B
ben_dy
Guest
The mega-church with which I am most familiar is still in existence…I guess I better keep my non-writer day job!
Clarifications:
The universal pattern I saw for new members was like this:
- The ‘similarities’ I discussed were among the mega-churches I have observed (via their members).
- I never attended any. Merely observed the members due to my folks choice of friends and my own during college. I was a weirdo that mostly associated with protestant evangelical, but always stayed catholic (and went to mass.)
I would be willing to bet that the local mega you mention either had a change in pastor or that pastor at some point succumbed to a catastrophic temptation (did you allude to a sexual one)?
- Nominal, but not very practising christian meets mega-shurch member.
- Mega-mem gets to know the person, talks about his faith, eventually invites person to some event at the church.
- New person sees impressive christian brotherly love, hears impassioned focus sermon on sin, depravity and salvation through Christ.
- Person says to himself at some point: "My church was never anything like this. These people really know God and he is obviously present in them. I want this.
- Person converts.
The achilles heel of these places IS how much they revolve around the person of the pastor. But these two that I observed, anyways, were NOT about entertainment and sermons to make you feel good about how you are now. Not what I get out of the people that I have known from these places at all.
I really think they are, in essence, a rallying place during the collapse of traditional protestant denominations.
col.tv/
…but they’ve been plagued by scandal (mostly sexual in nature and most concerning Bishop Paulk himself) since the ‘ministry’ first started - before they grew to a church with 12,000 members in attendance each Sunday (I believe they are now down to a congregation of around 2,000).
The most recent scandal…
ajc.com/search/content/auto/epaper/editions/saturday/metro_3443cfb1d529115e0049.html
…FINALLY has some Atlanta-area ministers discussing the situation…
charismanow.com/11-04-05/
… but Paulk has some odd, definitely out-of-the-mainstream theological notions…
iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/cri/cri-jrnl/web/crj0022a.html
…and always has.
Yet, as one article says, he always seems to bounce back. MOST of the people that I knew that began going to his church almost exactly fit the pattern you describe: those who were Catholic were in church on Sunday because they felt they should be rather than because they wanted to be. Of my protestant friends, some were that type who attended church services once a month or less. ALL were impressed by the color-blind nature of the church (Atlanta has a small Catholic population that really only blossomed in the early 1980’s, so there simply weren’t that many black Catholics in the city). And all spoke, of course, of what a dynamic speaker Paulk is (looking at the website it appears that he’s still carried by one of the Turner channels).
As one of the articles says, sexual improprieties have been numerous since his ministry began but it wasn’t until 2001 that charges were made public against Paulk himself and settled out of court, and now, at the age of 78, he may have lost some of the charisma that kept people coming back for more (I wouldn’t know as I’ve not seen a broadcast of his in at least 8 years - maybe 10).
Because this is the first mega-church of which I was aware (and, maybe, one of the first mega-churches in the country) it’s my ‘comparison’ to most others whenever I hear the term. As I said, most of the folks that I knew that joined the church left - even if they were heavily involved for a decade or more. Some simply ‘unchurched’, some returned to Catholic or protestant churches, some didn’t want to talk about the experience, others couldn’t stop talking about the hypocrisy and betrayal they felt. No one left feeling good about the experience as a whole, I don’t think. Some (maybe 6 couples in all?) stayed and I’ve not kept in touch with them - they may be as happy as clams, still. I hope they are - just as I hope that these latest allegations aren’t true.
…continued…