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Relevance:  A Tool, Not a Goal

Ed Stetzer writes: Relevance is a word seen more and more these days on church marquees, yellow page ads, and websites. It seems that every church wants to make sure everyone else knows how relevant they are. This strikes me a bit like the advertising agency named "Creative Ads." If you are so creative, could you not share that with me in a more creative way? No one advertises their lack of relevance. Who wants an irrelevant church? For most of us, we are tired of people criticizing culturally relevant churches. I have heard dozens of sermons against contemporary worship, music, and casual dress. Been there, done that, got the T-shirt (or the tie, depending on your perspective). But, we also need to be careful. Relevance can (and sometimes is) over-emphasized...

The problem isn’t found in the desire to be relevant. After all, the word relevant means, “to be pertinent.” The problem is that sometimes we have too little confidence in the Gospel and its ability to prove relevant on its own merit.

The Gospel is relevant, in this and every culture; it is often our churches and ministries that are not. We can find ourselves putting too much emphasis on relevance itself, and not enough on what we’re trying to make understandable - the Gospel.

While relevance can bridge some gaps to the Gospel, it is only a tool, not a goal.

Are you focusing too much on relevance?
Here are some ways you can know that relevance has become more important than the Gospel to you:

1. If we focus on personal transformation and not Gospel transformation.
Too often our messages are driven by the steps method (i.e. five steps toward financial freedom), when oftentimes these steps have little to do with Biblical advice on the subject. If this is the case, you’ll find more secular advice than Biblical advice on certain subjects. It’s not that we can’t learn from others in the world; however, the goal of our churches isn’t to simply reflect the culture but to impact it. The danger of relevance in this area is to enforce an already narcissistic mentality that permeates our culture. The consumeristic, me-istic mindset is thorny ground that threatens to choke out the Word in people’s lives.

2. If your sermons are so practical they lack any Gospel.
Do not preach any message that would not be true if Jesus had not died on the cross. It is great to be practical in what we teach; but, if we hesitate to share about the work of Christ, what is the eternal value? Using practical messages can help us share Biblical truth, but ultimately our goal is that they leave with the Truth, not just true stuff. The Truth is the person of Jesus. Think through the inner logic of Jesus and his very character. How does his viewpoint - what he really treasured - shine through here? The very essence of Jesus should waft through the room during your sermons.

3. If you talk about practical more than you talk about biblical.
This is more than simply how we preach, it is how we carry out our duties in the ministry. When sharing the vision of your church, what is prominent? What do people walk away with? What strikes them as being at the very heart of what your ministry is all about? There are many pastors who have visions of a new building, higher giving, and so forth. While these fit practical needs, many focus on them more than we focus on a Biblical aspect of our faith. You want the people you are leading to be built on the solid foundation of God’s Word - not the wood, hay, and stubble that will eventually fade away.

4. If your outreach demeans others that preach the Gospel.
This shows that your confidence is in your relevance and not His Gospel. Do not communicate anything that feeds people’s tendency to devalue other churches that preach the Gospel. There are plenty of churches today promoting their church by diminishing the ministry of another. While some of these churches may be irrelevant to much of the community, we shouldn’t make an extra effort to prove this to the community. Those churches are probably able to reach some people you couldn’t. We are all on the same team, even if our methods and styles are very different - so let’s begin to act like it - even when others do not.

5. If your approach makes you the hero and not Jesus.
It seems that many ministries are driven by personalities. It is not a good thing that the number one reason someone stays at a church is because they like the pastor. It is inevitable that personalities will drive some ministries, because people will obviously come to listen to this person. Seek for ways to promote others and their unique gifts. When you do so you emphasize the astounding body of Christ and the phenomenal power that comes when that body is truly connected and functioning. This brings glory to Jesus and not you.

Ed writes about five more over at the Catalyst Blog.  You can read these excellent points here...

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This post has been viewed 927 times and was added on June 25, 2007 by Todd Rhoades.
Filed under: Leadership Issues  Leadership Development  
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  There are 4 Comments:
  • Posted by

    EXCELLENT article!

    keep in mind on number 5, that as hard as you try to lessen yourself and increase Jesus, it still might not work, since people will tend to put you on a pedestal you don’t want to necessarily be on. And the harder you work, sometimes the more it seems that gets out of control. We should strive to avoid it though.

    Thanks! Great Monday Morning reading!

  • Posted by Phil DiLernia

    Good article.  I did think it was funny however that a 5 point article made light of the 5 point sermon!  Just a funny thought - not a putdown.

  • Posted by

    relavent, what a word, it fits what has become of the “old time churches” we need more “how too”
    we are an urban church struggeling with the new times vs the old ways.  somebody needs to start speaking to the fact that so many youths havent got a clue about God and His wonderful Bible, it’s not being transmitted to them, teach it so that is is clear to them as a mentoring tool.  Why are the therapy offices full and the churches empty??????  we need to act!!!!!  Pat Arena 617 783 2733

  • Posted by Phil DiLernia

    Hi Pat:

    Read Nehemiah Chapter 8.  Ezra read the Word of God to the people who hadn’t known what it said and he explains it so they could actually understand what it meant.  Then it says that the people were “JOYFULL” because the finally understood what it meant and what was being said.

    We need pastors and teachers to teach others how to make it more meaningful (by making it understandable!) I had a man tell me I watered down the gospel and when I asked him “how” he responded “well you read from the Word - that’s fine and well - but then you tell stories and explain what it means to everyone!” Imagine that??!!!

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