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Hardcover Beyond Megachurch Myths: What We Can Learn from America's Largest Churches Book

ISBN: 0787994677

ISBN13: 9780787994679

Beyond Megachurch Myths: What We Can Learn from America's Largest Churches

Drawing on extensive, broad-based, and well-designed research, as well as stories and anecdotes, Beyond Megachurch Myths dispels popluar myths about megachurches while highlighting the diversity within the megachurch phenomenon. Defining a megachurch as a Protestant church that averages at least 2000 total attendees in their weekend services, Scott Thumma and Dave Travis reveal what these churches are and are not, why they are thriving, what their...

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Customer Reviews

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Megachurches Can Be Mega Good!

This was a very helpful book for me because it reminded me that megachurches are doing megagood things to bring people to Christ and to build them up in the faith. The authors contend that the research shows that megachurches are not what they have been stereotyped to be. Not all megachurches water down the faith, or are a turnoff to young people, or are ready to fall apart as soon as the founding pastor leaves. Many senior ministers and their staffs have thought long and hard about who succeeds them. Also, the research confirms that many people are drawn to megachurches because of their outstanding forms of worship and for the many services they provide. The authors also deflate the myth that megachurches are not serving the communities they reside in, and they give many examples of churches that are actively involved with serving their city. The authors also acknowledge the challnges megachurches face: a stumbling economy, the long drives many people have to make to get to the megachurch, the problem of filling the shoes of a beloved senior minister, the problem of people coming and going without getting involved, etc. I was intrigued throughout. Great book.

An Inspiration to Church's of Any Size

This book is long on analysis and full of helpful lessons that any church can apply regardless of size. You could spend several months and thousands of dollars visiting the fastest growing churches in America and trying to gather what they've learned OR you can spend a few bucks and get it all in this book. Reading this book will challenge your assumptions and leave you inspired about the tremendous potential of the local church, including yours.

Research not opinions

There are a lot of opinions about megachurches, but this is the first complete assessment of the megachurch phenomenon. It draws together extensive information and other available research to correct assumptions. It also includes practical questions and considerations for all pastors and church leaders. As a broad overview, it doesn't get better than this. This book goes well with several others. I suggest Seeker Churches: Promoting Traditional Religion in a Nontraditional Way by Kimon Sargean, A Mosaic of Believers: Diversity and Innovation in a Multiethnic Church as well as Hollywood Faith: Holiness, Prosperity, and Ambition in a Los Angeles Church by Gerardo Marti, The Megachurch and the Mainline: Remaking Religious Tradition in the Twenty-first Century by Stephen Ellingson, When Church Became Theatre: The Transformation of Evangelical Architecture and Worship in Nineteenth-Century America by Jeanne Kilde, and Donald Miller's Reinventing American Protestantism: Christianity in the New Millennium.

Great Book

I would highly recommend this book to anyone who is looking for tips and strategies that have helped make megachurches so successful. While this book will not give you a direct strategy what it does is give you the data from surveys of both megachurches and small churches and then compares and contrasts the differences. It will help you to see what it is that megachurches have done differently. It will also help to dispel many of the notions and myths that surround megachurches. Some of those myths include "megachurches only grow because of the show", "megachurches are bad for the community", and "The magachurch movement is dying down". as I siad if you are intrested in learning what it is that magechurches are doing that smaller ones are not this is a MUST have book. It will offer some good insight that you can implement now.

Megachurches have their good side!

Beyond Megachurch Myths offers a counterpoint to megachurch critics, using survey data to overturn nine myths about megachurches, including the charge that the megachurch era is quickly fading into history. Scott Thumma and Dave Travis believe that the data demonstrates that not only will megachurches be with us for the foreseeable future, but that they are a much more complex phenomenon than most of us give them credit for being. To understand this phenomenon, we must first have a definition. According to Thumma and Travis, a megachurch is "a Protestant church that averages at least two thousand total attendees in their weekend services" (p. xviii). More than 1250 congregations fit this description. The nine myths are as follows: They're all alike, they're just too big, they're based on personality cults, they're concerned only about themselves and their attendees, they water down the faith, are bad for other churches, are homogeneous in race, class, and political affiliation, grow because they entertain, and finally, that they're in the process of dying because young people don't like them. As with any stereotype there is truth to the critiques, but the very fact that the movement is extraordinarily diverse means that the stereotypes easily fall apart. Megachurches may not be for everyone, but many people find them just right - and for many different reasons. And, whether we're fans of them or not, they have left a significant footprint on American religious life. Megachurches have been with us for some time, but their numbers are increasing rapidly - almost exponentially. In demonstrating that megachurches aren't all alike, they authors distinguish four basic types- the "old-line/program-based" church, the "seeker church," the Charismatic/pastor-focused church, and finally the New Wave/Re-Envisioned Church. The first type tends to be the oldest, the New Wave the newest, and the Seeker church may be the focus of many of our stereotypes. Some megachurches are quite homogeneous, many are conservative, but there are many that are quite diverse and even quite liberal. While some are personality centered, many others aren't. Although some of the older churches - which tend to be more liturgical in nature - buck the trend of modern culture, most of these churches are very in tune with modern culture - choosing an informal, pop music oriented format for worship, while being increasingly tech savvy. Most of all, these congregations have discovered how to adapt and evolve - something churches of all sizes need to consider. Although the shadow side of this movement doesn't get the attention the positives do, the authors are quite aware that pastoral care and assimilation happens in very different ways. These churches have to be much more intentional about their work and it's quite likely that the person in the pew will have little contact with the senior leadership. The future poses significant questions to these churc
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