A More Perfect Consumer Church
I’ve got some ideas that could help make the Church in America even more consumer-friendly. After all, since we need to be incarnational, it is our duty as the Church to unreflectively embody the consumerism of our day. Let me know if a church is actually doing any of this stuff:
eHarmony apparently does a lot of good matching men and women together…if their commercials are to be believed.
They should come up with an eHarmony-type-site for people shopping for churches! Why not? A church could fill out a profile, and individuals could also fill out a profile and they can be matched. That would significantly help streamline the consumer process.
Most churches that are worth-their-salt have coffee shops now. Why not cup holders on the backs of seats for the coffee? And why not a number of strategically placed cream-and-sugar stations throughout the auditorium?
Let’s take the Satelite Church Model one step further. Instead of merely sateliting (having a celebrity pastor broadcast his sermons [either live, or recently recorded] to handful of "satelite" congregations), I say that people at home should pay for a subscription to have the sermon piped into their home weekly, so they don’t have to get dressed at all on Sunday. For an extra fee, they can have someone visit their home weekly to tell them the latest gossip, so that their church experience is complete.
The technology exists to allow someone to have a fully customized Bible. For each chapter of the Bible, the reader should select which translation offends them the least. After they’ve made their way through the entire Bible, deciding upon translations on the basis of comfort alone, they can send their customized translation into a printing house that will leather bind it and ship it back.
On second thought, my previous idea wouldn’t work, since it requires a lot of reading.
I think mega-churches should have fun fundraisers. Here’s one that I think could work in many churches over 1500: "Win an afternoon with Your Pastor!" People could buy tickets, and whoever wins the raffle can spend an entire 3 hours with their pastor. Of course, the pastor would need to have someone else preach that week, since spending time with regular people cuts into sermon preparation and large-organization leadership tasks.
Finally, I’m thinking of going into business. I’m going to mass produce a bumper sticker that looks like this:
The sticker will be coated with a dry-erase material so that it can be changed, based upon how one is feeling that day. This takes the pressure off of having to submit to Jesus in any way, and instead making him the romantic personfication of whatever ideal we personally find the most satisfying.
Just some thoughts (removing tongue from cheek).










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