Wednesday February 10, 2010 ~
8 Comments
Vince Antonucci is the founder and lead pastor of Verve, an innovative new church for the unchurched on the Las Vegas strip. Vince's passion is creatively communicating biblical truth to help people find God. He is also the author ofI Became a Christian and All I Got Was This Lousy T-shirt.
Vince is also part of The Verve Foundation, which does community service to meet needs on and around the Vegas Strip.
His new book, Guerrilla Lovers, is another encouragement to the church to love in "deed and truth." I was happy to have the chance to ask Vince a few questions about the book. He'll be on the blog today answering your questions in the comments.
The name of your book is "Guerrilla Lovers." What does that mean?
I think there are two types of war - "shock and awe" and "guerrilla warfare." Shock and Awe is employed when you're bigger and stronger than your opponent, so you stay at a distance, hoping to bomb your enemy into quick submission. Guerrilla warfare happens when you're under-manned, under-resourced. It requires intelligence and creativity. You have to get close so you can pull off ambush attacks. It's a patient strategy where you realize you'll have to hit your opponent repeatedly before they finally decide it's not worth it to continue fighting. In this book I'm advocating that we start relying on guerrilla tactics.
So what does "shock and awe" look like in a church context?
Trying to impress people into the Kingdom - with the size of our buildings, the quality of our coffee bar, and assuming that we can "win the victory" in a single encounter - with one church service, or in one conversation with a stranger on an airplane, or with a big church event.
And "guerrilla tactics"? What do those look like in a church context?
It would be a patient, relational, servant-hearted approach. We love people. Creatively. Audaciously. Consistently and persistently. We love people till they finally have to ask why.
You do this in the book, but can you give our readers a couple examples of Jesus, and/or the Apostles, modeling this approach?
Absolutely. Jesus was the original guerrilla lover. His m.o. was to lead with love. I think immediately of Mark 1 where the leper approaches Jesus, hoping to be healed. And not only does Jesus heal him, he touches him. We see Jesus heal people without touching them, so this isn't necessary. I think it's that Jesus wanted this untouchable man to feel the love of God. And there's Jesus inviting himself over to Zacchaeus' house, when Zacchaeus was probably the most hated man in town. And after Jesus heals the woman who had been bleeding all those years, he calls her daughter. The reason we see the "tax collectors and sinners" always wanting to be around Jesus wasn't because he judged them and pointed out their sins, but because He loved them.
So are you saying no more big church buildings or coffee bars or church events?
No, but I am saying that churches in America have never done that better than they have in the last 20 years, and yet there are experts who estimate that there are 8 million less people going to church in America today than 20 years ago. And there's not a single county in the continental United States where more people are going to church. Shock and awe has not proven effective. And so I think it's time to go back to the strategy I think Jesus authored, and that was so effective in the first century, and more lately in China - guerrilla love.
You're a church planter, now starting your second church. In this book you share a lot of examples from your own church experiences. Do you think this book can help pastors and church planters?
Absolutely. I think it will inspire and equip pastors to spark a guerrilla love revolution in their churches, and it will cause their churches to grow and have a significant impact on their community. In fact, we have put together free resources for pastors who want to do a Guerrilla Lover series or church campaign, which are available at www.guerrillalovers.com.
Have questions for Vince, or just want to talk through some of these concepts? Jump into the comments and make the conversation count.
Posted on February 10, 2010 at 7:30 AM ~ 8 Comments
Tagged with: church, love, missional
Half way through GL. Loving it! Thanks for it!
You're welcome. Thanks for loving it!
I love the analogy of "guerrilla" over "Shock & awe." A problem is, the American church are looking for "shock & awe" - that is what we have trained them to expect. It takes persistent and clear leadership on the local church level to re-create people's expectations for what will really reach people outside of the faith.
Aaron,
First I have to say I love your name. It's almost hypnotic!
Second, I TOTALLY agree. In fact, I'm currently starting a church in Las Vegas, and we've been using our "Launch Team Meetings" (get togethers before we "go public) to repeatedly teach and share stories (from the Bible and our lives) of people who have had their lives changed by guerrilla love.
Vince,
I love it!!!! Home run, brother.
I find myself more often than not lately at odds with "Big Christianity." Not because I think they're behaving "badly," just because I think they're behaving ineffectively.
Keep reaching people, connecting with people, engaging people and continue being courageous enough to desire exploring the depths of relationships.
I pray God will bless your ministry, give you favor and transform lives in Las Vegas.
Praying for you!
“experts who estimate that there are 8 million less people going to church in America today than 20 years ago”
Maybe it’s because we (the church) have watered down the core reason Jesus died on the cross. To pay for my sins and yours if we will 1) Repent, 2) put our trust in Him.
The church pleads with people to “put on Jesus and see if your life is better,” and then when the first storm hits, they shrug off Jesus, because they were “false converts.” How are people going to be saved if people don’t first understand they are sinners that need to be saved?
The hypocrite of today’s churches is that we have taken such a soft view of the Gospel.
Your key word is "patient." We don't want to be patient, we want instant results, and preferably with no blood or guts. Shock and awe warfare is almost by remote control, and we are far removed from the smoke and the noise. Guerrilla fighters are up close and personal, and they get dirty and they get bloody, and they actually come in contact with the enemy. Unlike Jesus, we don't really want much to do with the "unclean" of the world we are called upon reach for the sake of the Gospel.
I can't help but wonder if the reason there are less people "going" to church in America has something to do with the internet. People have access to just about everything online and social and community networks seem to be at the forefronts of this technology. What do you think?