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Thousands at Megachurch Take a Sunday Off from Church to Reach Out to Their Community…

Orginally published on Monday, April 23, 2007 at 6:00 AM
by Todd Rhoades

The seats at North Coast Church in Vista will be empty the weekend of April 29, but members won't exactly have the day off. The church, which attracts about 6,500 people on weekends, is planning the largest community-service event in its history, with participants painting, landscaping, washing and rolling up their sleeves for various jobs at 54 sites throughout North County on April 28 and 29...

In all, congregants will tackle 92 major projects, including painting and landscaping Washington Middle School in Vista and Claire Burgener Academy in Oceanside, with up to 200 people working at each site.

“Jesus said the Commandments can be summed up in two things,” said senior pastor Larry Osborne. That message: Love God, and love your neighbor.

The Weekend of Service will put that love of neighbors into action, said Osborne, senior pastor at the mega-church since 1980.

“We’ve always felt spirituality isn’t something that’s just in church, but it’s going out and doing it, day to day,” he said.

Community service is nothing new for churches, including North Coast. For years, the small study groups that about 80 percent of the members attend have been quietly performing a variety of services throughout North County.

That work became more focused about three years ago, when the church hired Casey Yorman as its first community service pastor. About a year and a half ago, Yorman said the idea of a churchwide project was planted after he attended a meeting with Leadership Network, a national group focused on church strategies for pastors.

Yorman said discussion at the meeting was on what it means to be an externally focused church, or a church that cares about its community rather than just its own congregation.

“Most people think of a church as a secret club, but we want to be externally focused,” Yorman said, “a church that cares for its community and wants to show it.”

The previous community-service work paid off for the church when it came time to select projects for the Weekend of Service.

“When we went out, a lot of people already knew who we were or said, ‘Oh yeah, you’ve worked with us before,’” Yorman said.

The church’s reputation for doing quality work comes in part from a number of professionals who are on the volunteer crews. Yorman said a couple of hundred contractors are leaders on the volunteer teams.

The Weekend of Service doesn’t mean the church will spend less time on its smaller projects throughout the year. Rather, each individual study group is being asked to do at least one project every season. Osborne said he is not sure whether the Weekend of Service will become an annual event.

About 80 percent of the thousands of people who attend Sunday services also meet in groups of about a dozen during the week at a home for a more personal Bible study, Yorman said.

North Coast itself began in 1977 as a home Bible study in Carlsbad. It has grown to be the country’s largest member of the Evangelical Free Church of America, an association of 1,400 autonomous churches. Osborne describes the church as conservative Christian, although its method for delivering that message is far from traditional.

In 1998, North Coast spearheaded the multisite church movement. Besides its main campus on North Melrose Drive, North Coast also has services at Madison Middle School in Oceanside and Fallbrook High School. It has broken ground near Guajome Park in Vista for a structure that will replace the main campus in fall 2008.

On weekends, people attending services at the main campus experience a multimedia, a la carte approach to church. The bustling foot traffic outside the buildings resembles a street fair, while worship services inside are a smorgasbord of styles.

Churchgoers have a selection of venues to attend Saturday night and Sunday morning. In North Coast Live, a room that holds about 500, Osborne or pastor Chris Brown delivers a sermon from a stage shared with a band. From the overhead stage lighting to the technician in the control booth, the production is smooth and polished, although Osborne, who has an affinity for Hawaiian shirts, likes to keep things casual.

At another venue called Traditions, an older crowd enters the room through a facade that resembles an white, wooden church. Inside, choirs sing traditional music from a stage bracketed by deep-purple banners that read “King of Kings” and “Lord of Lords.” The service breaks for the broadcast of Osborne’s or Brown’s sermon in the North Coast Live venue.

Likewise at two other venues on campus, worshippers hear the same sermons projected on a large screen onstage. In the Video Cafe, the feel is more of a coffee shop and the music is played on acoustic instruments. In the rock ‘n’ roll venue called The Edge, gospel music is a bit louder, the subwoofers are bigger and the artwork is more urban.

Worshippers at the Fallbrook and Oceanside campuses hear the same sermons as their fellow congregants in Vista, although the message is recorded and brought to the sites.

All those rooms will be quiet in about a week, however, as the culmination of more than two months of planning is put into play with service projects throughout North County. The church will calculate the estimated value of the work in man hours and material later, but Yorman said a conservative estimate will be more than $400,000.

But the real value of the projects is more intangible.

“One of the things we talked about is changing how people think,” Yorman said about planning the event. “They may think Christianity is just something in church on Sunday. This is the ultimate object lesson. When you close down church services on Sunday and go out and love your neighbor, it shows how serious you are.”

You can read a list of some of the projects here at the North County Times...

FOR DISCUSSION: Isn’t this great?!


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  There are 11 Comments:

  • Posted by

    This is an GREAT idea they are borrowing from John Ortberg, I think. There was an article in REV a few months back about it.

    We’re doing the same kind of thing as part of a series on what defines “the church” later this year. I can’t wait!

  • Posted by

    Absolutely fantastic! Just a word of encouragement to any church whether big or small who thinks about doing a huge one day reach out into the community type event.... Don’t let it just be about that one day. Use that one day to be a jumping off point for countless hours of being involved throughout the community on a daily basis. THAT will show how even more serious you are about loving God and loving your neighbor.

  • Posted by Andy McAdams

    My family and I attend this church and there is no doubt that the church has a deep burden for the community.  When I first heard this announced, I scratched my head and wondered if they just couldn’t serve the community on Friday and Saturday.  Then I realized that was the “traditionalist” deep inside me trying to take over again.  LOL

    I guess you can say, North Coast Church is putting their money where their mouth is.  The most common rub I hear about Mega Churches is “How much money they must collect each Sunday”.  What a huge testimony it is to a community when a church would be willing to forfeit literally thousands of dollars in offerings and also be willing to pay for the projects they are working on.  To me there is an added testimony.  These people will be preaching without saying a word, giving up their entire weekends, serving their communities and their Lord and no doubt making up their offering the next week, I’m sure. 

    Hats off to Pastor Larry and North Coast Church.  Now if I could only get the smaller churches I am working with to catch this sort of vision.

  • Posted by Bryan McKnight

    How cool is that! Imagine a church, who is a called-out assembly, turning from the inside-out to impact a community! I believe when we take on the Christ Follower, Ambassador mentality like this we will see more and more people wanting what we have.

    When we keep thinking outside the box and get into the world, lives will be changed. Great story! Great Example! Great Lesson!

    Bryan
    http://www.Imforgiven.com

  • Posted by

    “Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven. Matthew 5:16 (NASB)

    I hope this “fire” is caught by every pastor and board!

  • Posted by John Atkinson

    That is one of the most amazing things I have ever seen a church do. Way to go North Coast, you guys rock.

  • Posted by

    Andy,

    Thanks so much for sharing about your connection to this church. And yes, if all churches could catch this vision!

    Looking forward to hearing more from this church…

    Blessings,
    Camey

  • Posted by Jeremy Farmer

    Absolutely incredible. I can’t wait to see what happens as a result of it. That’s the heart of God right there.

  • Posted by

    I attend North Coast and worked as a video camera man during the week of service. It was amazing to see the spirit of God working through the service.  I hope that this becomes an annual project.  It was a huge operation to take on but was worth all the work to see how we touched the people we worked with.  One teacher said he wanted to attend the church the next week so that he was able to see some of the videos that we were shooting.  Pastor Larry integrated a recap of the weekend of service into his sermon the next weekend including videos of a lot of the projects.  If you visit Youtube and search North Coast Church there are some videos of the weekend of service.

  • Posted by

    The message seems to be: humanitarian aid and the views of the community are more important than the church service.  What other things do they promote as priority?  Time with family over time in the Word?  Time in fellowship over time in prayer? 

    Small seemingly insignificant steps into false direction are some of the most dangerous.

  • Posted by Peter Hamm

    No, Sean.

    If that were the message they wouldn’t have only shut down services for one weekend.

    What this kind of activity DOES is to reinforce the idea that “pure and genuine religion in the sight of God the Father means caring for orphans and widows in their distress and refusing to let the world corrupt you.” I read that somewhere. This is the kind of thing that a “church without walls” weekend (that’s what we called it when we did it) accomplishes.

    Too many Christians think it’s all about Sunday services and not about being Christ-followers and being Christlike in their communities.

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