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How Expensive is Your Church?
Dr Alex Tang
I wonder how you will answer if someone asks you, “How expensive is your
church?” Your first impression may be, “My church is free. No annual fees, no
service charges and no membership dues. It is not expensive.” Then if that
particular person persists, “What about your church’s expansion plans? New
building projects. What will it cost you, as a member? How expensive will it be
to remain in your church?”
Many churches, especially bigger churches in the Klang valley are embarking on
multimillion ringgit building and expansion plans. I am sure there are excellent
reasons for these building and expansion plans. Growing church attendance,
increasing ministry programs and a bigger staff are some of these reasons. I am
also sure all churches which are embarking on these multimillion ringgit
building projects have excellent Christ-centered, church community discerned
reasons which are in God’s will for these churches. However, I hope that
churches are not planning on spending these amount of money (estimates of $50
million, $ 30 million, $10 million to name a few numbers) for the following
reasons:
“We want a church campus that looks like Rick Warren’s church campus in
California”
It of course great to have a church campus like Rick Warren’s Saddleback Church
in Lake Forest. The whole complex is bigger than some of our local university
campus. The main auditorium can sit 5,000 people and have the latest in
audio-visual equipment. We must realize that we are not in California but in
Malaysia. We have to be realistic and contextualize our church buildings.
Sometimes we look at the mega churches in other countries and we want to be like
them. There is nothing wrong with mega churches provided it is God who wants us
to have them. There is something wrong when we try to imitate by ending up with
only the superficial simulacrum of the whole concept. A multimillion ringgit
building may become a proverbial white elephant and become a millstone around
our necks. Instead of trying to build physical assets, we should concentrate and
invest in building spiritual assets in our members.
“We must show the surrounding community an impressive church building so
that they will know our God is a powerful God”
Aesthetic buildings are good to look at but we should aim for functionality and
multi-purpose. Then the building project will not cost so much. If the intention
of building is for show, then we need to rethink our priorities. If we think God
will be glorified by man -made structures, then we need to relook at Old and New
Testament history. Also, we must be aware of the sensitivity of building
impressive, attention-drawing buildings in a country where the ‘priority’
religion is not Christianity.
“Our church building must be more impressive than that other church’s
building because we are better than them”
Keeping up with the Jones is also occurs in religious communities. We need to be
aware of this and not get caught with in this vicious circle. Often it is a
subtle and unconscious need on our part to compare ourselves with others. It
falls to the church leadership and communal discernment of the church to make
sure that the tremendous investment in money, effort and work is for the
expansion of God’s kingdom, not in proving themselves better than other
Christians. Good Christian stewardship demands that every ringgit that we spend
must be accountable and for the mission of the church which is evangelism. How
many missionaries and ‘full time’ workers are suffering from lack of finances
while home churches are building ‘fine’ buildings? The work of the gospel
expands, not by buildings but by personal relationships and effective
stewardship of financial resources.
“We must have a new church building/expansion because there is not enough
space”
On the surface this sounds like a good reason. However, ‘not enough space’ is a
perpetual problem. I have never been to a church where they have ‘enough space’.
When I was visiting Rick Warren’s church, the people I spoke to also complain of
‘not enough space’. The solution to ‘not enough space’ may not be building new
buildings but in more creative use of existing space. We need to have a paradigm
change in our thinking of a church being a building where everything is in one
place. Could a church not be a small shop lot for administration office, rent
hall spaces for worship and services and hold other meetings in homes? Instead
of building a new building every time the congregation grows, should we not
think of leasing or renting of bigger and bigger convention halls or hotel
ballrooms for worship service? Most convention halls/ hotels come with
audiovisual equipment and adequate parking facilities.
I have nothing against churches that have visions for multimillion dollars
building projects. I just hope that they are aware that the fund-raising, the
work needed and the taxing of their members may drain their resources and divert
their attention from the more important task of building the Kingdom of God.
Soli Deo Gloria
|posted 6 July 2006|
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