |
| Yeah that is pretty bad! Oh well, it's a good way to have to walk ;-)
|
133.25 | Don't talk to me about parking | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Sep 28 1994 21:58 | 5 |
| We have an average attendance of 400-500 and _no_ parking. Not even one
single space. All the on-street parking is "resident permit required".
I park seven miles away and ride the subway.
/john
|
133.26 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | I'm the traveller, He's the Way | Wed Sep 28 1994 23:39 | 17 |
|
yes, I was amazed at how Nancy's church handles the parking..quite a task..
My church is about 350 and growing. We are moving as quick as we can with
a building program, though we are about 9 months away from pouring a founda-
tion. However, we are beginning to prepare the various ministries of the
church for the new facility, which will be an exandable 700 seat auditorium.
We have no real parking problems, but we've had to get pretty creative with
our first hour activities.
Jim
|
133.27 | | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | Julie O'Donnell | Thu Sep 29 1994 04:25 | 10 |
| I'd say my Church had about 100 attendees on average. Most of us walk
to church. We do have parking, but only space enough (including on the
road) for 15 or so cars, so I don't think it's worth the hassle and I
don't like driving anyway. The Church is about 2 miles away from where
I live.
They were talking about maybe creating a proper carpark in the church
grounds but I hope they don't - I prefer garden to concrete and the
garden supplies me with an inexhaustable supply of greenery for my
flowers.
|
133.28 | | USAT05::BENSON | | Thu Sep 29 1994 12:13 | 30 |
|
I'm only a bit embarrassed to admit that we left the Southern Baptist
mission about a year ago. I simply could not tolerate some Southern
Baptist doctrine or culture (congregational, belligerantly so in the
south). But I left in a very mature way with a very frank discussion
with the pastor.
We have found our home for awhile. We are a part of the Orthodox
Presbyterian Church now. It's a mission again (I'm growing a bit tired
by the pace - so much to do). I am so certain that the Presbyterian
form of church government is the biblical model and the difference is
so evident that its awesome sometimes. I'll never(?) return to a
congregational form of church governance. The Reformed faith has its
own struggles for sure but they aren't with fundamental doctrines. In
fact I have seen no more solid biblical traditions than in the OPC.
Hopefully I won't be reporting in a year that we've moved again! We
live in a rural suburb (exploding now, actually) and there isn't a
great volume of diversity by any stretch of the imagination. Now there
is a new Anglican congregation starting up (this seems sooooo strange
in our area). It is an offshoot of an Atlanta Anglican church, "Church
of the Apostles". A marvelous pastor serves there - Michael Youseff
who some of you may have heard on the radio. He's of Egyption
background raised substantially in Scotland.
Anyway,
jeff
|
133.29 | big churches have a whole different set of problems | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Thu Sep 29 1994 13:25 | 16 |
| Our biggest problem is that we've grown so fast in such a short time.
When I said we were at 3,000 I was referring to adults only. When I
first started going there 3 years ago we were at 700. There has to be
at least 1 child per adult, which puts a huge strain on the nursery.
Earlier this year we were at our wits end in finding Sunday school
teachers and assistants to keep up with the demand. It finally got to
the point where we prayed that the Lord will either provide the help or
lead the people to another church ;-) About a month ago we received
volunteers for 200 new teachers and assistants so it's been an answer to
prayer and a tremendous help.
It is amazing to see how the Lord has moved. We living proof that
people love to sit under great Bible *teaching*.
Mike
|
133.30 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Sep 29 1994 16:10 | 11 |
| My current church responsibility is showing an attendance of around 40
or so. We are involved in planting a church in the Windham, NH area.
We even are bringing the makings of help groups together for some who
have wanted to come out of sinful alternative lifestyles. We are
establishing a new outpost for the kingdom of God in Windham, NH
and covet your prayers for this effort.
I hope that by the time we reach 3000, we'll be a growing collection
of group ministries.
Mark
|