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  • Michael Duduit
    March 1997
    As we prepare to enter the twenty-first century, it is clear that western culture is caught in a whirlwind of conflicting values and...
  • Michael Duduit
    January 1997
    After our recent move, my family began to visit a variety of local churches in our new community and I began to rediscover that age-old...
  • Michael Duduit
    November 1996
    Attention, readers: does anybody know where my stuff is? Anybody?Anyone who has ever moved house and home (and that includes every...
  • Michael Duduit
    September 1996
    Any preacher without a sense of humor would be better off finding another place of Christian service. Truth is, it's impossible to...
  • Michael Duduit
    July 1996
    I've learned an important lesson: never, ever, ever tell your wife that you're never moving again.When we moved into our Louisville...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 1996
    I may never again be able to preach on the subject of raising children. I now have one.James Robert Duduit -- light of my life and...
  • Michael Duduit
    March 1996
    During the past several weeks I have been discovering a whole new world with its own language: bits and browsers, ftp's and domains,...
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It's About Time
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It's About Time
By Michael Duduit
We all understand the hectic nature of contemporary life, but some folks seem determined to carry it to extremes.

A recent article in our local newspaper highlighted two area churches which have begun "express worship" services -- one designed to last thirty minutes, the second stretched out to forty-five minutes. I've waited longer for a hamburger at McDonald's -- but then, the latter may also have provided more nourishment.

Church leaders avow only the most noble purposes: to reach people who are "turned off" by more traditional services, or who are accustomed to a more spontaneous, less-structured lifestyle. Or, as the Burger King people put it, "Have it your way."

Don't get me wrong -- I'm all for many aspects of contemporary worship experiences. I enjoy both praise choruses and a Bach cantata. I'm convinced effective preaching in the 1990's is characterized by contemporary application and illustration of biblical principles. I've even been known to clap an occasional hand (usually one at a time, however).
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But this "express worship" thing strikes me as considerably off the mark. It seems to imply that people today don't have the attention span or willingness to stay engaged in an hour-long worship experience. And they're right -- if the worship service is more ceremonial than involving, if the preaching is aimed at their grandparents' needs and interests, if there is no clear word from the Lord. On the other hand, people willingly sit through hour-long television programs, two-hour movies, three-hour football games -- when they are engaged.

Letting worship run an hour hasn't seemed to hurt Willow Creek or other churches using more contemporary models -- they simply plan a combination of music, drama and message that involves people and gives them something to think about. And I can take you to scores of more traditional worship services that run sixty to ninety minutes every Sunday, and are packing in the baby boomers.

People come to churches where the worship is compelling. It's not about how quickly it's over, it's about what happens when they arrive. That kind of engaging worship is hard to produce in thirty minutes. (I have sermon introductions that have gone longer than that!)

Feel free to call it "Mini-church" or "Gospel Lite" or something else that accurately describes the superficial nature of the experience. But don't call it worship.
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