Some
contemporary churches are billed as “seeker-friendly,” but the Bible says that
“no one seeks God.” Psalm 14:2–3 pictures God searching in vain for even one
heart that seeks Him: “The Lord looks down from heaven on all mankind to see if
there are any who understand, any who seek God. All have turned away, all have
become corrupt; there is no one who does good, not even one.” This passage is
quoted in Romans 3:10–12, which says, “As it is written: ‘There is no one
righteous, not even one; there is no one who understands; there is no one who
seeks God.’” So, if no one seeks God, who are the “seekers” that some churches
strategize to attract? Plus, how are people saved if no one is seeking God?
First
we must understand human nature. Because of Adam’s disobedience in the Garden
of Eden (Genesis 3:11), sin entered the world and became part of human
existence. Because Adam is the common ancestor of every human being, we all
inherit that sin nature. We are born with a natural desire for rebellion,
self-interest, and disobedience. In Romans 7:18, Paul says, “For I know that
good itself does not dwell in me, that is, in my sinful nature. For I have the
desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out.” In ourselves, we cannot
seek after God, for the simple reason that seeking God is a good and holy
thing. Sinful flesh is incapable of good and holy things (Isaiah 64:6).
Jesus
said, “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them” (John
6:44). In other words, the only way we can seek God is if the Holy Spirit has
first stirred our hearts with a desire for God. It is God who draws us to
Himself. Ephesians 2:8 underscores this truth: “By grace are you saved, through
faith, and that not of yourselves. It is the gift of God.” Even the faith to
believe for salvation does not originate within our fleshly nature. God enables
the fallen human heart to seek Him, when in our own self-centered rebellion we
would never do so. Every good thing originates with God (James 1:17). Faith in
God is a good thing, and so it also originates with God.
Even
our best efforts fall far short of the righteousness required by God (Romans
3:23). That’s why Scripture says that no one seeks God. We seek fulfillment. We
seek pleasure. We seek escape from pain. But the pure motivation of seeking
after God for Himself is a gift from God. We are not saved because we had the
wisdom and insight to exercise our own faith and trust God. No one wakes up one
day and, on his own, decides to seek God. That would be a salvation by our own
works, and Scripture is clear we are saved only by the grace and mercy of God
(Titus 3:5; Romans 11:6). We are saved when God touches our hearts and prompts
us to use the faith He gives to receive His gift of salvation. Even with the
knowledge of God’s existence everywhere, people naturally choose to “suppress
the truth by their wickedness” (Romans 1:18–20).
Because
no one naturally seeks God, God seeks us. He sought Adam and Eve as they hid in
the Garden (Genesis 3:9), and He has been seeking His lost loved ones ever
since. Jesus gave this as His mission statement: “The Son of Man came to seek
and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10).
In
Jeremiah 29:13 God says, “You will seek me and you will find me, when you seek
me with all your heart.” Is this a contradiction to those passages that say no
one seeks God? We know that God first gives us faith. But we also have a free
will. We decide what to do with the faith God gives. We can ignore it, we can
misuse it by chasing after false gods, or we can receive it gladly and use it
to embrace the gospel. When God says we must seek Him with all our heart, we
understand that He has taken the first step toward us. He has done all that is
necessary for our salvation; the work is done. It is now up to us to engage our
will and follow Him. The faith to seek Him is a gift, but we must accept it and
exercise it to have a relationship with Him.
Should
a church be seeker sensitive?
In
recent years a new movement within the evangelical church has come into vogue,
commonly referred to as "seeker sensitive." Generally, this movement
has seen a great deal of growth. Many “seeker” churches are now mega-churches
with well-known pastors who are riding a wave of popularity in the evangelical
world. The seeker-sensitive movement claims millions of conversions, commands
vast resources, continues to gain popularity, and seems to be attracting
millions of un-churched people into its fold.
So,
what is this movement all about? Where does it come from? And, most
importantly, is it biblical? Basically, the seeker-sensitive church tries to
reach out to the unsaved person by making the church experience as comfortable,
inviting, and non-threatening to him as possible. The hope is that the person
will believe in the gospel. The idea behind the concept is to get as many
unsaved people through the door as possible, and the church leadership are
willing to use nearly any means to accomplish that goal. Theatrics and musical
entertainment are the norm in the church service to keep the unsaved person
from getting bored as he does with traditional churches. State-of-the-art
technology in lighting and sound are common components of the seeker-sensitive
churches, especially the larger ones.
Expertly
run nurseries, day care, adult day care, community programs such as ESL
(English as a Second Language), and much more are common fixtures in the larger
seeker churches. Short sermons (typically 20 minutes at most) are usually
focused on self-improvement. Supporters of this movement will say that the
single reason behind all the expense, state-of-the-art tech gear, and theatrics
is to reach the unsaved with the gospel; however, rarely are sin, hell, or
repentance spoken of, and Jesus Christ as the exclusive way to heaven is rarely
mentioned. Such doctrines are considered “divisive.”
The
seeker-sensitive church movement has pioneered a new method for founding
churches involving demographics studies and community surveys that ask the
unsaved what they want in a church. This is a kind of “if you build it they
will come” mentality. The reasoning is that if you give the unsaved better
entertainment than they can receive elsewhere, or “do church” in a
non-threatening way, then they will come, and hopefully, they will accept the
gospel. The mindset is to hook the un-churched person with great entertainment,
give him a message he can digest, and provide second-to-none services. The
focus of the seeker church then is not Christ-centered, but man-centered. The
main purpose of the seeker church’s existence is to give people what they want
or meet their felt needs.
Further,
the seeker-friendly gospel presentation is based on the idea that if you will
believe in Jesus, He will make your life better. Relationships with your wife
or husband, coworkers, children, etc., will be better. The message the seeker
church sometimes passes on to the unsaved person is that God is a great cosmic
genie, and if you stroke Him the right way, you will get what you want. In
other words, if you profess to believe in Jesus, God will give you a better
life, better relationships and purpose in life. So, for all intents and
purposes, the seeker-sensitive movement is a type of system based on giving
unbelievers whatever they want. What too often happens in such a system is that
people make a profession of faith, but when the circumstances of their lives
don’t immediately change for their material good, they forsake Christ,
believing He has failed them.
How
are people responding to the “seeker” movement? Many people have responded and
begun attending seeker-sensitive churches. Many people, indeed, have come to
faith in Christ as a result of a seeker-sensitive church. But the bigger
question is, “What does God have to say about all this?” Is it possible for a
movement to be successful from a human perspective, but be unacceptable to God?
The
basic premise in the seeker-sensitive movement is that there are many people
out there who are seeking God and want to know Him, but the concept of the
traditional church scares them away from faith in Christ. But is it true that
people are truly seeking God? Actually, Scripture teaches the exact opposite!
The apostle Paul tells us that “there is no one who understands, no one who
seeks God” (Romans 3:11). This means there is no such thing as an unbeliever
who is truly seeking for God on his own. Furthermore, man is dead in his sin
(Ephesians 2:1), and he can’t seek God because he doesn’t recognize his need
for Him, which is why Paul says that there is no one who understands. Romans
1:20-23 teaches us that all unbelievers reject the true God. They then go on to
form a god that is what they want (a god in their image or the image of
something else). This is a god they can tame and control. Romans 1:18-20 says
they knowingly suppress what they know about God through His creation and that
they are subject to God’s wrath, another doctrine studiously avoided by the
seeker churches.
God’s
invisible attributes are clearly seen in creation, but unbelievers take that
clear knowledge and revelation God has graciously provided and flatly reject
it. This leads to Paul’s statement in Romans 1:20 that they are “without
excuse.” What man finds when he seeks on his own is nothing more than a god of
his own creation. Man does not seek for God; it is God who seeks for man. Jesus
said that plainly in John 15:16, and John 6:44. The idea of thousands or even
millions of unbelievers really searching for the true God is an utterly
unbiblical notion. Thus, this movement is based on an unbiblical concept of the
nature of the unsaved person, which is spiritually dead. A spiritually dead
person does not seek God, nor can he. Therefore, there is no such thing as a
seeking unbeliever. He does not understand the things of God until he is made
alive by the Spirit of God (1 Corinthians 2:14).
Until
the Father draws him (John 6:44) and the Spirit awakens the heart so he can
believe and receive the gift of faith (Ephesians 2:8), an unsaved person cannot
believe. Salvation is completely the act of God whereby He draws and empowers
the dead sinner with what is necessary to believe (John 6:37, 39-40). What part
do we play in the salvation of others? God has commanded that we are the
instrumentality through which the gospel is proclaimed. We share the gospel,
but it is not our responsibility to make people believe, or even to try to be
persuasive or manipulate them into believing. God has given us the message of
the gospel; we are to share it with gentleness and reverence, but we are to
share it, offensive parts and all. Nobody believes the gospel because a speaker
is persuasive. People believe because of the work of God in their hearts.
God
has not been vague on what His church is to be like. He didn’t leave us
guessing. He has given us direction on how men are to lead His church (Acts
6:1-6, 14:23; Titus 1:5-9; 1 Timothy 3:1-13; Ephesians 4:11), the ordinances of
the church (1 Corinthians 11; Matthew 28:19), and the worship in the church—it
is to be on the “Lord’s Day” (Acts 20:7), and is to consist of preaching and
teaching, prayer, fellowship (Acts 2:42) and the taking of an offering
(Colossians 3:16). Here, the seeker movement has missed the mark completely
with its man-centered focus. When an unsaved person enters church, should our
goal be to make him feel as comfortable as possible? When it comes to issues
like our kindness, speaking respectfully, or even physical comfort, all who
enter the church should be treated well. But the unsaved person should never
feel “at home” in church, which is the body of Christ. The preaching and
teaching of truth should make him feel very uncomfortable as he, hopefully,
realizes the state of his soul, comes to know the existence of hell, and
recognizes his need for the Savior. This discomfort is what brings people to
Christ, and those who attempt to circumvent discomfort are not being loving. In
fact, just the opposite is true. If we love someone, we want him to know the
truth about sin, death, and salvation so we can help him avoid an eternity in
hell. According to Paul, when an unbeliever enters the church and the Word of
God is preached expositionally (taught directly from the Scriptures), he will
be convicted and called into account for his sin. The secrets of his heart are
disclosed as he confesses and repents of his sin; this leads him to humble
himself and worship the God who has provided the sacrifice for his salvation.
If
we apply the standards of the seeker-sensitive movement to evaluate Jesus’
ministry, we get some interesting results. At one time, Jesus was preaching to
thousands, and He clearly offends nearly all of those who heard Him. They
desert Him, and “from this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer
followed him” (John 6:66). The Greek words in this verse mean they left and
never came back. Jesus warned us that, far from healing our relationships with
others, Christians will experience rifts in their closest relationships because
of Him (Matthew 10:34-37). It is true that once we are saved life is better
because we are reconciled to God and have a right relationship with Him. This
provides the deepest peace that can be known. However, the rest of our lives
will almost certainly be more difficult than before. God has said that we will
experience persecution (Matthew 10:25), the rest of the world will look upon us
as fools (1 Corinthians 1:18, 23), and we may even experience deep divisions in
our own families all because of Christ (Luke 12:53). Jesus never intended for
us to be popular with unbelievers, saying instead that He came to bring not
peace, but a sword (Matthew 10:34).
The
basic philosophy, theology, purpose, and end of the seeker-sensitive movement
are entirely man-centered. However, some would say that regardless of the
purpose, motive, and outcome of the movement being wrong, we can’t argue with
the principle of getting the unsaved through the doors to hear the gospel.
Certainly, any exposure we can give the unsaved to the gospel is a great thing.
However, the seeker-sensitive movement sometimes doesn’t have the real gospel.
Rather, it is a shell of the truth; it is hollow and void of the truths of sin,
hell, and the holiness of God.
How
is the rest of the body of Christ to respond to the seeker-sensitive movement?
We are to “contend earnestly for the faith that was once for all delivered to
the saints” (Jude 3). We are to be all the more vigilant to model our churches
after the instruction of Scripture. Eventually, this movement, like all others
which have come and gone over the years, will run its course and fizzle out.
The seeker movement is large and well accepted, but it will eventually give way
to the next fad, and in some ways that has already happened with the Emerging
Church movement. Oddities within the church come and go, but the biblical
church, like her Lord, endures forever.
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