Nelson:
The best way to learn something is by experiencing it, and experience focuses
on the sensory. We are sensual people, literally. God created us with five senses;
unfortunately most sermons are asensual. They really focus on cognition but
very little else. And I think what we need to move toward is designing into
our messages or our services experiential components — which allow people to
touch, smell, hear, and see — so that it has a deeper embedding and it goes
beyond pure intellect and cognition.
On Palm Sunday
we were kind of weaving an arc — with me leaving the church along with the Holy
Week focus — and we talked about the triumphful entry. So for us it was “Pom
Sunday.” Although we had palm leaves in the lobby outside, once they got inside
we handed them a pom — a miniature pom-pom on a stick — and we played sports
music which focuses on the ears. It was tactile in the sense they could hold
the pom-pom and encouraged them — non-charismatic to boot — so we encouraged
them on good points to wave your pom-poms. And we used it as a modern metaphor
for celebrating.
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You know when Jesus
came in to Jerusalem they celebrated Him. In the church we need to celebrate
more. When we leave sometimes you mourn, but we need to celebrate the good things
God has done in the last niine years. At the very end we had stations where
people could give an offering, so they could get out of their seats and move.
We had stations where they could take communion, which involved their taste
and smell. Then we had these white charts around at different stations where
they could take a marker and write on these pieces of paper — pages of big post-it
note sheets — things they wanted to celebrate or things they were thankful for,
things they wanted to praise. In the back room we had a DVD clip with music
going on a song that lasted six minutes.
So in our service
we had six minutes of experiential worship where the people weren’t singing
— they were actually taking communion, giving offering, writing, and in between
we had the pom-poms there. Those would be some experiential components that
allow the people to participate — not just to be spectators but to be participants.
Preaching:
Do you do much with visual images or video in connection to worship and the
message itself?
Nelson:
I think a growing number of people are using the whole imagery thing, whether
it’s a cutout on stage or whether it’s a media clip. A variety of ways — not
just media, not just movies but a variety of ways of creating visual or symbols.
Maybe you have a single symbol where people are focusing. You go to a GenX conferences
or emergent church seminars and they are really into visuals. They have visuals
going, in fact, that have nothing to with the message per se but they are just
kind of going in the background, I think because it gives them a sense of stimulation
while they are being spoken to. I think variety is important, and I think as
much as possible we can give people metaphors — maybe for every message have
a singular metaphor that says this is what this is about.