Recently, however, we had reason to be disappointed in a contestant of Design Star on HGTV. Given the task of designing a room for a little boy, whose very basic requests were "locker room" and "bunk bed," she managed to design a sad space with neither feature. She created what she thought was good design, not what the child (or his parents) expected. Though he responded politely during the reveal, the last camera shot is of the little boy with his back turned to the room. It was as if he was so disappointed he couldn't pretend, so he just looked away.
This episode made me think. Are we designing church services for ourselves, or for the guests? When was the last time you asked a guest what they thought about a church service? Not if the coffee was hot or the people were friendly (hopefully both were), but do you know if they understood the message, knew how to apply it, and felt some connection to God they didn't feel before they got there? Do you think about these things as you are planning your services? How about the words of the worship songs?
Here's an example of an old hymn that you might sing in your church:
There is a fountain filled with blood drawn from Emmanuel’s veins;
And sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.
Lose all their guilty stains, lose all their guilty stains;
And sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.
Out of context, this could be pretty freaky imagery to the unchurched visitor. Fountains of blood? Drowning sinners?
The contemporary version cleans it up a bit, but there is still the same basic imagery:
It came and it healed me
It came and refreshed me
It came and washed my sins away!
Listen to the culture through your guests, friends, the media, and apply what they are longing for to your church services. Give them the basics - a spiritual bunk bed and lockers. Design a service around the foundational elements of the faith so that guests won't be disappointed.
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