MEMPHIS, TN – Many Christians have heard sentences like these lately:
"Oh, you really should read The Purpose Driven Life by
Rick Warren," and "Wow, I can't believe you haven't
read The Purpose Driven Life yet." But only one group of
believers has been confronted with this imperative: "Read The
Purpose Driven Life by Rick Warren or forgo your church membership."
That group is the membership at Memphis Community Church.
In a groundbreaking move, the elder board at MCC – a nondenominational
"mega-church" – passed a resolution to revoke the membership
of any church member who does not, by the end of 2003, read The Purpose Driven Life, the New York Times bestselling book by Rick Warren, the founding
pastor of Lake Forest, California's celebrated Saddleback Community
Church and author of The Purpose Driven Church.
"Upon encountering this life-changing book, we realized that if
members of our church aren't leading a purpose driven life, they
really don't have much value as believers," said Senior Pastor
Charles Moynihan. "After much prayer and consideration, we simply
decided that they can take their purposelessness elsewhere."
The decision was announced during Sunday morning services on November
9th, and every MCC member will have received a form letter from Moynihan
by the end of the month.
Not only do MCC's 2,348 members have to read The Purpose Driven Life
by December 31st, 2003, they also have to pass a written test of both
multiple choice and essay questions, formulated by the elder board, that
demonstrates that they understand the concepts and have undergone the
life-changing effects of the book.
Moynihan says that he expects that very few, if any, members will lose
their membership, and that many will easily fulfill the requirement during
the church's "40 Days of Purpose," a collective reading
and study of the book, now in progress at MCC and thousands of other congregations
around the world.
"We're not looking to expel anybody here," he said.
"We know that our membership will rise to the challenge and start
to actually live lives with a purpose. The reaction to this action by
the board has been overwhelmingly positive."
But that doesn't mean the church's revolutionary decision
is completely free of detractors.
"I went through nine weeks of mind-numbingly boring membership
classes, and now I have to prove my worth as a member by reading about
some evangelical fad?!," exclaimed Memphis resident Rick Peterson,
who became an MCC member last year.
Despite his objections, Peterson, an avid basketball player, plans to
read the book and take the test.
"I'm not ready to give up my free access to the church gym,"
he said.
For his part, Moynihan is convinced that the required reading will have
an effect on the church that will be just as revolutionary as the elder
board's ultimatum.
"We're going to have hundreds of Christians finding unique
purposes simultaneously," he said. "I like to think of it
as the Purpose Storm."
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