Skye Jethani manages Christianity Today’s Leadership Journal and is a pastor at Blanchard Alliance Church (Wheaton, IL). His new book, The Divine Commodity, discusses how consumerism has affected churches and Christ followers. Upon given the opportunity to ask Skye one question about his new book, I asked:
How can a church best avoid becoming a victim of consumer culture?
His response was:
The short answer is—it can’t. It’s rather like asking how a fish and avoid water or how a snake can avoid getting its stomach dirty. The reality is every person living in the North American culture has been impacted and shaped by consumerism. It is the air we breathe and the bowl we swim in. Therefore, every church is full of members and leaders shaped by the uncontested values and beliefs of consumerism. So, avoidance is not an option unless we abandon our missional calling and retreat to monastic cloisters removed from all popular cultural exposure.
We cannot avoid consumerism, but we can recover from it. This transformation requires processes of deconstruction and reconstruction. This is exactly what The Divine Commodity is about—uncovering how we have all been malformed by consumerism, and how we’ve misconstrued our faith in the process, and prescribing practices (corporate and individual) to reshape us with God’s help into communities that reflect his kingdom more brightly.
My book does not advocate a radical coup within the church or call for a revolution in the church’s structure. It’s not about strategy, systems, or programs. In fact, if nothing ever changes about the way your church operates, you are still able to engage and employ the lessons within The Divine Commodity. I don’t believe we can (or should) overturn our consumer culture. Nor do I believe churches (from the mini to the mega) should just radically revamp their structures. That wouldn’t solve the threat posed by consumerism—it’s a far more elusive foe because the battlefield between consumerism and the Kingdom of God is not external, but within the heart and imagination of every believer.
As consumerism’s grip over you begins to loosen, and you experience the transforming reality of “Christ in you, the hope of glory,” the way you worship, serve, and relate will begin to change. In time, through resources like The Divine Commodity and others, perhaps others will join you in your quest for a richer Christian life. The gospel has always been an incarnate reality, transmitted life to life across the medium of relationship. As this begins to take root within your church, regardless of what the leadership or programming is doing, the message of hope, liberty, and fullness in Christ will spread like yeast through a lump of dough. So, rather than criticizing those still enraptured with Consumer Christianity, save your energy and simply let your life reveal a fuller glory which does not fade.
For Discussion:
- How do you think consumerism has affected the church?
- How do you think a church can best avoid becoming a victim of consumer culture?



















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take this with a grain of salt:
while reading this post, i kept a smirk on my face because the shell of his answer is, “Buy my book to learn more.” LOL
i love unintended irony… you even had the Amazon link for the title, which i want to believe is something done tongue-in-cheek.
the answer to consumerism within the Church is… Consumerism!
answering your questions:
1- it’s impacted the american Church by the constant need to outdo the other mega/big church. locally here in cincy this resulted in a christmas program gone very wrong this past season where crossroads community church had loosely-trained people doing mid-air (flying) drama by way of wires attached to harnesses. one of the actresses’ harnesses malfunction, and she fell 30 ft., landed on her head, and died during the production.
having been part of “big ministry” for many years, i know the culture, and is why i now chose home church over the nonsense seen in these mega-church “god malls” found everywhere, which only serve to feed the want of their milk-fed followers of more, more, more.
2- sell everything it owns. donate its building to a homeless, battered women, or orphan shelter. have all staff be bi-vocational, and take no salary. meet in houses or basically just decentralize. stop focus-group testing on all christianese music, books, and media. close every “christian” book store. repent for all of what we the American Church have created, all of these false gods.
Shouldn’t any book titled “The Divine Commodity” at least be available as a free download?