Todd
Hunter New Alpha President
Following his tenure as National Director of the Vineyard
Churches, Todd
spent several years taking a close look at the Emerging church
movement, his most recent position being with Allelon
based in Boise, Idaho. That organization made some changes, which
freed Todd up to look for new opportunities. One of the organizations
that contacted him was Alpha USA. He accepted the offer to lead
Alpha USA this past week.
For those unfamiliar with Alpha,
could you give us some background?
Todd
Alpha is a program that started about 20 years ago in an Anglican
church in London called Holy Trinity
Brompton. Founded by a Barrister (Lawyer), now curate, Nicky
Gumbel, it was designed originally to provide a safe place
for British churchgoers to learn more about their faith. It evolved
into a 10-week course. People gather for a meal, get to know each
other socially, watch a video of Nicky Gumbel talking about spiritual
matters and then follow up with discussion at each table.
So, Alpha came out of a non–evangelical setting?
Todd
Yes and no. It was written and nurtured by a succession of curates
(assistant pastors) previous to Nicky Gumbel. It was fist used
as a way to help unbelieving church-goers to understand the basics
of the Christian faith. Holy Trinity Brompton, while certainly
a traditional Anglican church, is definitely evangelical within
its own tradition. By the way, Holy Trinity Brompton was the primary
host church for the Vineyard renewal meetings in the early 80s.
That is the connection with the Vineyard and why I had a relationship
with them for the past 20 years.
Nicky Gumbel
says that John Wimber was the most influential
person in his life?
Todd
Yes. Apparently, when Nicky was a young man he attended some of
John’s meetings and not only had his theological world,
but also his experiential world rocked. During a clinic time,
the Holy Spirit came powerfully on Nicky and John turned and said
the Holy Spirit was going to use him to talk to the lost
Then from Nicky’s perspective,
this was a discipleship program that happened to appeal to lost
people?
Todd
Right, he was simply trying to provide a place and a process where
Christians could come and learn more about the faith they already
espoused. He never imagined it spreading to 140 countries and
touching millions of non-Christians. That just happened. They
saw it and went with the flow of the Spirit and the Alpha program
we know today came into being.
So how many churches in the US are currently
participating
in the Alpha program?
Todd
I’m just learning numbers myself, but I think it is in the
neighborhood of 7200. There is no geographical “center,”
but the majority of participating churches would be Methodist,
Episcopalian, Vineyard and Presbyterian. Interestingly enough,
two of the fastest growing new Alpha user groups are Pentecostals
and Baptists. Traditional evangelical churches have been slower
to adopt the Alpha course.
Ok, that’s great background on
the organization you are about to begin leading. Now give us some
personal background. What kind of changes have you gone through
over the past few months that led you to make this rather surprising
(at least to some) choice?
Todd
Much of my spiritual history has been rooted in the practice and
study of evangelism. My motive for exploring the emerging church
scene closely was at least in part an attempt to see if they/we
had an alternate answer for what many of us perceive as modernity’s
artificial and non human ways of going about it. And, if you could
get a bunch of us emerging church types alone and honest, we would
have to admit that we ourselves are not doing so well at talking
with the lost either.
I realize that there is dissonance around this
issue (evangelism) for many, if not most, of the emerging church
types – they wonder not only about bad models but also whether
evangelism is even a necessity. For me, implicit in being human,
and what it means to be the people of God is that life is otherly
and intentional. God didn’t just say to Adam and Eve –
Go and relate, he said go create, work and serve.
An invitation like that requires a response, and while I favor
multiple and creative approaches to evangelism, one option we
are not given is to do nothing. As I like to say, the answer to
“misuse” is not “no use,” it’s “right
use.” Jesus and the Apostles used words and works as ways
to persuade people to come and follow him.
How would you respond to the critique
that in your passion to “get something done” you are
selling out to a program?
Well, I understand that thinking, and am actually
looking forward to continued dialog with my friends in the emerging
church movement about this dilemma. The viewpoint is typically
expressed in the following way. Programs are inherently mechanistic
or “modern.” and the apologetics part of something
like Alpha are also off-putting for those who have a high value
for mystery. Again, I am very interested in dialoging about these
issues with my more postmodern friends.
Because I also had some of these same concerns,
I asked the Alpha board if they would give me 5-6 weeks to travel
and observe Alpha events and programs so I could see for myself
before I decided to take the position of President. They graciously
agreed
And… ?
Here’s what I found. Alpha is communal
– they eat dinner together and share normal social time
together. It was also relational; you are encouraged to be real
and even assert things that are counter to Christianity, and the
Alpha “insiders” are trained to listen and ask more
questions. I observed a huge trust in the work of the Spirit.
All of these are the selfsame values I would often discuss with
emerging church leaders. While Alpha is certainly intentional,
it was never manipulative. No one was forced to believe or shunned
for not believing. What I observed was that people were respected
and engaged in thoughtful and authentic dialog. Everything was
an invitation; nothing was compulsory.
Tell us a story
Well, just last month when I was in London observing at Holy Trinity
Brompton, I saw hundreds of twenty-somethings participating in
an Alpha course. I was surprised by the age since I have been
so focused on trying to reach this age group. I have heard scores
of stories of self described atheists and agnostics who have come
to faith through Alpha. In New York at St Barts, where over the
past 8 years 1500 people have taken the Alpha course, the average
age of that group was 26. We’re not talking Atlanta or Orange
County where you still have a Christian culture; we’re talking
about the secular center – New York City. That’s impressive.
So what I’m trying to say is that I think
I see in Alpha a way of being able to speak meaningfully and naturally
with not only a post modern, but also a truly post Christian audience.
So Alpha and Postmodern are not oxymoronic
in your mind?
It’s only a program and all programs
have problems, but in the right hands, it can be helpful. I think
I see in Alpha the potential to respectfully engage post Christian/modern
people in dialog, which translated means we listen to them. I
think you’ve heard me say before that if we were to ask
Jay Leno to do one of his word on the street video interviews
and he said “Evangelical,” the last thing we would
ever hear people say is “great listeners”. In my view,
Alpha helps Christians become better listeners and I consider
that to be significant and worthy of my investment as a leader.
Alpha knows how to create a listening culture.
Why would Alpha ask someone with no
Alpha history to come in to lead Alpha at this time?
Interestingly enough, I think they liked the
fact that while I am personally fascinated with evangelism, I
have never been a big time Evangelist (I would’ve like to
have been, but just didn’t have the magic). I think they
also wanted someone with pastoral and local church experience
Where will you be living and what will
you be doing for the next year?
My office will remain in Boise where we have
a home. I will personally be on a steep learning curve trying
to grasp all things Alpha and I will continue to travel and speak
in emerging church events and Off
The Map events since not only I but Alpha has asked me to
continue in my contacts with the people and groups I currently
work with. They aren’t requiring that I move into Alpha
Land and never see my old friends again. I still get emails from
young church planters every day and I answer them and will continue
to do so. My commitment is to continue to stay in the conversation.