Posts Tagged 'Video Venues'

A VIDEO VENUE & MULTI-SITE UPDATE

Much has changed since the concept of video venues and multi-site churches burst onto the scene in the late 1990’s. What was initially considered a wacky idea has become the new normal – especially among fast growing and larger churches. Today, literally thousands of churches use video as a way to expand geographically, demographically, or simply to avoid the high cost of building.

One of my biggest surprises has been the 180-degree turnaround in the way that church planting movements look at multi-site churches. When we launched our first Video Venue, our harshest philosophical critics were the leaders of church planting movements. Most of them seemed to assume that video venues would cannibalize church planting – as if ministry was a zero sum game in which the success of one method means the failure of another.

But now, a few years later, many of those original critics have launched their own multi-site campuses as a way to handle growth. And they’ve done so without any wavering in their commitment to church planting. In fact, many of the most effective church planting movements are now led by pastors who have multi-site churches. Go figure.

Recently, my friends Geoff Surratt, Greg Ligon, and Warren Bird released a book that explores many of these changes as well as the current state of multi-site ministry. It’s called A MULTI-SITE CHURCH ROAD TRIP. If you want to know where the movement is going and how it’s changed, this is a great read.

They’ve also asked me to participate in their blog tour by answering a few questions regarding multi-site and video venues. So here goes – Geoff Surratt’s questions and my answers.

1. You pioneered the concept of the video venue at North Coast. What do you feel are two or three reproducible keys to your success in utilizing video that other churches could reproduce?

I believe a huge part of our success was our decision early on to only use video for teaching. Many things don’t translate well on a screen (for instance music, drama, and the like). But teaching plays well in almost every geographic and demographic setting.

In fact, the biggest shock when we launched our first Video Venue was that it was so readily accepted by virtually every demographic. We thought our older folks would reject it outright. We thought younger generations might find it inauthentic. We assumed churches in the more traditional parts of the country would be highly resistant.

But we were wrong. It played well just about everywhere.

Looking back we should have realized that teaching is uniquely suited for a big screen. It allows people to clearly see facial expressions and non-verbals – which is why most people in a large facility with a video screen end up watching the screen rather than the little person up on the stage.

The other thing that I believe is easily reproducible is our use of differing music styles and ambiances to broaden our demographic outreach. Both Chris Brown (our other teaching pastor) and I are able to reach a far broader demographic (traditionalists, country music fans, and folks with lots of body art) than we could if we had a one-size-fits-all sanctuary.

2. How important is it for a church using video teaching to have the very best technology available?

I think the need for the quality technology is vastly overrated. You don’t need the latest and greatest in order to succeed. You can’t be so cheap that your venues are cheesy. The video can’t look like a 1980’s VCR.

At North Coast we’ve always made due with less than the best technology simply because we often can’t afford the best. We’re not a rich suburban church. We’re a blue collar church that meets in an old warehouse. If we felt we couldn’t succeed without the best and latest technology, we’d still be saving up to launch our first venue.

We’ve learned that good enough is good enough when it comes to technology. I always tell the churches we consult to buy the best they can afford. There’s no need to hock the future for cool technology you can’t afford and there’s no reason to hold off launching a new ministry just because everyone else has better equipment.

3. North Coast has multiple venues with live worship bands at multiple locations and multiple service times. How do you find enough musicians to have that many worship teams?

The secret to our plethora of musicians goes back to a decision we made long before we started our Video Venues. Because we believe the job of a pastor is to equip the saints for the work of the ministry (Ephesians 4:11-12) our worship pastors have always been judged, rewarded, and paid for raising up other worship leaders rather than creating an all-star band.

I find you always get what you measure and reward. So guess what? Since we measure and reward raising up worship leaders, we get worship leaders. And better yet, once we turned the corner, we discovered that musicians draw musicians. So right now I think we have something like 24 adult worship bands to pull from.

4. In your book Sticky Church you describe the role of sermon based small groups in the life of North Coast. How integral do you think sermon based small groups have been to the growth of North Coast?

Our attendance was about 120 when we started our sermon-based small groups. They haven’t particularly drawn people in, but they have helped to slam our back door shut – and when the back door stays shut, a church tends to grow.

We’re pretty much a word-of-mouth church (we don’t do any marketing or advertising) so closing the back door has been an essential ingredient of our growth. But the biggest advantage has been the way these sermon-based groups have enabled us to get everyone on the same page – and keep them there. That’s made us a much healthier church, not just a bigger church.

5. What did I not ask that I should have?

You didn’t ask why my books are so much better than yours – at least that’s what my mom thinks; though my wife, Nancy, isn’t so sure.

By the way – Here’s a link to A MULTI-SITE CHURCH ROAD TRIP at Amazon.com

A WINE & CHEESE VENUE?

As most of you know, North Coast Church offers a ton of worship options and styles each weekend. Currently members of our congregation can choose from 23 different local worship venues (with 16 unique styles and settings).

The names of the venues speak for themselves:  Traditions, Country Gospel, The Edge, Last Call, Early Bird, Encore, Video Café, Live @ 12:35 and many more.

Each one is an attempt to follow the example of the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 9: 20-23 where he speaks of his willingness to become all things to all people in order to save as many as possible.

Fact is, we are open to trying just about anything as long as it doesn’t compromise the message. We will adjust times, location, worship style, ambiance, and whatever else will remove the cultural barriers that keep people from hearing and responding to God’s Word.

But I have to admit; occasionally some people don’t get it.

I’m not talking about those who object to our creativity and options. We’re way past trying to convince or please them. I think most of those folks would vote against the second coming. No, I’m talking about the people who love our options and come up with new ideas that are (how should I put it kindly?) way out there.

One such proposal came across my desk recently. It wasn’t actually sent to me. It was forwarded from one of our other pastor’s inbox. It said something like this (with a few changes made to protect the innocent).

Dear Pastor _____________

Since we’ve been so crowded at church recently, I have done more than just think about a new venue and ministry idea. I actually tried it out on my San Diego wine group this weekend. I promised the guys I would host some over-the-top wines if they would give a listen to this week’s sermon while we were tasting.

The group agreed even though none are churchgoers.

It worked for a while, partly due to their enthusiasm over the wines I opened. But it started to dwindle as we got further into the sermon. Some of the guys were clearly bored by the teaching and eventually started talking about the wine. One of the older guys actually started to nod off. I think that if I have the courage to try this again, I might have a better chance of holding their attention if I were to use one of Chris Brown’s sermons instead.

Oh well, it was an Interesting idea, but I think mixing alcohol with religion is best left to Mission San Juan. Based on my experience attending some of their fund raisers, they have it down to a science.

But I have another novel venue idea to run by you guys, how about a ‘Sport of the Kings’ venue at the Del Mar racetrack? They have year-round off-track betting and we could slip the sermon in between races. Just a thought, you guys know best.

Anyway, back to the wine venue attempt. I am hoping that you have a budget for this stuff. I opened 6 bottles ranging in value from $80 to $175 for a total value of $720. I am OK covering the cost of the cheese and munchies, but I would appreciate if the church would cover me on the wine. Please don’t consider this a waste, the wine was unbelievable!

Let me know if I can help with anything else. Always willing.

Respectfully

Name withheld

PS. Please don’t share this with Larry. I wouldn’t want him to hear that his sermon was boring and even put one guy to sleep. But you’ve got to admit, I think he mailed that one in. I should have pre-listened.

 

Oh the joys of multisites, video venues and a permission granting ministry.

So what do you think?

Should we go for it?

Should I have Chris preach more often?


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