Listening to the Critics

Interviewing people at the center of controversy poses problems for fairness. How do you make sure the critics are fairly represented when the journalist stands between them and the criticized?

One way is to listen carefully. In preparing to interview megachurch pastor Bill Hybels, who has been accused of subordinating the gospel to marketing concerns in growing churches, managing editor Michael Maudlin and project editor Ed Gilbreath spent a lot of time on the telephone listening to the critics.

Ed was impressed with the sober judgment and concern of those he talked to, and in particular with theologian David Wells, whom he singles out for his thoughtful sincerity.

Just before the interview, Mickey and Ed had lunch at an upscale restaurant filled with the kind of dark-suited power-lunchers that Hybels's Willow Creek Community Church attracts. Their server asked in a friendly manner what they were going to do that afternoon.

When they told her, she replied with delight, "I go to Willow Creek," and told them that what attracted her was the wide variety of ministries, especially the "great" fitness center.

Later Bill Hybels, with typical humility, played down the significance of the fitness center, the capacity of the church, and the size of the budget.

Is Hybels really humble? Our editors sensed the humility was real—as was his sensitivity to criticism and the hurt that he tried to disguise.

Is the house that Bill built about marketing? Or is it really about soul-winning? Read Hybels's defense, in this issue.

Copyright © 1994 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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Selling Out the House of God? Bill Hybels answers critics of the seeker-sensitive movement

Cover Story

Selling Out the House of God?, Part 2

Cover Story

Selling Out the House of God?, Part 1

'True Love Waits' Now Worldwide Effort

John Zipperer

Sanctions Harm Mission Work

Pope Reaffirms Ban on Women Priests

Julia Duin

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Bankrupty Tests RFRA Statute

Church Names Leader, 86

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Health Problems Sideline General

Baptists Resist EEOC Guidelines

APA Halts Conversion Therapy Change

Problems of Joint Action Are Detailed

Conflict Divides Countercult Leaders

Doug LeBlanc

World Scene: Rebels Kill Top Church Leaders

SBC Refuses Funding from Moderates

John W. Kennedy

Rush Limbaugh: An Ego on Loan from God

Mark Horne

Is the Fat Lady Singing?

Philosophers on Pilgrimage

Reclaiming the Strip Mines: A Writer's Calling

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The Church's New McCarthyism

Canada’s Evangelical Face

Changing from the Inside Out

The Birth of a Megachurch

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News Briefs: July 18, 1994

LETTERS: Clarifying a Trend

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Christian Colleges’ Urgent Mission

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The Burden of Celebrity

Darrell A. Harris, president of Star Song Communications

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The Second Calling of Art

Sandra Barton

Ending the Cold War Between Theologians and Laypeople

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What Jonathan Edwards Can Teach Us About Politics

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Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from July 18, 1994

Healing Our Mean Streets

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RE-Imagining Labeled 'Reckless'

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75-Year-Old Graham a Hit with Youth

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