|
"Crazy Aussies!" Lessons We
Must learn from The Aussie Church

An American pastor, who has lived in Australia for 21 years, believes we
should take some spiritual cues from the land Down Under.
Guest editorial by J. Lee Grady, Editor of Charisma Magazine
Jack and Carol Hanes were forced to make lots of cultural adjustments
when they arrived in Australia in 1987. The couple moved to the Sydney
area from Arizona to start a church, knowing that the Christian
population was tiny. They soon learned that if they were to be
successful in this very secular society they would have to modify their
American style and do things the Aussie way.
As it turned out, the Aussie way worked pretty well.
Today, Jack Hanes is the director of missions for the Assemblies of God
(AOG) in Australia, and the group has become the largest Protestant
denomination in the country. Currently the AOG is planting one new
church every four days in the country - an impressive statistic when
compared to the sluggish growth of churches in the United States.
Hanes' own congregation, Penrith Christian Life Centre, located 40 miles
north of Sydney, has grown to 2,000 members since he and his wife
started it 21 years ago, with a handful of believers meeting in a hotel.
Meanwhile, the massive Hillsong Church, also affiliated with the AOG and
located in Sydney, has grown to 20,000 members and is one of the most
influential churches in the world because of its popular worship
recordings and TV broadcasts.
I asked Hanes, who is 55, what he believes American pastors
could learn from the Aussies' out-of-the-box approach to church. He gave
these seven reasons why churches are growing Down Under.
1. Christians aren't religious. The typical Australian is a lot more
earthy and irreverent than his formal British counterpart. Because the
country was started as a penal colony, it doesn't have a churchy
culture. Hanes says this can be an advantage when you are trying to
reach unbelievers with the gospel. People don't dress up, they don't
wear hypocritical masks and they tend to be bluntly honest. "It's
refreshing," Hanes says.
2. They have a wild, daring spirit. Americans fell in love with Aussie
wildlife expert Steve Irwin, the infamous Crocodile Hunter who died in
2006, because of his playful and audacious taunting of dangerous
reptiles. Hanes says a similar willingness to take risks characterizes
the Australian church, which is less mired in tradition than American
church groups. "Aussies don't have to be safe and secure. We know God
wants us to risk everything. We could not do that if we weren't crazy,"
Hanes says.
3. They are aggressive about church planting. Several years ago AOG
leaders in Australia began to focus on multiplying their movement rather
than just maintaining churches. They did this by eliminating useless
denominational bureaucracy. Today every major leader in their
organizational structure in Australia is a working pastor who is
involved in a hands-on way in church planting. There are no "fat guys
sitting behind desks in denominational offices making $300,000," Hanes
says with typical Aussie frankness.
Hanes makes a painful comparison between Australia's lean
church-planting machine and the multilayered AOG hierarchy in the United
States. He says one Aussie minister visited the AOG's headquarters in
the U.S. four years ago and learned that leaders were celebrating the
fact that they had millions of dollars in the bank - even though church
planting was flat. "Can you imagine if Jesus came back and we had
millions in the bank?" Hanes asks. "I'd rather we had no money in the
bank because we had used all the money for missions."
4. Their worship is fresh and vibrant. Worship from Australia has
dominated the Christian music scene since the mid-1990s, after Hillsong
Church's band, led by Darlene Zschech, first released their popular
chorus, "Shout to the Lord," in 1993. Today Hillsong music encircles the
globe, its annual worship conference attracts 40,000 people and their
youth band, Hillsong United, is setting trends for Christian teens.
Hanes' wife, Carol, says she believes God's anointing has stayed on this
Aussie music because it is based in a local church - not in a music
industry that is driven by sales, profits and concert schedules.
5. They give sacrificially. Unlike those in the United States,
contributions made to churches in Australia are not tax-deductible. Yet
many Aussies give extravagantly to missions and church-planting
ventures. In 2007, Hanes' church gave more than $1 million to missions
and started more than 700 churches in India. "And church leaders here
don't ask the people to give what they are not willing to give
themselves. We lead by example," Hanes adds.
6. They focus on youth. Australia is a young nation, and Hanes' church
mirrors the population: The average age in his congregation is 27. "I
don't know of one church in Australia that is filled with old people,"
he says, "except some of the mainlines." Aussie Christians see the
potential of giving young people ministry credentials so they can
pioneer churches.
Hanes points out that in Iraq today, 19-year-old soldiers lead squads of
48 men. They are trusted to fight battles for us. "Yet we won't let
people that age preach in our pulpits until they are 'proven.' Something
is wrong with that," Hanes says.
7. They release their women. "There is a recognition here in Australia
that if a woman has a gift, you make room for her in the church," Hanes
says, noting that the AOG has many ordained female pastors. The growing
list of prominent women ministers in Australia includes Margaret Court,
a pastor in Perth; Christine Caine, a Bible teacher based in Sydney;
Donna Crouch, a lead pastor at Hillsong; Royree Jensen, a pastor in
Brisbane; and Darlene Zschech, the Hillsong vocalist who is arguably the most
recognizable worship leader in the world.
Hanes dreams of a day when the same innovative approach to ministry that
is transforming the churches of Australia will one day sweep across
America. After spending this week in Sydney and seeing these innovations
with my own eyes, I share his enthusiasm.
J. Lee Grady is editor of Charisma. He spent a week recently visiting Penrith Christian Life Centre near Sydney. To learn more about Jack
Hanes and the Penrith church, go to
www.penrithclc.com.
#
|
|
|