I have had the privilege of speaking with several pastors recently about
church growth or the lack of growth which many churches are
experiencing across the country. Some pastors are looking for gimmicks
or programs to attract those who left and also looking for ways to
welcome those who have never been. Others are accepting of their size
and diminishing membership and are desirous to settle for being in the
service of those who remain.
A predominant reason people say
they don't go to church is that they consider themselves spiritual and
not religious and that the church is filled with hypocrites. It is very
easy to perceive the church as being filled with people who are "holier
than thou." It is also very easy for the church to attract or foster
people who "protest too much" in an effort to hide their own sinful
nature. It is easy for good people to be judgmental especially if they
secretly recognize sinful desire in their own hearts. On top of that,
when some crime occurs in a church, we might discover that the perp was a
pillar of the community, a lector, secretary, youth group leader,
pastor or Eucharistic minister.
It is not that the church
attracts bad people. The truth is everyone has the capacity to be a
"bad" person. There was a study by Wallerstein and Wylie where they
asked 3,000 NY citizens who have never been arrested about all the
things they had done in their lives. 100% of them have committed
misdemeanors and were never caught and 97% had committed felonies but
have never been caught. So if you've never been caught, you must be a
good person despite the bad things you've gotten away with.
About
fifteen years ago I vacationed in Canada with a friend who illegally
brought back Cuban cigars and prescription drugs which you couldn't buy
in the US but they were available in Canada. I thought it was very
funny that I got flagged for a search and he, a Roman Catholic priest,
waltzed right through.
Today, churches often run background
checks on its members in an effort to weed out the sinners. It is good
that they want to make safe sanctuaries but they need to keep in mind
that most saints such as St. Paul and even Jesus, a convicted felon
himself, would not be welcome in our churches for none of them would
pass their background checks. Part of the problem with organized
religion is that it represents only a tiny part of the story and one
that is often dangerously dysfunctional at that.
People of
adversity find strength within themselves and they think that that has
to do with finding meaning. Instead of finding meaning we should call
it forge for meaning for finding and searching are two different
things. Endurance is the entry way to forging meaning and, being
accepted into a community is the only place that that can happen. When
we forge meaning we can incorporate that meaning into a new identity and
that is what the church needs. We need to take our faults and traumas
and make them part of who we've come to be and we need to fold the worst
events of our lives into a narrative of triumph as a response of things
that hurt. Instead the church tries hard to deny this.
I once
encouraged a church to start a prison ministry and the response was that
they didn't want to attract or associate with those kind of people.
What they failed to realize was that those people were already in the
parish as convicted arsonists, drug users, DWI perps, a sex offender and
burglar. A few years later one of their 20 year old boys was arrested
for dealing drugs and it still didn't dawn on them that they had the
capacity to heal and the healing needed to happen in their own back
yard.
When it was found out that I answered a suicide hotline, a
woman grabbed me after a church service, broke down in tears and told
me that her brother was arrested for committing a sex crime with a
teenager, then completed suicide while in jail. We spoke for quite some
time and afterward I told the pastor what had happened so that he could
be aware of the situation. Instead of being compassionate, he became
angry that the woman would confide in me and not him. Of course, this
was in a parish who abandoned a former pastor who was arrested on a DWI
charge. She never trusted anyone in the parish with her pain and she
carried it silently for many years.
A woman who was raped as a
teenager seemingly had her life destroyed. She dropped out of school,
gave birth to the child of the rapist and never went to college or
forged a career of her own. At the age of fifty she was asked if she
ever thought of the rapist and she said she did and she felt sorry for
him because, he has a beautiful daughter and two beautiful grandchildren
and he doesn't know that and she does. As it turns out, she considers
herself the lucky one. She credits the support and love of her
community for the blessings in her life.
Some things we are
born to; our race, a disability, our sexuality, our gender and some are
things that happen to us; being a rape victim, a prisoner, a Katrina
survivor, a 9/11 survivor. Religious identity means being able to enter
into a church community to draw strength from that community and to
give strength there too. A church community is not for someone to enter
in and say "I am here and I hurt," but rather "I hurt and I am here."
But we are ashamed, judgmental and can't tell our stories to the "good
people" but our stories are the foundation of identity.
Just as
the stories we tell come from our life experiences, our lives can grow
from the stories that we tell. The bible is filled with such stories of
healing, joy, forgiveness and com-passion (suffering with one
another). That is the key; one another and, you won't find that on a
Facebook page. Instead, the church looks for ways to attract the wrong
people because the church is interested in numbers and money. If the
church's goal is to promote healing and acceptance through pain and
struggle, numbers and money will be the symptom thereof. Currently,
that calling is being lived out through social services and other
organizations and they are doing a better job than the church is. So, who needs the church . . .
It
isn't solely about changing ourselves but about changing the world. It
doesn't make what is wrong right but makes what is wrong precious and
you won't learn that from social services. The road less traveled is
what makes all the difference and the church is abandoning that road.
We can not be ourselves without the misfortune that drives our search
for meaning. "I take pleasure in infirmities," St. Paul wrote, "for
when I am weak, then I am strong." The church is trying to be strong
while denying its weakness and driving out people it thinks will make
them weak.
Oppression breeds the power to oppose it and that is
the cornerstone of identity. However, you can't change the church if
you don't belong to it. If a church is full of hypocrites, leaving it
doesn't change that. I know a church whose organist was arrested and
half the church supported him and half wanted to abandon him. The
church chose to abandon him and eventually all the supporters left and
the haters won. That church's attendance dropped and is currently in
danger of closing because - hate begets hate. If the church chose love
and forgiviness, who knows where it would be today.
Today's
church does not know what oppression is because they are doing the
oppressing. If you banish the dragons, you banish the heroes and we've
always been attracted to the heroes in our society. Satan doesn't have
to fight the church because he has joined it. When we shelter our
children from adversity, we've failed as parents for it is adversity
which trains and teaches children how to prepare and cope for what the
real world may throw at them. Someone once asked gay activist Harvey
Milk what they could do to help the cause and Harvey told him to go out
and tell someone. There is always someone who wants to confiscate
humanity and there are always stories to restore it but we need people
to tell the story. By banishing sinners the church is denying and
forgetting its story and its calling. Certainly every church will
proclaim that it welcomes sinners but watch what happens if a registered
sex offender or former murderer would like to join. Ask Squeaky Fromme
what church she is welcome in.
If the church lives out loud, we
can trounce hatred and restore everyone's lives. Then we can truly
celebrate who we are and truly see ourselves in a healthy, life-giving,
complimentary relationship with creation around us. Forge meaning and
build identity then, invite the world to share your discovery and joy.
As the Hollywood axiom goes, "If you build it they will come." Those
who hear may even enter in for, they too have a story they'd like to
share if they are brave enough and welcome to do it and then in the
process, heal others too afraid to speak up. The big question is
though, does the church want to listen?
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