Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Part Two

In a recent conversation with another minister, I mentioned a friend who asserted that she was closer to God before she went into ministry. My colleague responded, “that’s her problem; her responsibility. I have no sympathy for someone who is not nurturing their own spirituality.” On the surface, his answer made perfect sense, but it continued to nag at me. I’ve finally learned to pay attention to such gnawing and have decided I disagree wholeheartedly with my friend, who is currently not in the “plum” position of serving a congregation.

I realized I don’t know anyone—clergy or layperson—who has drawn closer to God as a result of experience in the church. Church tends to test faith rather than nurture it. Church is the place where we practice being very human, beset as we are by all kinds of conflict and power-plays. Church is a place for learning patience. It is a place where we can use or develop a variety of skills—communication, organization, fundraising, and money-management. All of that is lovely and does indeed build character. It is not what necessarily deepens our walk with God.

Most people I know who are bumping up against a certain level of spirituality find they must leave the church, at least for some time. They must leave the noise, the impossible demands and trite activity. They must learn how to live with God, be in God’s space rather than in their own. This can be a most trying circumstance, coming generally later in life, often during crisis. It generally requires a momentary release from “the race.”

Is this counter-intuitive, even an escape? The opposite is true: church life is the escape. There parishioners gather to discuss, argue, and recite theology—talk about God—effectively shutting God out. Ask any active church member about their life and conversation with God. You will likely receive a puzzled look. At best you may get a recitation about prayer life that is lifted from a devotional book—what talking to God is supposed to be like. Those who are really talking to God have no words for it; no easy description. The church, in contrast, is all about words, all about the busy-ness of faith.

Take these two holiday stories: First Baptist Church of Orlando recently had a televised production of their “human singing Christmas trees,” the latest in a line of holy Christian traditions. Because the people stand for so very long to achieve this sentimental menagerie, they have “tree monkeys,” people who go along unseen, massaging the legs of the singers during the show. This is the same church who hollers long and hard about homosexuality being unnatural. Does anyone else find this bizarre?

The second story is less amusing, but very much to-the-point. A music director told me he had to punch up the ending of “Joy to the World” for his church’s Christmas Eve worship service. It lacked a certain…something, which he achieved by adding, in his words, “a Disney-esque” finale. Perfect. Ready for worship. God will be even more pleased and the congregation will get goosebumps. I, however, am holding out for the inclusion of a big laser show.

Want to find God? Get out of the church.

3 comments:

Second Spring said...

Yeah, but . . . the church is where I found God. Truly. It is where my Christian education took place, where I was first introduced to the Golden Rule and then was taught to take it one step further with "love your enemies". The church is what brought me to the realization that we don't live in a vacuum, that we must take care of one another, that we are loved simply because we are. Not tolerance, but acceptance. I feel so blessed to have experienced that love, and yes, that communing with God. The church can be an anchor for us in the storm, or it can be an anchor dragging us down into the gloomy depths. I think when the obligations of the church supersede the love we were meant to experience there, we must leave or force a change, because that is the point at which people have pushed God away. I have pushed God away. I have allowed myself to become a Congregational Workhorse. A real church home brings God to us and shows us how to open ourselves to God in the simplest of ways. I get a lump in my throat when I remember the time our minister showed us that we could look into the communion cup and see the eye of Jesus. Thirty years later I still see Him in each communion cup, and I think He sees me. No Disney ending. No Hallelujah Chorus. Simply a man showing us God. Does that sound familiar? The bottom line is that I will forever cherish the life lessons I learned, the easy love I found, the deep friendships I formed, at church. I hope to find all that again. I hope to get back there. I hope. And that is what I found at church.

The Real Spring said...

It's a conundrum, isn't it? The church giveth, the church taketh away.

Second Spring said...

Maybe. So which is it?
"...and in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make..."
or
"...can't please everyone, so ya got to please yourself."