Jump directly to the Content

WORSHIP IN A BOX

I hadn't been inside a church for three years. I'd seen no sanctuary, no cross on the wall behind the pulpit, no pews, no stained glass, no engraved communion table. For three years at Heritage Church in Aurora, Colorado, I led worship inside a box-well, actually an elementary school gymnasium.

Instead of ornate banners declaring truth about God, the walls of the "sanctuary" were lined with sports posters and exercise equipment. Four regulation basketball hoops hung above us, and volleyball poles congregated in a corner-symbols of a competing American religion. The orange, all-purpose carpet had enough out-of-bounds lines to play most any sport. The mercury-activated lights hummed as loud as a swarm of bees.

Yet my fate wasn't unusual. Box churches are popping up all over-in gymnasiums, recreation centers, and storefronts. Heritage Church was in a building program, hoping one day to trade our box for a sanctuary. In the meantime, we had to face an important issue: Could we effectively worship ...

From Issue:Winter 1990: Context & Culture
April
Support Our Work

Subscribe to CT for less than $4.25/month

Homepage Subscription Panel

Read These Next

Related
Keeping Spontaneity on Track
Keeping Spontaneity on Track
From the Magazine
Fractured Are the Peacemakers
Fractured Are the Peacemakers
A Christian reconciliation group in Israel and Palestine warned that war would come. Now the war threatens their relevance.
Editor's Pick
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
Understanding God and our world needs more than bare reason and experience.
close