The prefix “re” usually implies “again,” — return, turn again; review, view again; regain, gain again; reframe, frame again — so in the case of ReThink Church, the implication is that we have thought church through at least once.  (It doesn’t work so well with regret, gret again?, rebate, bate again?, rebut, but again???)  Upon reflection, some believe it is time to rethink church — to take a careful look at what we’ve got and ask the question, “is this the best we can do?”  rethinkchurch_logo_The deeper question is, “are we really re-thinking or just dressing up the same old thing so it looks different?”  As with most things in life, the answer is not a simple ‘yes’ or ‘no.’

ReThink Church is a branding package — a promotional ploy to update and/or replace the problematic “open hearts/minds/doors” sound bite of Igniting Ministry — designed to get more people to want to join The United Methodist Church.  To this extent, it is simply same-old, same-old — nothing new, just a retread.  If it becomes nothing more than a pleasant website and a logo on a bumper sticker or a coffee mug, then we’re no further along than we’ve been with whatever Ministries we’ve Ignited over the past eight years.  Each time I visit the website, I come away dismayed that there really isn’t anything new or innovative.  It seems to me to be a fresh coat of paint on the old, familiar structure.  To me, and I emphasize that this is (as always) just a personal opinion, it smacks of the tired “Venus fly-trap” approach to snagging young people to bolster the sagging attendance stats of the UMC.  So much is geared to getting people in our doors — the main foundation of the “institutional preservation paradigm” of our denomination.

This calls to mind the business book battle of the 1980s and 90s between “re-engineering” vs. “reinventing.”  The United Methodist Church cannot afford re-engineering in a time demanding reinvention.  Our denomination accepts as given the historical and traditional practices of itineracy, connectionalism, governance, judicial review, episcopal oversight, appointive orders, apportionments and disciplinary obligations, and resourcing.  None of these should be summarily dismissed, but all have more validity for 18th, 19th, and 20th century realities than relevancy in the 21st.  It sometimes seems that we are trying so hard to be a Sony Walkman church in an iPod world.  This is more than an “I’m a Mac, I’m a PC” thing — it’s more an “I’m a Mac, I’m an IBM Selectric” (with self-correcting ribbon cartridge!) distinction.

The idea that The United Methodist Church might actually be doing a new thing falls apart under close scrutiny.  ReThink Church, at least what has appeared so far, is the same old institution parading around in a new suit of clothes.  Unfortunately, like the emperor of the children’s tale, this new suit is imaginary and what is underneath is shining through — the church we’ve always had, unaware that it’s not fooling anyone.

We need a new United Methodist Church — drawing from its strengths, its theological roots, and its commitment to transformation — to create a Christian presence in the world that is different.  The key to this difference is that we stop focusing so much on “Methodist” and we start focusing more on “United.”  Rather than airing all of our grievances, disputes, controversies, and conflicts, we need a witness to the world that unity in Christ is greater than our petty squabbles.  Instead of fixating on our sins, failures, losses, and weaknesses, we need a vision for God’s healing grace, inclusive justice, unmerited mercy, and boundless love.  We need to get up out of our pews, stop hiding in our sanctuaries, drop our clergy-laity competitions, and take our faith into the world — especially the ugly, dirty, broken, diseased, and hopeless corners and crannies.  We need to stop believing we are the gravitational center of the Church, and become the presence of Christ reaching to the fringes, the margins, and the boundaries where the children of God are disenfranchised and ignored.  We need to break from the “mainline” to and draw a “newline” that encompasses more of those on the outside — increase our definition of “us” while significantly decreasing the number of people we marginalize as “them.”  Perhaps what we need most is to stop listening to those calling for revision and pay a little more attention to those crying out for a revolution.  It’s not too late.  Let’s rethink our rethinking before all we end up with is a repeat of what we’ve already done.

43 responses to “What Do You Think ReThink is Thinking?”

  1. Susan Youmans Avatar
    Susan Youmans

    After reading this article (http://snurl.com/gugh4), it appears we are in need of a different perspective around being/doing church. How does marketing work for those looking in when we can’t get our story straight from the inside?

  2. Tom Jackson Avatar
    Tom Jackson

    “Of the almost 2,000 adults who tried The United Methodist Church but decided not to stay, close to 300 (10.2%) reported that the “OH, OM, OD” claim figured in their decision not to stay because they discovered that the congregation couldn’t deliver on its promised openness.”

    Were there any who were afraid that the UMC could deliver on that openness, but only by abandoning traditional standards?

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      It would be nice to dismiss it that easily, but the reality is much more sobering. Most visitors to UMCs realize very quickly that the majority of people in the pews don’t KNOW their own story — they don’t know the Bible, they don’t know their denominational history, polity, or doctrine. Most UMCs wouldn’t know a “traditional standard” if it bit them. As much as we claim to be a connectional church, we operate in a fairly classic congregational way. We keep harping on a “Wesleyan” theology, but much of what we talk about would be completely unrecognizable to John or Charles. As a denomination we are both literally and figuratively all over the map, and we are predominantly unable to explain and introduce ourselves to people outside our churches. The 2,000 adults cited hypocrisy, low expectations, confusion and/or ignorance about UMC core beliefs, apathy, judgmentalism, materialism, poor preaching, poor teaching, lack of involvement in social and justice issues, as the top ten reasons they didn’t experience “openness.” Most of the people outside the church aren’t much interested in the petty squabbles that obsess us inside the church — they simply marvel at how much disunity exists in a “united” church.

  3. Adam Dalenburg Avatar
    Adam Dalenburg

    We need to get to the root of the problem…we are talking about doing church…not being the church, the body of Christ. It is great doing things or should I say re-doing the same things. The UMC needs a paradigm shift on how to be a church. We need to become efficient and more effective in presenting the Gospel. The UMC can change their packaging but are still the same church. They need to change the ingredients.

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      Amen. I think we’re on the same page.

  4. Keith Avatar

    My concern has been that the commercials seem more like ads for a charity or an activist group, not mentioning or even referring to Jesus. I’m not suggesting they should present a hippie Jesus freak image or something that smacks of fundamentalism, but theologically, the campaign seems to lack a proper focus; yet another example in the UMC of good people who maybe haven’t thought things through theologically.

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      It really is important to keep in mind that this is just an ad campaign. We got in trouble with our last slogan — “open hearts, open minds, open doors” — because (while a few congregations actually fit the description) we were advertising something we didn’t “have on our shelves.” It would be tragic if we failed to learn from that mistake and promised to do something new, then just continued to offer a variation of the same, tired old thing. We do a lot of good things, but the church is more than a smattering of good works. I agree with you — the current ads are so generic, they could represent any number of things. One note of interest: A few years ago, I showed forty Vanderbilt students three Igniting Ministries ads without sound, and with the graphics stripped. No one identified them as United Methodist. Sixteen thought they came from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon), three thought they might be McDonald’s ads, and two thought they might be Hallmark ads!

  5. Craig L. Adams Avatar

    I’ve been uncomfortable with the “ReThink Church” campaign from the get go. And, maybe the problem is me. But, here is what I’m feeling. Preaching the Gospel and growing in the faith and serving Christ in the world are all things that are important to me. Marketing the “Church”? Not so much.

    Long ago the apostle Paul said: “But we have this treasure in clay jars, so that it may be made clear that this extraordinary power belongs to God and does not come from us.” (2 Corinthians 4:7 NRSV). And, if this is the case, why are we marketing clay jars instead of sharing the treasure?

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      Yea, Craig! I love the point about marketing the jars rather than the contents/treasure. WE are not what is important about the Christian faith, but we are working so hard to convince people that The UMC MATTERS. The only way we matter is to be faithful, relevant, counter-cultural, and to be a conduit through which God’s Spirit can move (rather than a door that people must enter before they can experience said Spirit. Nice posts — I hope people read them!

  6. andy Avatar

    You wrote: “we need a vision for God’s healing grace, inclusive justice, unmerited mercy, and boundless love.” I have always found that in the Gospel, so that is what I preach.

    You also wrote ” We need …and take our faith into the world — especially the ugly, dirty, broken, diseased, and hopeless corners and crannies.” We in the United Methodist congregations where I live are actively involved in the community every day with soup kitchens, gleaning, Habitat, drug rehab, homes for the disabled, creating Hispanic churches for the disenfranchised, supporting each other in hard times. None of which we do in a perfect way, but we are doing as we can. So what is your congregation doing?

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      Yeah, unfortunately the past few churches I have led/attended were hit or miss. Unlike you, I have yet to have a whole congregation fully engaged in the kind of ministries you describe. I and a handful of others have provided the outreach and missional service for the larger congregation. The vast majority of the congregation’s members were content to sit and let others go out into the highways and byways. I struggled for years to get people to accompany me on prison vistation, work at the soup kitchen and homeless shelters, work on area service projects, work with street kids, and serve in advocacy roles for the poor and less educated. We always got some, but not very many. You are incredibly lucky to be in a place where whole congregations are living their witness in the world. I hope you realize how very rare that is!

  7. Katie Dawson Avatar

    I must say that I do think “rethink church” is a new thing… but I’m also reading a lot of my hopes and dreams into it. When I saw the video and especially heard the line about being the church six days a week so that we can come to the church and rest together on the Lord’s day (my paraphrase), I wanted to scream YES! (I might have actually shouted YES!… it’s been a few weeks).

    I absolutely hear your criticisms and I am praying that it is not just a pretty bow on top of a gift we’ve been given before.

    Oh – and your last paragraph… PREACH IT!

    1. doroteos2 Avatar
      doroteos2

      I want ReThink Church to get people engaged. I hope it can do that. However, I have to keep reminding myself that this is really a big advertising campaign, and not the vision of the church. In my intensive study with spiritual seekers disillusioned with mainline religion, these kinds of campaigns, messages, and promotions were a HUGE turn-off. Even the focus groups hosted within the denomination show that the true market audience for these spots are people who are already Methodist, but enjoy seeing such a positive message — they feel proud of their church. The impact beyond current UMs is very slight. In my interviews with 687 “new” United Methodists across all five jurisdictions indicated that none of them came to the church because of Igniting Ministry TV spots, only 41 were even aware of the ads, and 66 (9.6%)claimed that the “Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors” slogan influenced them. Of the almost 2,000 adults who tried The United Methodist Church but decided not to stay, close to 300 (10.2%) reported that the “OH, OM, OD” claim figured in their decision not to stay because they discovered that the congregation couldn’t deliver on its promised openness. When a campaign turns off more of your target audience than it attracts, maybe it’s time to… wait for it… ReThink.

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