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Why Not Urban Ministry?

by Tim Adams ~ June 11th, 2008

Why urban ministry?

That’s a question I’ve heard from others and even asked myself at times. Jesus often answered a question with a question, so I’ll give it a shot.

Why not urban ministry?

Of course, not everyone can or should do ministry in an urban setting. Obviously there are people who live in rural and suburban settings. They need the Gospel just as much as anyone in the hood. Their need of the Gospel may not be expressed in the same ways that are apparent in a neighborhood filled with crack houses, but if you followed some of the vehicles that spend 5-10 minutes in front of a dealer’s house, you’d end up in some of the most affluent neighborhoods of your city.

I know because I’ve done it.

At one time we had a drug dealer living directly across the street from us. I’d called Crime Stoppers on numerous occasions, reported the activity to police officers when I saw them at a nearby shopping center and talked to neighbors. This went on for nearly three years, but nothing was done.

Eventually, I resorted to taking down license plate numbers and occasionally following vehicles often driven by white teenagers with parking permits from high schools located deep in the suburbs.

Yes, the suburbs need Jesus too and they have many of the same problems as our neighborhood, but they tend to be covered over by the veneer of a gated neighborhood or an exclusive zip code. And enough money to buy the drugs sold in the hood.

Still, I have to wonder – Why do most people hear the call to serve Jesus in the suburbs but so few hear the cries of the inner city and urban areas of San Antonio or any other metropolitan area?

Why not urban ministry?

In my own town, there’s a stretch of highway that’s about 15 miles long – roughly 15% of the outer loop (1604) that circles San Antonio. From the starting point of Judson Rd. and Loop 1604 to just north of IH 10 W and Loop 1604 you will find about a dozen churches that average over 1000 in attendance each Sunday. Out of those 12, at least six of them qualify as megachurches (over 2000 in weekly attendance) and two of those average over 10,000 in weekly attendance.

Go along that same stretch of road and you’ll find parachurch groups like FCA, Campus Life and Young Life represented on most of the high school campuses from which those churches have built their youth groups.

But, once you get inside the inner loop (410) everything changes. For the most part, if you live inside Loop 410, you live in an urban area. The large churches are almost nonexistent, with the exception of a few established mainline churches, but none that compare to the typically non-denominational megachurches of suburbia.

Throughout the inner city and urban areas of San Antonio you’ll find churches struggling to keep their doors open or already closed. Buildings that once housed vibrant congregations on Sundays and were the hub of community activity throughout the week now sit in disrepair, seldom used and often seen as eyesores.

Like the valley of dry bones, they sit there - just waiting for someone to breath new life into them.

Parachurch ministries that are prominent in suburban schools and churches are nearly nonexistent inside of Loop 410. While some are trying to correct that neglect, the deficit will be difficult to overcome, unless donors can be convinced that ministering in urban and inner city areas is worth the sacrifice.

Many of those megachurches that populate that 15-mile stretch of Loop 1604 were once located in these urban areas, but left years ago, some citing that the areas where they were located had become “too Catholic” or that they were “landlocked and needed more room to grow.”

Many of the people who still live in the neighborhoods those churches left see it as nothing more than white flight.

I had a Sociology professor in college who used to say, “The most segregated hour of the week is 11:00 a.m. on Sunday morning.” If you drive that 15-mile stretch of Loop 1604 on a Sunday morning you’ll see that he was right.

I’m not saying it’s a sin to serve at or be a member of one of these suburban megachurches. But I am saying it’s a sin to continue to saturate and over serve one area of a city while we completely ignore the needs of those in urban and inner city areas.

A turkey at Thanksgiving or Elf Louise at Christmas without any relationship the other 11 months of the year is the 21st Century equivalent of “be ye warmed and filled” (James 2:16).

Spending tens of thousands of dollars for mission trips to foreign countries to the exclusion of investing in community development a few miles from your multi-million dollar facility doesn’t sound like a very good answer to WWJD?

Why not urban ministry?

14 Responses to Why Not Urban Ministry?

  1. Jeff Carlson

    AMEN! Our prayer is that the Lord will somehow open eyes to the need and opportunity in our urban areas. Recently, scale’s seem to be falling from suburban eyes and this will allow us to see and follow the Lords command when Jesus said in Matt 22:39 “you shall love your neighbor as yourself.”

  2. Len

    Good stuff Tim. Glad you are sharing your heart on the web.

  3. Leslie Kelsie-Grubbs

    This almost made me cry. I ditto every word.

  4. A Member of a Megachurch

    As a member of one of those megachurches on 1604, I want to point out that we do see the need for urban ministry and have had a church in one of the roughest government housing projects for over a year now. We are also reaching into neighborhoods that need the love of Jesus and our members are the ones being the hands and feet of Jesus.

    Why do you need to blast the suburban church to justify God’s calling to you? Instead of blasting the 1604 churches, go and make disciples with the vision that God has given you and we will follow God for his plan for our church body.

  5. Administrator

    Jeff - Build Up SA is already making a difference on the Eastside - looking forward to watching God multiply your work in the near future.

  6. Administrator

    Len - thanks for the kind words. You need to bring your youth group to SA for work mission trip. That’s another door that’s been opened for Corriente - let’s talk about it.

  7. Administrator

    Leslie - thanks for all you do with Urban Connection. You walk the walk.

  8. Administrator

    Dear Megachurch Member - I know most of the people who have been involved with your church’s work on the Eastside. They’re good people and they’re doing good work. But there’s a difference between making something a line item and making it a priority. It’s all a matter of scale.

  9. Jen Moore

    Hey, Tim. I think I know some of those answers, because I’ve done quite a bit of urban ministry, and for various reasons live and worship in the suburbs.

    Let’s face it: suburban ministry is just easier. There’s no wondering how to cover the mortgage, or weighing an extra Communion Sunday against an extra set of Bibles, when the majority of your parishoners are relatively affluent. I understand that not all suburbanites are wealthy, and we know that the “urban” poverty are increasingly being priced out of their inner-city neighborhoods into the suburbs. But the fact remains that the pockets of wealth are still outside city limits in most areas of the country.

    The problems of the city are still very real, too. Yes, white middle-class kids buy drugs, but their parents can afford expensive treatment programs and in-home schooling when their recreational drug use becomes a problem. AIDS, poverty, crime, drugs, unemployment, homelessness - these are still largely urban problems, and because the centers of wealth are elsewhere, so too are the local funds to address these problems.

    That leaves a mighty load for the urban church, which must not only preach the Gospel, but must also minister to people’s basic needs in order to get the Gospel through. I’m not listening to the sermon when I haven’t eaten in three days. I’m not attending Wednesday evening Bible studies when I’m working a double shift. I may not even attend Sunday services if I feel bad about not being able to put an offering in the plate.

    And, frankly, middle class folks are content to pretend that these problems have nothing to do with them. Yes, they care, but from a distance. It’s preferable to send missionaries to distant lands because the liklihood that I will go there is slim. It’s harder to make up an excuse for not visiting a sister congregation on the other side of town.

    Engaging in urban ministry requires a different, more complex understanding of God and of neighbor. It sometimes means searching deep into ourselves to discover dark parts of our nature, like our own racism and classism, parts of ourselves that we don’t like to acknowledge. It requires opening ourselves up to different ways of seeing and of being seen, and it means relating to people with whom it may be hard to relate. There’s nothing easy about it!

    So, anyway, I guess this is too long. But I was moved by your entry, and felt compelled to respond.

  10. Administrator

    Jen:

    Thanks for sharing your heart. Take as much space as you want because you’ve spoken truth we all need to hear. And thanks for all you do with Time Banks USA.

  11. Jim

    Check this east side ministry out.
    http://www.strongfoundation.org

  12. Todd Ruth

    I love your heart and passion. It seems we are on the same page. My brother-in-law and myself have just started an urban ministry called Revolve. It’s geared to students and families. revolve4elkhart.wordpress.com is the ministry blog. I’m loving every minute of it!

  13. Administrator

    Jim:

    I’ve added you to the contact list for our Urban Ministries Network. Please come to our next meeting at 1:30 p.m. on Thursday, July 17 at Guadalupe Coffee House - 1320 Guadalupe St.

  14. Administrator

    Todd:

    I checked out your blog - yes, we’re on the same page. God is moving people all over this country to get involved with Urban Ministry. Be sure to check out the Christian Community Development Association, if you aren’t already a member - http://ccda.org

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