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It Takes a Brave Guy to Plant a Church in Utah

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J. Lee Grady

Matt Roberts, a young preacher I met last week,
has built a congregation of 950 in the middle of Mormon country.

U.S.
News & World Report
recently released its list of “Top Careers,” an outline of professions
that are expected to be popular in 2011. I was not surprised to find all kinds
of medical jobs on the list—from registered nurse to athletic trainer to
massage therapist—but I didn’t expect to see “clergy.” U.S. News
revealed that the Labor Department expects the number
of religious leaders to climb by 13 percent over the next decade.

One
reason that number will grow is that brave men (and some women) are stepping
out in faith to plant churches in an increasingly unchurched America. I met one
of these courageous souls last week. His name is Matt Roberts; he’s only 32;
and he moved to Ogden, Utah, six years ago to start an
evangelical church in the heart of Mormon territory.

 “We don’t argue with Mormons. Some Christians have been really hateful toward them. One hundred percent of our members have relatives in the LDS church.”
—Matt Roberts


“Whenever
I used to think about Utah I got scared. I said, ‘God, please don’t call us
there,’” Matt told me, laughing at his first reaction to God’s plan. But after
Matt and his wife, Candice, surrendered to the call, they embraced the
challenge. “I said, ‘Why should we plant a church anywhere else but
Utah?’”—noting that born-again Christians make up only 2 percent of the state’s
population.

This
is not a cushy job—or a high-paying one. Even though his church, The Genesis Project, now has 950 members, Matt gets only
$36,000 a year because most of his members are new converts. Matt and his wife
have four young boys.

There
has also been a lot of spiritual warfare. “We deal with more demonic
manifestations than I’ve ever seen,” says Matt, who went to Southeastern
University in Lakeland, Fla., and was a youth pastor with the Assemblies of God
in Oregon.

Once,
a lady walked into the church and began pulling her hair out while shouting
profanities. Another time, a demon-crazed man tackled Matt in the street in the
middle of the night after he answered a distress call. Matt’s congregation has
also been referred to by locals as “the apostate church.”


So
far, about 75 percent of Matt’s members come from a Mormon background, although
many are known as “Jack Mormons”—people who were raised Mormon but no longer
attend temple ceremonies. It is not uncommon for Mormons to be disowned by
their families if they leave the church.

“Mormon
churches are not retaining their youth,” Matt adds. “So there’s a whole
generation of kids [in Utah] who have been crushed by works-based religion.”

Matt’s
outreach strategy, however, has not been anti-Mormon by any means. He’s quick
to acknowledge that young people from Christian churches have also been wounded
by religion. So he just preaches Jesus, without attacking Mormon doctrines.

The
Genesis Project bought a building in downtown Ogden and offers concerts,
addiction counseling, a homeless outreach and improv comedy shows to share the
gospel. The church’s 350-seat sanctuary is open for four weekly
services—including a popular Friday night meeting that attracts many young
people.


“We
don’t argue with Mormons,” Matt explains. “Some Christians have been really
hateful toward them. One hundred percent of our members have relatives in the
LDS church [Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]. We believe
differently than they do, but we are here to serve them.”

What impressed me most about Matt (besides his radical
decision to tackle Utah) is his humble approach. Pastors of 900-member churches
in the South or Midwest can make $100,000 a year, but Matt invests most of his
church’s budget in outreach. His dream is to scoop up all the young people in
Ogden who have been hurt by drugs, rejection, promiscuity or religion and offer
them a countercultural Jesus who cares.

“Church planter” is not exactly the most popular career
in this country, but I’m grateful Matt Roberts was willing to take the job. I
hope many more people like him will volunteer for this profession.

J. Lee Grady is the former editor of Charisma. You can find him on Twitter
at leegrady. His newest book is 10 Lies Men Believe (Charisma House).
Learn more about Matt Roberts’ church, The Genesis Project, at genesisutah.com.


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J. Lee Grady is an author, award-winning journalist and ordained minister. He served as a news writer and magazine editor for many years before launching into full-time ministry.

Lee is the author of six books, including 10 Lies the Church Tells Women, 10 Lies Men Believe and Fearless Daughters of the Bible. His years at Charisma magazine also gave him a unique perspective of the Spirit-filled church and led him to write The Holy Spirit Is Not for Sale and Set My Heart on Fire, which is a Bible study on the work of the Holy Spirit.


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