Hey John,
I agree with this pastor's observations for the most part. I just
don't get how staying away solves the problem.
By the way, Just an aside, you might like our church. We don't have
any professionals, except Greg, I suppose, and we're screwing up all
the time. If people are coming for a show, they may get it, but it
won't be the polished variety. We just worship. What I am pleased
about is that our people are really working at taking relationship
and building community seriously. That Veteran that I had written
about a while back who is staying away over the flag issue is really
on the minds of a lot of our people and we are all continuing to
reach out to him in love. I know that, when he comes back, he will
be welcomed with open arms by everybody. I used to joke that food is
our spiritual gift, but our people are starting to get the hang of
community. Go God!
Kathy
At 10:03 PM 9/2/2006, you wrote:
>This is part of why I am not in a church.
>
>Text of forwarded message follows:
>
>>Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2006 15:07:23 -0500
>>From: "a pastor"
>>To: Tom Lamb <mailto:[log in to unmask]><[log in to unmask]>
>>
>>Tom,
>>
>>Thanks for the article and your willingness to share it with me. I
>>also went to your website and read some of your other articles. I
>>agree with your observations about the state of the modern
>>institutionalized church. If you would be so kind as to indulge me
>>for a moment, I'd like to make a few observations of my own about
>>the "system" as you call it.
>>
>>First, let me confess that I am a pastor (I pastor a Baptist church
>>in the Midwestern region of the USA). Let me also say that I am not
>>apposed to the idea of church. It is the body of Christ and the
>>bride of Christ. He loved her and shed His blood for her. I
>>especially love the people God has entrusted to my care; they are
>>wonderful; I have no gripes with them personally. What I am
>>frustrated with is what the church has become. It has gone from
>>being a vibrant, home-based, interpersonal, life-giving body (New
>>Testament church), to an exhausting, often lifeless,
>>institution-based, impersonal organization (today).
>>
>>I am not saying that nothing worthwhile ever happens in local
>>churches; that would be an inaccurate statement. I have been
>>blessed in many ways over the years through local church
>>involvement. I just have many questions and frustrations about the
>>way church is done, especially here in America today. I detect from
>>your articles that organized churches in your country suffer from
>>similar maladies. Anyway, here are the gut-level honest
>>frustrations of an institutional insider: (note: from here on I
>>will refer to the church as the "institution')
>>
>> * As a pastor I often feel like the guardian of an institution
>> rather than a participant in a revolution. The advancement of the
>> kingdom of God, the spreading of the gospel, and the making of
>> true disciples is often lost behind the seemingly endless busy
>> work that must be done in order for the institution to continue to
>> function. Everything gets bogged down in red tape and
>> institutional bureaucracy. Rather than being on mission with
>> Christ, the institution spends most of its time, energy, and
>> resources promoting and preserving itself; i.e., keeping the
>> "machine" oiled and running. I often wonder how many poor,
>> oppressed, and spiritually lost people we could help in Jesus'
>> name; how much human suffering we could alleviate; how many
>> missionary endeavors we could undertake; and ultimately how many
>> disciples of Jesus we could make around the world if we moved our
>> gatherings back into homes, fired all the professional staff, sold
>> all our institutional buildings, and pooled the proceeds together.
>> (Shhhh..don't tell anyone that the pastor was actually thinking
>> something like that)!
>>
>> * As a pastor I am expected to be a fund raiser, vision caster,
>> motivator, organizer, and administrator. It recently occurred to
>> me: "I am not a shepherd, I am the CEO of a corporation called
>> 'church." And my success as a CEO is often measured by how large
>> my congregation is, how fast it is growing, how much money we
>> have, and how fast we are building new buildings. Unfortunately
>> none of these things are within my control, so you can imagine the
>> frustration. And of course within the congregation there are the
>> whiners, complainers, critics, and pathological antagonizers who
>> love to torment institutional leaders. Oh, and don't forget the
>> church politics, unresolved interpersonal conflicts, and
>> denominational garbage that goes on. By the way, I read last week
>> that 20,000 pastors leave the ministry forever every month in the
>> USA! I wonder why? Hmmm.....
>>
>> * As a pastor I am weary of continually trying to motivate
>> spiritually lethargic, apathetic (and probably lost) people, to no
>> avail. I'm convinced that our churches are literally filled with
>> deceived people who equate being a Christian with institutional
>> involvement, i.e, "I am a good Christian because I am active in
>> the institution." There is no real life transformation going on;
>> no submission to God; no being conformed to the image of Christ;
>> no daily spiritual disciplines; no exercising on one's spiritual
>> gifts; just attendance at the institution (and sometimes nominal
>> attendance at that). And because of the way the institution is
>> structured there is no accountability mechanism in place to
>> address the issue with them. This is nothing but deception from
>> the enemy. Jesus said that many faithful churchgoers are going to
>> wind up in hell, much to their shock and dismay (Matthew 7:21-23).
>> It saddens me more than you know. People say they love Jesus yet
>> deny Him with their lifestyles. The hypocrisy is unnerving. They
>> want to call themselves followers of Christ, they just don't want
>> to do what He said (Luke 6:46). I'm really not trying to be
>> self-righteous (I'm not perfect either). It's just that, as a
>> pastor, it breaks my heart when people live under a deception that
>> brings reproach on the name of Christ, destroys their lives, and
>> jeopardizes their eternal destiny. How did we get here? One
>> problem I see it that this modern-day monolithic institution
>> called "church" has all but lost the ability to get people
>> together regularly in small fellowships in intimate settings,
>> where they gather around the Scriptures, encourage one another,
>> pray for one another, and hold one another accountable. It seems
>> to me it would be very difficult to live a double life and be a
>> hypocrit in such an intimate setting.
>>
>> * In many American "institutions" Sunday worship services have
>> degenerated into little more than slick, high-tech entertainment
>> designed to manipulate the emotions. The "auditorium" is
>> constructed so that the audience (congregation) can sit and be
>> entertained by the professional performers (singers, dancers,
>> actors, and speaker) up on the "stage" or platform. Preaching in
>> many of these places has reduced the Almighty to a Genie in a
>> bottle and a cosmic therapist. The focus is man-centered (give
>> sinners whatever they want so they will like us and hopefully
>> accept Jesus). If I read my Bible correctly trying to make sinners
>> like us is both unrealistic and futile (See Matthew 10:22; John
>> 15:18-19; 2 Timothy 3:12). When God instructed the Hebrews
>> concerning how His tabernacle was to be constructed He did not say
>> to them, "Go survey the Philistines and Jebusites and find out
>> what they would like in a tabernacle and then build it that way."
>> No. Because He is holy, He gave them strict instructions as to how
>> HE wanted the tabernacle to be built and to function. When the
>> early church was forming they did not survey the Greeks, Romans,
>> pagans, or Gnostics to find out what they might like in a church.
>> No. They were consumed with radically loving God, radically loving
>> one another, and walking in the power of the Holy Spirit. They
>> were too busy being the church to worry about how to do church. It
>> was about substance, not style. They had no institutions, no
>> buildings and no bureaucracy. They had no professional church
>> growth consultants or mega church growth conferences or marketing
>> strategies or seeker-sensitive services, yet somehow God added to
>> their number daily those who were being saved (Acts 2:47). What a
>> shock by today's standards! What can we learn from this?
>>
>> * It seems to me that after 2,000 years of church history we
>> have shaped, organized, and structured the church and its
>> practices according to the traditions of men rather than the Word
>> of God. So much of who we are and what we do is not prescribed in
>> Scripture. I understand that as cultures change the church has to
>> adapt in some ways. But we've become something I can't imagine God
>> intended. How did we get here? As Greco-Roman culture overtook the
>> early church, and as Constantine later united church and state
>> (leading to what would eventually become the Roman Catholic
>> church), we lost much of what early believers understood about
>> what it meant to be the church. Regular gatherings of believers
>> were moved from the homes to the cathedral; ministry was taken
>> away from the common man as a sharp distinction was made between
>> laity and clergy; an complex ecclesiastical hierarchy was
>> instituted; the Bible was taken out of the hands of the common man
>> and entrusted to the priest. All this had devastating
>> ramifications. And the Protestant Reformation did not restore what
>> was lost. We've never recovered. Unfortunately, we are what we
>> are. And there doesn't seem to be much freedom to fix this. If you
>> start trying to color outside the lines of tradition you are
>> labeled a nut, a heretic, a troublemaker, or a cultist. As you
>> well know, the Radical Pilgrim pays dearly for departing from the status quo.
>>
>>I could go on, but I will spare you. All I'm saying is, I
>>wholeheartedly agree that the modern institutionalized,
>>westernized, monolithic, materialistic, consumeristic church has
>>evolved into something that is incapable of being what Jesus called
>>His body to be. And frankly, I don't see the situation changing. I
>>have recently had a rather sinister thought, however. Intolerance
>>for Christians is increasing at a rapid pace in the USA as American
>>culture has succumb to postmodernism (this represents persecution
>>from within). Radical Islam is trying with all its might to take
>>over the world. These nut cases want to kill everyone on the planet
>>who does not embrace Islam, especially Jews and Christians. They
>>have now declared Jihad against the "West" on every continent on
>>earth (this represents persecution from without). If the
>>persecution against Christians in America got severe enough at some
>>time in the future, might this force the church back into a 1st
>>century kind of situation? Would we have to abandon our buildings
>>and structures and go underground, meeting once again in homes? I
>>pray fervently that it doesn't come to this...
>>
>>Please don't interpret my words as those of an angry, embittered
>>pastor. As I said, I love the church (Jesus loved the church and it
>>seems to me that if I love Him I will love what He loves). I don't
>>mean to insult His bride. I just think we could do church a better
>>way. >From reading your articles it sounds like you guys have
>>discovered one way to do it better. Thank you for your time.
>>
>>Blessings!
>>
>>A Radical Pilgrim wannabe
>>
>>
>><http://beyondcamp.net>http://beyondcamp.net
>>
>>
>End of forwarded message text:
>
>
>John
|