Why We’re Launching Weekly Gatherings

I’ve been encouraged by several readers to keep posting some of the things we’re learning from this experience of launching The Fulcrum Community. By nature I love to share what I’m learning, so I’m happy to do so.

As I’ve written elsewhere, we’ve been hesitant to move too quickly into launching a weekly large group gathering.

One reason is that we wanted our core group to develop a sense of community and prove that we could be “church” to each other without relying on such a gathering. We also wanted to experiment and see how meeting together only a couple of times a month would shape us. Would it encourage or discourage connections with new people? Could we grow numerically without a regular gathering?

After six months of experimentation we’ve decided to launch weekly large group gatherings on September 12th.

In no particular order, here’s a list of why we decided a weekly large group gathering is a good idea:

1. In this neck of the woods, it gives cultural legitimacy to a community of faith. Even those who have no interest in attending the gathering expect it to be a weekly affair. Stray too far away from the cultural norm and you come across as weird and not in a way that the people of Austin want to keep.

2. It’s harder to keep a group of people focused on a unified vision when they’re only getting together a couple of times a month. Vision leaks and it leaks fast when we’re not being reminded of it regularly.

3. If someone misses a twice-a-month gathering, it means a month will pass before they’re with everyone again. If they miss two in a row, it’s six weeks. Not as big a deal if they’re in a small group that meets weekly, but if they’re not (and not everyone will be), then it is easy for them to lose touch with the community.

4. When the purpose of the home group is not geared toward deep Bible study (and ours are not), then the larger community doesn’t get much exposure to Scripture. Call me old fashioned, but I think most people need to hear the gospel more than twice a month.

5. If you have a gifted teacher or worship leader in the community, it puts his or her gifts in the dock half the time. Since one of my primary gifts is teaching and Patrick is a gifted worship leader, this made less and less sense as we went along. I’m not sure if I should have said this one out loud, but it’s the truth.

6. Most people we’ve encountered aren’t going to come to a home group first. It’s asking a lot of someone to show up at a strange house and hang out with ten people they don’t know for 90 minutes. Extroverts may not mind it so much, but half the population are introverts. A larger group gathering feels safer than a home group setting.

7. Our kids like seeing all their friends at the large group gathering each week. They were always disappointed on our off weeks.

8. It made it a bit harder to invite our friends to come to one of our gatherings. We’d have people ask us, “Are you meeting this week?” It never felt right saying “No, but we’ll meet the next Sunday.” Sometimes it takes multiple invitations before someone shows interest. If they showed interest on a week we weren’t meeting, if felt like a lost opportunity.

9. Most of us weren’t using our off Sundays productively. Instead of using that time for service projects or cultural engagement, some of us were sleeping in and/or staying at home and doing nothing. A few among us, who admit to being addicted to attending church services, would attend gatherings at other churches out of habit or a sense of guilt.

10. I don’t have a tenth reason. I’ve been trying to think of one for two weeks, but I’m done. You’ll have to live with only nine.

Comments

  1. So the meeting together on the first day of the week is an addiction?

  2. Lance Newsom says:

    Wade,
    Good thoughts. It’s been interesting watching Fulcrum develop. I think you’re right on in regards to exposure to the gospel, exposure to the community of faith and also about the repetition of routine. The trick is to keep routine from becoming mundane and ineffective.

    I still need to visit for a few days.
    By the way, you’re ok on #5 because, technically, you didn’t say it out loud. You blogged it.

    Peace Bro.
    Tell Heather and the boys Hi from us Northerners.
    Lance

  3. Lance–great to hear from you. There’s a bowl of chips and salsa and a set of live music waiting for you down here. Just let us know when you’re coming.

    Chris–for some people, yes it is. Even though we were meeting together for prayer and communion on Sunday nights, some of us still felt compelled to go to a church service on Sunday mornings because as one member of our team said, “I can’t stop.”

  4. Scott Lambert says:

    Good to communicate with you Wade. I meet lots of people who know, love and watch you and Fulcrum. Thank you for being a pioneer in America again.

    I really appreciate your 10 listings…we just need 10 things to make “top ten” sense to our culture! Seriously, people desire community in all it’s shapes and sizes. There is something about the large gathering that creates opportunities for discipleship that is missing otherwise. Of course, we live in a world that desire small, authentic and intimate places to belong. And, big visionary places to belong. You expressed all of that well.

    Check out Ed Stetzer’s blog for some thoughts and research on inviting people as still the most effective tool for many corners of America. God bless you and I am honored to work in God’s field with you.

    Scott Lambert
    Kairos/Los Angeles

  5. Scott–thanks for stopping by. I really appreciate the encouragement.

  6. Amos Allen says:

    Wade, I know you through Jason Whaley (hope that’s a good thing). Thanks for your honesty and insights; some things make sense even when I don’t want them to. May our Father be strong in you/y’all as you give it your best.

  7. Brian Jay says:

    Hi Wade,

    Good to read and be challenged by the Podcasts I received yesterday. It was a great thrill to suddenly find them all in my Reader mailbox – thanks for adding my name to the list. How I wish I could just stop by, catch up, have a flat white (???) chew over things and then assist in person (rather than just with Prayer)the work in Austin.

    Give the Heather and the boys a big hug from me. Don’t forget there is always a bed over here for you all.

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