Chapter 3 – Major Influences on Worship

Continuing in Chapter 3 of Pagan Christianity?, writers Viola and Barna next tackle how the changes in early church buildings affected worship. Because Emperor Constantine was the #1 “lay person” in the church, a simple style worship service would simply not do. To honor him, much of the pomp and ritual of the imperial Roman court was integrated into Christian worship.

These pagan cultural imports included:

  • Lights and aromatic spices carried before important people in public
  • Candles and incense burning
  • The clergy dressing in special garments
  • Gestures of respect toward the clergy
  • Beginning a service with a processional and music accompaniment
  • Choirs and instruments to make the processional more dramatic, professional and ceremonial

The outcome of these and more cultural imports was a “loss of intimacy and open participation. The professional clergy performed the acts of worship while the laity looked on as spectators.”

A Catholic scholar is quoted as writing that “even the ceremonies involved in the ancient worship of the emperor as a deity found [its] way into the church’s worship, only in their secularized form.”

4th century Christians came to view Constantine’s rise as an act of God, and divine provision for their rescue. He even instituted the “tax-exempt” status idea for these churches. This is in contract to 1st century Christians who were taught to avoid pagan culture and its futility, and to be living counter-cultural examples through their new life and community found in Christ.

To see Christians slowly blinded and overcome by the world system is a sad story. Buildings made with hands become holy shrines. Pagan ceremonies and objects become “holy” traditions of the church. They even began to attribute all of these things to principles and ideas found in the Old Testament. “Dignified and sacramental ritual had entered the church services by way of the mysteries [the pagan cults]. and was justified, like so many other things, by reference to the Old Testament.”

But this idea is self-defeating. We know from the New Testament that on the cross Jesus Christ destroyed the old wine skins [forms and structures] of sacred priests, sacred buildings, sacred rituals and objects. He replaced it all with the new wine skins of a nonhierarchical, nonritualistic, nonliturgical organism called the ecclesia.

REFLECTION

I do not personally come from a high-church tradition with lots of liturgy and ceremony. I can appreciate some of the beauty and wonder of these forms of worship, but it really doesn’t help me connect with God. Even within the Protestant traditions that I am more familiar with, I am growing tired and weary of some of the outcomes we see outlined in this book.

How many “churches” have spent years of time, and millions of dollars on their buildings? Buildings require upkeep, maintenance, expansion, heating and cooling, parking and all the rest. They can become a huge weight around the neck of a local congregation. How many have floundered and failed because of a building? How many other needy people were not ministered to because a “church” was focused and sidetracked on their building?

Buildings tend to become a huge distraction to people being a church, and doing the work of ministry and service that it is supposed to be about. Instead of investing in people, the community and outreach, we spend most of our time and money on the physical needs of the building and the programs in it.

Given this background and cultural conditioning, when it comes to worship, we feel we need sound systems, comfortable seatings, projection systems, technology, nice decorating, stained glass, beautiful objects, and all the rest… or “we can’t have a good worship experience.”

I don’t see any of this in the New Testament descriptions of the church. I see simplicity, mobility, agility, and more of a “freedom from,” rather than a “bondage to.” Perhaps the early believers we so thrilled with their new freedom in Christ that the old patterns, forms and structures didn’t have much appeal. Why have a building when you can worship from house to house and enjoy fellowship out in the neighborhoods, courtyards and places where the people are?

I think the 21st century world and culture is moving back toward these early NT church patterns. We have experienced spiritual life with the weight of programs, budgets, staffing, annual reports, fund raising, boards, buildings and committees, and found it wanting. We are yearning for a simpler and more basic spiritual experience with fewer encumbrances. We would rather invest a greater part of our time, money and talents in people, relationships, discipleship, ministry, service and outreach.

Does the community I live in need something like this? Do I need this? I think so. How do I make it happen? What are the steps? Where do I go from here? That is the question and the process of discovery I find myself in.

Garden Variety Evolution Wilts

Fazale Rana writes in the March/April 2008 edition of the Reasons to Believe Newsletter that evolutionists and creationists agree that the earth’s “garden” (plant life) has changed dramatically over time. The questions is on the “how.” Darwinists propose that it happened slowly in spontaneous response to external and internal environment changes via natural selection and mutations. But this theory doesn’t seem to fit with what we now know from the fossil record.

Scientists like Stephen J. Gould have modified the theory to propose a “punctuated equilibrium” theory to better fit the fossil record. This view states that life changed in sudden spurts, followed by long periods of little or no change. These proponents say that small groups of species became isolated and that change occurred rapidly as they responded to their new environments and conditions.

The University of Oregon challenged this notion by doing theoretical work that showed the isolation and adaptation process at the core of “punctuated equilibrium” leads to extinction, not evolution. Field workers from Washington University have more recently confirmed this conclusion by studying collared lizards in the Missouri Ozarks. They found that an isolated group is more likely to die off than adapt and survive.

In conclusion, the evolutionary view faces two major problems. It lacks corroboration from the fossil record, and the punctuated equilibrium version lacks a legitimate mechanism. In light of the absence of naturalistic explanations, it seems only reasonable that science should consider all options, including the possibility of an “intelligent designer.” The “scientific method” is by definition based on gathering evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning. It pursues the “truth” without bias, no matter where it leads.

What Al Gore Thinks of People Like Me

I found this revealing video on YouTube today while watching another climate change related video. Al Gore is speaking with Lesley Stahl on 60 Minutes about global warming. He makes an incredible statement about all those who disagree with him. Then, just when you think that he is making a joke and exaggerating things to make his point, he’s not! Yikes! – he’s talking about me!

Causes of Global Climate Change

Today, a friend of mine told me about a video he recently received and saw that really impressed him. He found it on YouTube, and sent me the link. I’ve just finished watching it. He’s right – it is very good! I offer it here for your educational benefit.

I think it raises the serious question whether or not we we willing to look at all the evidence, and study every possible explanation scientifically, no matter what the potential outcome. I think many are already so politically committed to what they think is the reason, that they can’t afford to be wrong.

Scot McKnight on House Churches

Scot McKnight - Professor at North Park University

Scot McKnight - Professor at North Park University

I’ve recently been diving into personal research about what the “Emerging Church” or the “Emergent Conversation” is all about. One of the resources I came across is a website called Emergent Village which appears to be a sort of clearing house for this movement in the US.

One of the resources they offer on the site are podcasts by a number of different speakers, writers and authors who are leading this movement or “conversation” as they like to call it. People like: Brian McLaren, Scot McKnight, Doug Pagitt, Diana Butler Bass, Tony Stone, and many more. You can also subscribe to the Emergent Village podcasts through iTunes.

I have found the communication by one of these leaders to be very good. His name is Scot McKnight, and he is a professor of Biblical & Theological Studies at North Park University here in the Chicago area. He has written a number of books, including one called Jesus Creed… which is also the name of his blog… which I highly recommend subscribing to.

One podcast that is outstanding is Scot speaking to a leadership group of Northpoint Community Church in Atlanta about “The Whole Gospel.” You really must listen to it.

Near the beginning of his talk, Scot highlights some amazing facts about “the church.” First, that there are 20 million Christians in the US who are currently not involved in any organized, institutional church. They are completely disconnected from it, and they meet in organic house-based churches. These organic churches are “growing like crazy” according to Scot, who was basing his facts upon research done and reported by George Barna. This growth is mostly by new believers being “added to the church.”

He also pointed out that a research group in Europe has been studying this same trend worldwide, and they estimate there are currently 125 millions Christians worldwide who do not go to a “local church.” They predict that in 2025, there will be 250 million Christian like this.

He notes that “This is the growing generation”… and that many of his college students graduate and then end up getting together informally with other believers informally on Friday night and weekends and they do not attend a local church. They feel that this is “good enough.” This pattern usually lasts up to 5 years.

My response is: what is the institutional, organized “church” have to say about this? Does this not reflect a growing sense of “irrelevancy” that many of the young are saying they experience toward “the church?” What is “the church” going to do about it? How will it respond?

I sincerely hope that we “moderns” who have grown up in the institutional and organized “church” can find the maturity and humility to look at ourselves, and change where we need to change in order to stay relevant to not only the younger generation of Christians, but more importantly to the “post-modern” culture around us.

Sunshine Gospel Ministries Website

At the company I founded in 1996 called BIRKEY.COM, I was able to build a web design business first as a one man web designer, and then as a team when I merged with a software development firm. Most of my experience in those years was in designing sites for Windows servers using Microsoft based technologies such as Active Server Pages (.ASP) and SQL Server databases.

When I started Headstand Media in 2007, I had the opportunity to start designing for “open source” technologies in addition to Microsoft technology. This development has opened up a hole new world of possibilities from a design, usability and customer service perspective. It also affords my customers to harness the cutting edge Web 2.0 features that are built primarily in open source. Now I can afford to asses the needs of my customers and recommend the best design, search engine optimization AND web 2.0 technology to meet their needs! Fantastic!

Sunshine Gospel Ministries Home PageOne such customer is Sunshine Gospel Ministries, located in the Woodlawn neighborhood of Chicago, near the University of Chicago. Sunshine is a non-profit Christian organization that exists to seek renewal in the city through ministries of discipleship, mercy, and justice. They do this through building relationships, teaching and mentoring, developing life skills, care and advocacy in their community. They’ve got a fantastic facility, a great staff and a great reputation in the community. They are a joy to work with!

Headstand Media was asked to assess the current Sunshine website, to help them define a web strategy for the future, and then implement a new Chicago website design and content management system and search engine optimization to meet those strategic goals.

We determined that an open source tool called Drupal (see Drupal.org) was the best content management system for Sunshine for a number of good reasons:

  • Low cost – it’s FREE – and this is a non-profit ministry!
  • No future license costs for upgrades – also FREE.
  • Runs on a standard LINUX hosting package, which is extremely affordable – usually around $100 per year. (This sounded good to them as well!)
  • Very large and mature worldwide developer community
  • Very informative and easy to use website found at drupal.org
  • Extensibility: loads of features can be added in a modular fashion – also free!
  • Widely used by many other corporations, organizations and associations
  • Very search engine friendly taxonomy and navigation – helps their site get found in the search engines.
  • Written in open source PHP and uses the mySQL database (also free)

We also decided that Sunshine would be able to manage and maintain their website themselves with minimal training and orientation with this powerful Content Management tool. We were right!

My firm, Headstand Media was able to design a new interface and a new look to better brand and position Sunshine as a Chicago based urban ministry. We were able to wrap the new design around the Drupal CMS fairly easily. We finessed their new logo, and created other ministry logos to help them better position themselves and their brand visually. We integrated Flash animation and Flash video with ease. The Drupal CMS tool was great to work with.

The new Sunshione Gospel site was launched on March 24, 2008 – almost one month ago. In that short time, their website is now #5 for a Google keyword search on “chicago urban ministry,” and #3 for “chicago urban ministries.” It was virtually lost and very hard to find before this web redesign and SEO project. Their new site is competing with the other big Chicago-based urban ministries such as: Breakthrough Urban Ministries and Circle Urban Ministries.

I get a lot of personal satisfaction and fulfillment knowing that we were able to make such a huge difference for the better in such a short time. I believe in what Sunshine is doing and so the personal satisfactions is even greater! I am hoping that their ministry will increase and grow in part because of our contribution.

Check them out at www.sunshinegospel.org

Go See “Expelled” – The Movie

Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed

Ben Stein\'s \My wife and I went and saw the newly released movie “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed” last night, and I’ve got to say it is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a long time. We had not heard about it before yesterday, and we knew very little about what it was about. It just sounded more interesting than anything else playing. It turned out to be not only interesting, but also entertaining, thought-provoking, and it actually draws you in like a good drama with a compelling plot and interesting characters. Yet, it’s a documentary!

Ben Stein is a well-known actor, comedian, speech writer, syndicated columnist, economist, lawyer, professor and TV game show host, author, commentator and financial adviser – to name just a few of his accomplishments.

In recent years Ben has taken on “Big Science” and what he calls the Darwinian Evolutionists establishment, charging them with suppressing free and open scientific inquiry, and persecuting those who do not toe the line in the politically correct academic environment.

As Ben writes on his blog: “America is not America without freedom. In every turning point in our history, freedom has been the key goal we are seeking: the Mayflower coming here, the Revolution, the Civil War, World War II, the Cold War. Tens of millions came here from foreign oppression and made a life here. Why? For freedom. Human beings are supposed to live in a state of freedom. Freedom is not conferred by the state: as our founders said, and as Martin Luther King repeated, freedom is God-given.”

Of course there are critics in the media and in the scientific community who claim the movie is propaganda, or just a sleazy cover for creationism. This will no doubt continue as the film gains more viewers in the coming weeks and months.

I particularly enjoyed the interviews with Richard Dawkins, John Lennox and Alister McGrath because of my personal connection with Oxford, England having studied there with the Zacharias Trust in the summer of 2006. I heard lectures from both Alister and John, and heard other lectures in a lecture room down the hall from Richard Dawkin’s office.

My hunch on this film is that most people who have thought about these issues before will either love the film or hate it depending on their pre-existing worldview. However, I think there is a large number of people in the middle, who are not aware of there being a growing “issue” with Darwinian Evolution, nor the growing Intelligent Design movement within the scientific community. This movie will be the first exposure to the issue for most people. For this reason alone, I personally think it is fantastic… even if all it does is get people aware and thinking about it, and asking questions.

The scientific method is based upon free, open and honest inquiry. I don’t see how anyone who understands this should have a problem with an open debate between Darwin’s theory of Evolution, and the proponents of Intelligent Design. Let’s have an open, fair fight and may the best theory win!

Watch the official movie trailer:

All I can say is to go see the movie and draw your own conclusion.

Chapter 2: Exploring the First “Church” Buildings

Exploring the First Church Buildings

A Typical AltarIn the book Pagan Christianity?, authors Frank Viola and George Barna continue Chapter 2 by exploring the evidence we have about the first “church buildings,” a trend started by the “Christian” Emperor, Constantine in the 3rd Century AD.

We have already learned why early church buildings were considered “sacred” places. This lead to the idea that congregants had to be purified in order to enter. This necessitated the design and construction of fountains and courtyards to pass through before entering. Early church buildings were huge and modeled on the Roman “basilica” – the common Roman government buildings, the design of which was borrowed from Greek pagan temples.

Basilica design included:

  • Windows positioned to allow the sun to shine on the speaker who was addressing the audience – enhancing the sun worship idea – a practice that Constantine never stopped after becoming a “Christian.”
  • An elevated platform where the “clergy” ministered, much like the Roman magistrate. Rails were added to further separate the “clergy” from the rest of the congregation.
  • A center table or chest on the platform called the altar, considered the “most holy place” which usually contained bones of martyrs, or held the “holy” Eucharist. The Eucharist was served only by “holy men” – the “clergy.”
  • A “Bishop’s chair” or “Throne” was positioned in front of the altar, and was called the “cathedra.” The term ex cathedra means “from the throne.” This concept came from the seat of the judge in the Roman basilica. The sermon was preached from the throne. Power and authority rested in the chair, which was covered by a white linen cloth. Later, this was moved to the “pulpit,” a raised platform where the “clergy” delivered the sermon.
  • Surrounding the cathedra were rows of other – most often smaller – chairs, reserved for the elders.

The paternal hierarchical message embedded in this visual architectural layout and design were unmistakable.

A Typical PulpitThis leads me to consider our typical modern day church building layouts. We also tend to have a stage or platform that separates the “leaders” from the “congregation.” Many churches still have a special chair on that platform for the “senior pastor.” Many “churches” have other smaller chairs next to it for other leaders, be they pastors or elders, deacons or worship leaders.

Even though the original pagan influence is quite clear, there are many today who would still argue that these “traditions” of the modern institutional church ought not to be questioned, changed or tampered with because they are “sacred.”

As a missionary friend recently pointed out to me in a personal conversation – the physical layout, decorations, architecture, design, lighting, etc. of a worship space – all contribute to a subconscious message and expectation as to what a worshiper will experience in that place. We are sending messages, good or bad, positive or negative, about ourselves, our view of God, about the purpose of worship, the source of truth, and all the rest, by these choices we make.

At the dawn of the 21st century, what are those messages we want to send?

  • That worship is a spectator sport?
  • That in worship there are some people who lead and some that follow?
  • That we can “watch” worship take place?
  • That there is one special person with the authority to speak the words of God?
  • That God is separate and “up front” by the more holy places in the room?
  • That there are special people who can only handle the holy items?
  • That truth comes only from the one special person on the stage, in the chair or behind the pulpit?

What does all this really communicate about our God and our view of him – especially to those who do not yet know Him, and are unfamiliar with our customs and traditions? How many people have entered our special worship places, and received these unbiblical, negative messages, because they did not understand our culture and language? I wonder.

I believe that this kind of unthinking, blind acceptance of “the ways things are,” is unhealthy and damaging to the growth and relevancy of the ecclesia in the 21st century. I don’t see how we will reach our culture with the Gospel while thinking and acting like this.

Chapter 2: Constantine-Father of the Church Building

Statue of Roman Emperor ConstantineConstantine-Father of the Church Building

Viola and Barna now enter into the incredible story of Constantine, the founder of the concept of church as a building. In AD 324, Constantine became emperor of the Roman Empire. Constantine’s thinking was dominated by superstition and pagan magic. He never abandoned sun worship, even after his “conversion” to Christianity. He made “Sun-day” a legal holiday to honor the god Mithras, the Sun God. To his death he retained the title Pontifex Maximus: chief of the pagan priests. Shortly after he became Emperor, he began ordering the construction of church buildings.

All the historical evidence points to Constantine as an egomaniac. A few examples include that he continued the practice of honoring the dead and increased the idea of sacred objects an places. After his death he was declared “divine.” He surrounded his own grave site with monuments to the 12 Apostles, making himself the 13th and chief Apostle.

After his wife’s trip to Jerusalem in AD 327, he started erecting the first church buildings throughout the Roman Empire. He named the “churches” after saints-following the pagan custom of naming temples for the gods. He built them often over the graves of dead saints, assuming additional “powers” to be ascribed to that location. In total he built 9 church buildings in Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Constantinople.

So I conclude that today when we say, “I’m going to church,” we do so thanks in large part to Constantine, one of the most pagan “Christians” in history. We are also in fact not referencing any concept, idea or words in the New Testament.

I happen to like architecture and buildings. I have been an architectural illustrator in my past. I think it is great than man has been able to learn to design and build great buildings and structures and spaces – even to honor God. But, when we allow the culture and worldview around us to redefine and reshape the way we think and act about the New Testament “church,” our culture and what it is telling us must be questioned

The Apostle Paul said:“Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” I like how Eugene Petersen translated this verse: “Don’t become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even thinking.”

I suggest that this is one huge area where we have allowed the world system to change us for the negative.

Chapter 2: The Creation of Sacred Spaces and Objects

A typical grave markerThe Creation of Sacred Spaces and Objects

Authors Frank Viola and George Barna record that a shift occurred in the late second and third centuries when Christians began reverencing their dead. Christians began to meet in two places… their homes and the cemetery. They picked up the pagan practice of having meals to honor the dead. Their original intended purpose was to honor the memory of the martyrs.

It became their belief that to share a meal at the cemetery, honored their dead brothers and sisters. Since the bodies of the “holy” martyrs were there, the idea of it being a “holy space” also developed. They eventually copied the pagan practice and erected small monuments over these spaces.

In Rome, the Christians started decorating the catacombs (underground burial places) with Christian symbols. The authors point out an interesting fact that the cross as an artistic reference cannot be found prior to the time of Constantine. Thus art became associated with sacred spaces.

The Christian fish symbol for ChristAround the second century Christians started venerating the bones of saints, regarding them as sacred and holy. This gave rise to relic collecting.

Later in the second century, we see how the Lord’s Supper was changed from a full meal shared among believers, to a stylized ceremony called Holy Communion. By the fourth century the bread and wine produced a sense of awe, dread and mystery. As a result, some eastern churches put a canopy over the altar table, and later rails to separate and reinforce the idea of it being holy, separate and only for the holy persons (clergy) to handle.

So now we see more clearly how Christians developed sacred spaces, places and objects, as well as the beginnings of a sacred priesthood. During all of this, they also began to assimilate the “magical mind-set” common in pagan thinking. All of this prepared the way for the man who would be almost single handedly responsible for changing the meaning of the word church.