Article

An Uncomfortable Issue

The proliferation of vices in our culture means our posture as churches needs to adapt.

Last year our partner publication ChristianBibleStudies.com conducted a simple online poll, asking readers, “Have you ever struggled with an addiction?” When the numbers were reported, everyone was surprised. Over half of the respondents said they are currently battling or had previously struggled with an addiction.

We wondered if the response would be different among Leadership readers. We posted the same question on LeadershipJournal.net and Out of Ur. Hundreds of church leaders responded, and once again the outcome was startling. More than 50 percent acknowledged having a destructive vice they could not shake.

Although our online poll was not a scientific survey, it is consistent with what other studies have found. Our culture, including the Christian subculture, is hooked. Alcohol, pornography, tobacco, drugs (prescription and illegal), gambling, gaming, sex, media. The list of addictive behaviors has never been longer, and they have never been easier to find.

For our interview with Craig Gross, Brandon O’Brien and I traveled to Las Vegas. It was my first visit to “Sin City,” and I found it to be aptly named. Walking along Las Vegas Boulevard after dark is like entering the belly of the beast. Your eyes are accosted by electric sex in every direction—jumbotrons with nearly nude showgirls, billboard trucks advertising “Girls Direct to Your Room,” and dozens of neon-shirted men offering free rides to a nearby strip club. Directing your eyes down at the pavement offers no respite. The sidewalks are littered with thousands of cards featuring images of topless women and 800 numbers.

They say that what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. But that’s no longer true. The vices once identified with Las Vegas are now accessible everywhere through the web. While walking along “the Strip,” I realized I was experiencing the Internet in a three dimensional form. Something as innocuous and kid-friendly as M&M World is across the street from Diablo’s, where a red-skinned girl with thigh-high leather boots offers you “a wicked good time.”

The advent of the Internet, and the proliferation of vices in our culture, means our posture as churches needs to adapt. Bret Johnson, a pastor in Las Vegas, says every church leader “needs to approach ministry as if they live in Las Vegas, San Francisco, West Hollywood, or Amsterdam. Every city is now sin city.”

Rather than assuming the individuals and families entering our churches are relatively healthy and functional, the assumption should be the opposite. Most of us are hooked on something. Most of us are fighting a secret battle. And that applies to those behind the pulpit as well.

This issue of Leadership makes us all a bit uncomfortable, but it also will challenge your assumptions and give you hope. Transformation and growth are not only possible in a culture of addictions and vices, but absolutely essential.

Copyright © 2009 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Posted April 24, 2009

Also in this issue

The Leadership Journal archives contain over 35 years of issues. These archives contain a trove of pastoral wisdom, leadership skills, and encouragement for your calling.

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Recovery ministries demand a level of honesty many congregations aren’t used to.

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Rather than importing pastors from elsewhere, these churches are discovering the benefits of cultivating new leaders from within.

Ministry Lessons from a Muslim

His unexpected message to church leaders: fully embrace your Christian identity.

The Sin Tamer

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Beyond "Us versus Them"

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Do It, Don't Blog It

Is all the chatter on the web about missional church actually keeping us from being missional?

The Transparent Pastor

When a pastor struggles with an addiction, who needs to know?

Stranded in Neverland

Consumerism addicts us to immediate gratification and perpetual youth, but the cross lifts us to a more satisfying joy.

Through a Screen Darkly

Book Review of Flickering Pixels by Shane Hipps.

Fitting the Arts into Church

Using art to enhance, and never distract, in a worship service.

Growth in the Gutter

Cultivating spiritual formation in a community of addicts.

Lay Off the Layoffs

Alternatives to cutting staff when the budget gets tight.

Speaking into the Meltdown

What might God be saying in tough economic times?

When You Sin While Preaching

How to recover from your failures in the pulpit.

Church Discipline for Repetitive Sin

How do you work pastorally with people who are likely to fall again?

Salvation on the Strip

The Porn Pastor’s strategy for reaching Sin City is unconventional, and what he’s doing in Vegas can’t stay in Vegas.

Messy, Costly, Dirty Ministry

The risk of welcoming those nobody else wants.

Big-Picture Evangelism

A new tool that emphasizes transformation and not just decision.

Preaching on My Feet

Could I speak for 35 minutes without ever writing notes?

Living the Story of God

Connecting both the sermon and small group to God’s big story.

Trouble Brewing

Is a relaxed attitude toward alcohol among clergy leading to a new battle over prohibition?

Pastoral "Problem Solving"

Misleading Church Sign

Self-Promoting from the Pulpit

Giving Church

Positive Outlook on Church Foreclosure

View issue


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