MARS HILL BIBLE CHURCH


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'Mars Hill Bible Church' is a Christian, non-denominational, Protestant, evangelical Bible megachurch located in Grandville, Michigan. The teaching pastor is Rev. Rob Bell.

Contents
History
Leadership
A note about denomination
Ideology
Theology
Grand Village Mall
Related books
See also
External links

History


Founded in February 1999, services, or "gatherings" were originally housed in a school gym in Wyoming, Michigan. Based on the idea that worship could be stripped down to its simplest form, it quickly grew in popularity. Through word-of-mouth and the launch support of Calvary Church in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the church attracted about 1,000 visitors to their first gathering. Within a year the church had the defunct Grand Village Mall donated to them, and purchased the land on which it is now located in Grandville, Michigan. After some remodeling, the 3,500 seat facility opened its doors in July 2000. They have recently added 300-400 chairs. As of 2005, the church attracts over 10,000 churchgoers to its three Sunday services and up to 50,000 downloads per week. They are now offering weekly podcasts so that the teachings can be automatically downloaded to your computer.

Leadership


The church's founding pastor, Rob Bell, founded the church at 28 years old. He is now considered to be the "Teaching Pastor" at Mars Hill. On August 1st, 2005, Zondervan Publishing released his first book, . His next book, Sex God, was released in 2007 through the same publishing company. The current "Lead Pastor" of Mars Hill is Don Golden.

A note about denomination


The church claims to be nondenominational on its website, though some may describe it as interdenominational.

Ideology


The ideology of the church is somewhat different from other large mega-churches in that it places little emphasis on high-tech production during its weekly gatherings. The church's sanctuary (formerly the anchor store of the mall) reflects this simplistic ideology; the sanctuary walls are a dull green, there is a freestanding homemade wooden cross in the sanctuary on communion sundays, and the multimedia projections are white text on a black background. There is a belief that the gatherings should not be a performance, as many megachurches are often known for.
Mars Hill receives the financial tithes and offerings of the people through "joy boxes" that are located in the back of the room (versus a traditional “pass the plate” tithing moment). The initial 25% of the offering is given away to global and local partners in order to "join God where He is already at work among some of the most church-forsaken peoples, places and issues of our city and world." This figure is public knowledge and the individual missionaries supported are highlighted on a regular basis through preaching stories, video testimonies, and strategic updates in "the weekly" bulletin. It is the philosophy of Mars Hill that “living the way of Jesus is to be put on display” so that more might be inspired to take up the cause wherever they live.
The annual giving at Mars Hill is just above $4 million, which equates to $8.00 per attendee per week.

Theology


Their theology is based upon the presumption that YHVH is the "God of the Oppressed." They see the biblical narrative through the lense of what they call "The New Exodus." The New Exodus Theology begins in Egypt where God "hears the cry" of the oppressed. It moves to Sinai where God makes a covenant with the descendants of Abraham, giving them a "purpose and mission." Third - Jerusalem - where Israel has a choice to be "indifferent" and use forced labor to build their own kingdom or to promote a "kindgom of rightousness and justice." Finally, Babylon is the place where there is hope for a New Exodus climaxing in that of Jesus.
They also understand the biblical narrative much like N.T. Wright presents, finding themselves within the fifth act.
Act 1 - Creation,
Act 2 - Fall,
Act 3 - Israel,
Act 4 - Jesus,
Act 5 - Church,
Other theologians have added a sixth act but still find themselves in the midst of the fifth act.
Act 6 - The Return of the King

Grand Village Mall


The current home of Mars Hill Bible Church was originally a small shopping mall known as Grand Village Mall. The mall's main anchor store was Witmark, a catalog showroom chain based in Grand Rapids; after the closure of Witmark in the late 1990s, the small mall fell on hard times and was shuttered.

Related books



★ , by Rob Bell

Sex God, by Rob Bell

★ ''Girl Meets God'', by Lauren F. Winner

★ '', by Anne Lamott

★ '', by Brian D. McLaren

See also



Narrative theology

NOOMA

External links



Mars Hill Bible Church - Sermon Audio

NOOMA, a series of videos based on the church's teachings

Christianity Today Magazine

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