If potential is the measure, imagine the potential if your church were to offer free needles, smack or pot... just think of all the new people that could be reached that wouldn't come otherwise...
The question remains, when do the costs (including the cost of compromise) outweigh the benefits?
What I find interesting is that all these "evangelism tools" that churches like LifeChurch involves misses a very key component to effective and lasting evangelism — relationship. Members can say that their church is doing this and doing that (like having an online church experience on a virtual -- as in NOT REAL -- world) and they feel less of a responsibility to personally get involved in the lives of those around them, demonstrating Christ in their own lives that draws the seekers into asking them questions rather than letting artificial means give the answers. God is a very personal God, not a virtual God. Unbelievers have enough trouble believing in an unseen God, how much more than when they are being evangelized in a virtual -- as in NOT REAL -- world.
Just because something has potential doesn't automatically make it a good thing... or even a God thing.
On that note, I'll pop on over to
Second Life: Your World. Your Imagination. now and "experience" the virtual LifeChurch.tv service so that I don't have to change out of my pajamas and leave the confines of my living room to go to my
real church... with
real people... and with
real accountability...
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