Thursday, August 19, 2004

What is Church?

"Whatever God's dream about man may be, it seems certain it cannot come true unless man cooperates." - Stella Terrill Mann ... FOUND AT "THE QUOTATIONS PAGE"

What are God's dreams for the Church? He seemed to think this whole thing was worth the trouble. In fact, I would argue that the establishment of His Kingdom through the Church was the specific mission He came to accomplish on earth. When the Spirit was sent to fill and empower us, it was God's intention that we would use the power of the Holy Spirit to build the Church. We were created to worship God and reflect His Glory. Human beings are hardwired to worship. Once we have any true experience of God whatsoever, we desire to worship God. If the experience is real, and we taste of His glory, there can be no choice. Anne Dillard once said, "I only know enough of God to want to worship Him, by any means ready at hand...There is one church here, so I go to it." We are in His likeness and image, an honor far beyond our worth, but one God chose to bestow in His lovingkindness.

However, there are two important realizations to address here. First, we must keep in mind that, though we are in His likeness and image, we do not come close to the power, glory, holiness, and righteousness of the Absolute. While He chooses to be intimate with us, what we undertake in our fumbling attempts at worship is no less than a journey or expeditional adventure toward the Absolute. He is, as Anselm expressed, "...that than which nothing greater can be conceived." We are embarking on something far beyond ourselves. Anne Dillard goes on to compare worship to an expedition to the North Pole. She sees our approach to worship as frightening and says:

Why do we people in churches seem like cheerful, brainless tourists on a tour of the Absolute?...On the whole, I do not find Christians, outside of the catacombs, sufficiently sensible of conditions. Does anyone have the foggiest idea what sort of power we so blithely invoke? Or, as I suspect, does not one believe a word of it? The churches are children playing on the floor with their chemistry sets, mixing up a batch of TNT to kill a Sunday morning. It is madness to wear ladies' straw hats and velvet hats to church; we should all be wearing crash helmets! Ushers should issue life preservers and signal flares; they should lash us to our pews!" quoted from The Contemplative Pastor by Eugene Peterson


What an incredible understanding of what church could and should be. Yet, with our tame services and fear of being found to be politically incorrect or insensitive to seekers, we have no care about how our worship pleases God. We approach worship like a fool grabbing the Ark of the Covenant as it slides off the cart. We do not have a reverence or awe for the Sacred anymore.

Secondly, like a trip to the North Pole, worship cannot be done alone. People often argue that one can meet God under a tree. They can have a profound experience of God while alone. Yes and no. Yes, God in His infinite love and mercy can do whatever He wants, including spending time with one of us in the woods. However, we can only have a limited experience of God in that context. God, is by nature, relational. We cannot meet him, therefore, unless we are connected and in relationship. Just like we were create for worship, we were also created for relationship. The desire to stay away from church, or to be in an extremely large church, comes from our individualistic, capitalistic, American mentality that exalts above all the concept of individual salvation and a personal relationship with Jesus. We have thrown away the necessity of gathered worship. We can only have a full experience of the Living God in the context of the Gathered People. We can go only as deep with God as we can go with others. Churches grow large in the US, because they allow us anonymity and a lack of intimacy. Just like we cannot travel to the North Pole without a team of adventurers, however, we also cannot approach the unfathomable glory of God alone. The journey is just too dangerous.

So, first and foremost, Church is Communal Worship. It is the gathered people in intimacy with one another and in relationship together with the Father. How I long for a church service that is so dangerous, it requires safety equipment. We could all us a little more danger on a Sunday!

Sunday, August 15, 2004

A New Beginning

This blog site is a place to talk frankly about church. I want to look at church from the perspective of what it should look like, if and why it is important, and where we should go with it in the future. It is also based in the experience of people, believers and non-believers alike. We are all hardwired to try to find God. So, how can we do that? Churches have become the place least likely to provide an experience of God. People feel that they are more likely to meet God in their jobs or in a conversation with a person over a beer than in a church. What an indictment of how Christian leaders have approached church. Well, I am actually going to set out to pastor a church that is real and authentic. Is it possible? Dialogue with me, and let's find out! We also do this as a live conversation in a gathered setting through our church. If you would like, check us out at our church website. We want to have a living, organic community, and we want to see people set free!