主线的隐性散居与福音派对当代崇拜的接受

IF 0.1 0 RELIGION
L. Ruth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

到20世纪90年代初,伊利诺伊州芝加哥附近的Willow Creek社区教堂可能是美国最著名的教堂。这是当天最热门的教会新闻。关于教会的文章出现在各种读者的出版物上:妇女节、美国天主教、《纽约时报》、《财富》、《华尔街日报》、《时代》杂志和《今日基督教》。宗教社会学家也在写关于这个迅速发展的教会的论文。20世纪90年代,当北美礼仪学院在芝加哥举行年会时,即使是在礼仪事务上获得严肃学术的堡垒,北美礼仪学院也对该会众的一项服务进行了实地考察。此外,越来越多的教会领导团队亲自前往伊利诺伊州朝圣,观看、模仿和模仿Willow Creek的成功。柳溪是什么引起了人们的注意?这是教堂周六和周日的探索者礼拜。为了为其郊区目标受众(教堂称之为“Unchurched Harry and Mary”)提供一种无障碍、愉快的体验,Willow Creek试图消除可能导致这些郊区居民避开其他教堂的每一个无聊障碍,这让教堂世界天翻地覆。结果是对周日上午进行了彻底的修改。相关信息?专业级流行音乐?优质剧集?出色的热情好客(甚至可以通过停车的动态进行思考)?轻松的氛围?有吸引力的商业风格的校园?Willow Creek按照计划仔细考虑了所有这些问题,并在每个周末领导其多个探索者服务。Willow Creek教授的这种寻求者驱动的方法为数千个会众的革命提供了一个模式。没有那么突出的是,Willow Creek正在经历自己的礼拜迁移,既没有成为媒体的头条新闻,也没有引起渴望模仿旅居伊利诺伊州的朝圣者的注意。但这一举动并没有发生在周末。这是在会众周中的礼拜仪式上。这些周中的仪式是为会众中活跃的基督教信徒计划和举行的。(当时,Willow Creek谨慎地避免将其为寻求者提供的周末服务称为“礼拜”。这些服务是为了传福音和外联,而不是对上帝的崇拜。其礼拜服务——“新社区”服务——发生在周中。)起初,这些周中的服务有点事后才想到的,因为20世纪70年代末会众开始的主要愿景是福音宣传。这些周中的服务就像圣经研究一样,有几首当代歌曲被主题性地挑选出来,摆放得很整齐。但1982年夏天,当会众的首席牧师比尔·海贝尔斯(Bill Hybels)从暑假回来后,这种地位发生了变化
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Hidden Diaspora of Mainline and Evangelical Adoption of Contemporary Worship
By the early 1990s Willow Creek Community Church near Chicago, Illinois, was perhaps the most prominent church in the United States. It was the hot ecclesiastical news of the day. Articles about the church appeared in publications across a range of readerships: Woman’s Day, US Catholic, the New York Times, Fortune, the Wall Street Journal, Time magazine, and Christianity Today. Sociologists of religion, too, were writing their dissertations on this rapidly growing church. Even the bulwark of serious scholarship on liturgical matters, the North American Academy of Liturgy, took a field trip to one of this congregation’s services in the 1990s when the Academy had its annual meeting in Chicago. In addition, increasing numbers of church leadership teams took their own pilgrimages to Illinois to see, appropriate, and imitate in hope of replicating Willow Creek’s success. What was it about Willow Creek that garnered the attention? It was the church’s seeker services on Saturday and Sunday. In order to provide an accessible, enjoyable experience for its suburban target audience, which the church called “Unchurched Harry and Mary,” Willow Creek had turned the church world upside down as it sought to remove every boring barrier that might have led these suburbanites to avoid other churches. The result was a thorough revisioning of Sunday morning. Relevant messages? Professional-grade popular music? Quality dramas? Outstanding hospitality (which reached even to thinking through the dynamics of parking)? Relaxed atmosphere? Attractive, business-style campus? Willow Creek had thought through all of these issues as it planned and led its multiple seeker services every weekend. This seeker-driven approach taught by Willow Creek offered a model for revolutionizing thousands of congregations. What was not nearly as prominent, capturing neither the headlines of the press nor the attention of the eager-to-imitate pilgrims who sojourned to Illinois, was that Willow Creek was undergoing its own liturgical migration. But this move was not happening on the weekends. It was in the congregation’s midweek worship services. These midweek services were the ones planned and held for the active Christian believers in the congregation. (At the time, Willow Creek carefully avoided calling its weekend services for seekers “worship.” They were for evangelism and outreach, not the worship of God. Its worship services—the “New Community” services—occurred mid-week.) Initially these midweek services were a bit of an afterthought since the driving vision for the congregation’s start in the late 1970s was evangelistic outreach. These mid-week services were along the line of a Bible Study with a few contemporary songs topically selected and placed in a nice order. But that status changed after the summer of 1982 when the congregation’s lead pastor, Bill Hybels, returned from a summer break having attended a small, charismatic Black church in
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Liturgy
Liturgy RELIGION-
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