WASHINGTON - Coming out of the first day of the second annual Buzz Conference and a showing of the top ten sermon trailers, sermon illustrations, and other short movie clips produced by churches across the nation, Pastor Mark Batterson of National Community Church found himself amid some Hollywood-caliber creativity.
Mark Batterson, lead pastor of National Community Church in Washington, D.C., hosts the second annual Buzz Conference.
Less stressed than when hosting last years first ever Buzz Conference, Batterson drew a sold-out crowd this year with around 260 pastors converging for a casual recline on leather seats inside Union Stations movie theater to hear some of the most innovative church leaders in the nation.
And the pastors were all looking for ways for their churches to create an impacting buzz in their communities.
The following are excerpts from Battersons interview with The Christian Post on Thursday:
CP: What would you say the buzz about the Church is right now - not in the media, but in the America public?
Batterson: I think there are a lot of mixed reviews. Lets be honest with each other, the Church has a little bit of a perception problem and I think part of it is media and part of its the Church. I think the big issue is the Church is more known for what its against than what its for. And I think to change our perception we have to live out the reality of what we believe and I think a couple of the ways we do that is with the spirit of humility which is serving our communities and blessing our communities and just showing the love of Christ .To me its always about going back to the most basic, simple principles. Jesus told us to love our neighbor. And if you love your neighbor, then you change their perception of who you are.
CP: A Gallup poll recently came out saying Americans confidence in the Church and organized religion is reaching an all-time low. Why do you think that is?
Batterson: I would say that its because organized religion is organized and its religious. And what Jesus was about was inviting people to follow him on a spiritual journey and thats a little different deal. I dont think people are looking for religion. I think theyre looking for God. And unfortunately, they cant always find God in religion and so I think the Church has to find ways to incarnate the truth so that people can hear the Good News in a language they understand.
CP: What category, if you will, does your church fall under?
Batterson: Were a mix; were sort of one of those emerging churches. I mean were reaching emerging generations but the funny thing is, I dont really like labels because labels tend to come with stereotypes. Personally, Im kind of a denominational mut. I come from seven different church backgrounds growing up. But I think the Lords used that in my life to see that nobody has a corner on the Truth, but each of those expressions are kind of one dimension of who God is and if we could learn from each other and love each other, I think wed be a lot better off than focusing on our differences.
CP: There was an interesting question posed by YouTube co-founder Chad Hurley. He asked: How do you stay relevant when people can entertain themselves? So, how do churches stay relevant when people can entertain themselves?
Batterson: My take is that what were experiencing in our culture is what I would call creative inflation. So you have incredible entertainment and entertainment that is available in every form imaginable and we entertain ourselves all the time. But then I also see bookstores arent bookstores anymore; bookstores are bookstores in cafes. Restaurants arent just restaurants anymore that serve food; restaurants are destinations and theyre themed after Hard Rock Café or Planet Hollywood. In a sense, theres so much creative inflation in the culture that we (the Church) are competing for peoples time against people that are very creative.
But church ought to be the most creative place on the planet because we have the Spirit of God and I think creativity is a dimension of spirituality. So theres this creative inflation but I think the Church ought to be leading the way. I think thats part of what we experienced in the Buzz Film Festival this [Thursday] afternoon. What you have are videographers and filmmakers who are producing things that I think are Hollywood-quality. And we need to not just criticize whats happening but - I love what Michelangelo said criticize by creating. And so we need to engender and cultivate creativity. Thats a lot of what The Buzz Conference is about.
CP: It says For Your Eyes Only on the conference posters. What does that mean or imply?
Batterson: Thats just a take of the spy theme. Of course Im talking about 10 spy rules that are leadership tactics and kind of learning from the espionage industry how we do leadership as spiritual leaders. One of the themes is decoding culture. Most pastors are pretty good at biblical exegesis but not cultural exegesis. And so, those 10 rules are sort of inspired by Numbers 13 where the spies go into the Promised Land and I think that frames the leadership challenge in the 21st century.
CP: Youre going to launch a new church campus soon. And Pastor Craig Groeschel talked about breaking the rules. Could you just talk about your new site and about what rules youre breaking?
Batterson: One of our core values is everything is an experiment. So we feel like if were not making mistakes, we probably arent trying enough new things. Wed like to think were in the research and development part of the Kingdom of God. We like doing R&D. The thing that drives us is that there are ways of doing church that no one has thought of yet. And thats that creativity that then finds expression in reaching people. For us, one of the ways we do that is with the multi-site; were always launching new locations. And the beautiful thing about that is it doesnt allow us to live in the past or become comfortable with where were at.
CP: Where will the new site be located?
Batterson: The fourth location will be in Northwest D.C. and its part of our vision of meeting in movie theaters and meeting at metro stops throughout the D.C. area. We have not identified our exact location yet. September 30 is launch day.





