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Monday, May 19, 2008
Meet needs, share Christ, panelist urges
By Adam Miller / Baptist Press
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HOUSTON (BP)--When several thousand people walked out of church in their stocking feet at Fellowship of the Woodlands near Houston, Texas, they made a simple but huge difference in their community.

"A big church makes a big impact," Fellowship pastor Kerry Shook said. "We wanted to make a big impact on the homeless of Houston. We knew people had given them plenty of blankets, but what they needed were shoes. We decided to do something that would solve a big problem instantly."

So he challenged the congregation -- if people felt led and with no guilt attached -- to take off their shoes and place them at the front of the sanctuary. The church collected 4,600 pair of shoes that day.

"People filled a need," Shook said. "And when they walked out in their socks, they got to experience a little of what the homeless in our area deal with every day."

Shook is one of four panelists slated to participate in the Missional Network Dinner and Panel Discussion set for June 9 during the 2008 Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting in Indianapolis.

Shook and other missional pastors will discuss the challenges and opportunities facing churches as they look for relevant ways to witness and minister in their communities.

"We've been a church of all different sizes," Shook said. "We wanted to have a vision to help people experience Christ."

Every church, regardless of size, can be Christ's presence in its community, Shook said. It's a matter of identifying the needs of a community and doing something that will mobilize an entire congregation into service and evangelism.

Fellowship of the Woodlands has done this through simple acts like raking leaves on a Saturday or, as they grew larger, collecting as much as 70,000 pounds of food for relief. They even purchased and staffed feeding units for disaster relief ministries.

"Acts of kindness, no matter how simple, make a difference," said Shook, who sees every kindness as an open door to sharing the Gospel.

These "conspiracies of kindness" and the church's vision to multiply and spread have spawned church plants elsewhere in Texas and in New York, as well as a satellite church 50 miles away in Atascocita, Texas, that already runs 1,700 in attendance.

The congregation has not always latched onto Shook's vision.

"We had 15 people come to help start the church," Shook recalled. "They got so excited only eight came back." Continued...

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Subject: More Megachurch Malarkey
Rev. Shook's recent shoeless stunt is just one more display of how removed the megachuch movement is from reality. Not long ago he and his wife were featured on ABC's Nightline sermonizing about the need for Christians to pack more excitement in their sex lives. The only thing new here is that this Pastor and Mrs. Pastor (popular new and -- as always -- another "exciting trend" -- within the ever beholden to the latest frends contemporary version of evangelical Protestantism: merely megachurch christianity) -- are just hawking another addition to the continuing stream of merely small-c megachurch bland-brand of contemporary christianity.

To be fair, I'll admit to being Catholic, but I'll go a step further and admit my Church pulled off some pretty embarrassing boners of its own during the giddiest years of "post Vatican II grass-roots reforms" -- complete with all the "clown" and even a "polka mass" I once attended in Massachusetts. (Yes, the band struck up the melody of "In Heaven there is no beer" during the offeratory. Kindly substitute "fear" for "beer," thank you. Thankfully, Pope Benedict's sweeping all that nonsense out St. Peter's back door.

Thankfully not all of Protestantism's infected by this mega-virus of Sunbelt-style megachurch nonsense, where packaging reigns and substance takes a back seat. Any time Shook wants to put some real sizzle in his sermons, he can ditch the sex and shoeless schticks for substance and put his big wallet where his mouth is by selling off his multi-million dollar "campus." Then, do as Jesus told the rich man seeking entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven, he can give what's left after all the closing costs to a real charity. I've got two in mind; one started by Protestants, Habitat for Humanity or the soon-to-be canonized St. Mother Teresa of Calcutta's MIssionaries of Charity.

Boy, I must be dreaming!
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