majority of sermons ((in my experience)) are 30 min or less & could have been condensed to 15. whole services typically last 1 hour, with half of it being music, announcements and collecting money.
I agree. The whole concept of "church service" is flawed at best.
to me, obviously, this is no way to be 'fed' or 'discipled' adequately
I agree with this also. True discipleship requires more than one hour a week spread out over hundreds (or even thousands) of people.
an actual teacher behind a pulpit is extraordinarily difficult to find, and one that's willing to teach from that dais as though he's not speaking to babes the whole time, harder still.
In the current church model, there is very little room for growth, since only one person is allowed to speak. In the early church, everyone had a verse of scripture, a song to share, or a simple testimonial. In our church today, you get a "vote" once a year (provided you're a member).
there's a lot to be said for smaller-group Bible studies outside of what i like to call 'the sunday morning big show' -- but the really disheartening thing is that when churches do have such opportunities, only a very small % of the people that nominally 'attend' the church are ever willing to take part in them.
If all of the churches in the U.S. decided to sell their buildings and give all the money to the poor, I am convinced there would only be the small percentile you allude to left standing. We as Christians sometimes don't want to think of there being so few who get saved. However, Jesus (as He often did) put it very plainly:
Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.
Matt. 7:13-14
if you want more than this, that sadly puts you in a shrinking minority, i'm afraid.
if you have more than this -- blessed
I am optimistic. I think we are going to see people, churches, congregations, and pastors start to think outside the box. We are already seeing house churches pop up everywhere around the world. The internet also offers us a way (such as what we are doing now) to fellowship in very unique ways. Take heart; nothing is over. The revival is just getting started!