Quitting Church

It has become something of a trend lately to say things like, "I'm leaving the church to pursue a relationship with Jesus on my own."  Typically, reasons given include, "People are mean," "Christians are hypocrites," or "You don't know how bad I've been hurt." 

Adherents to the trend often have a well blended mixture of indignation over legitimate frustrations and a sheep-like compulsion to follow the Christian trend of the day.  When I hear church people take up their latest offense and grumble about how church hurt them by not remembering the second anniversary of the time they were over-charged at Whole Foods,  I quietly resit the urge to karate chop them in the ear lobe. 

My frustration is kindled for two reasons:

  • There are plenty Christians who really do suffer.  
  • The mentality often reflects a consumeristic view of the Body of Christ.  

Of course, my heart is immediately grieved, because I know that in most cases there is real hurt involved, hurt that is directly related to some failure of someone somewhere to show unconditional love to the person in question.  The hurt may or may not be directly related to the Church, but it is real.  

My family and I have been hurt by people in the Church.  It would be inappropriate to go into specifics, but in the context of Church we have experienced abuse, betrayal, financial ruin, and physical danger.  Perhaps ironically, the most painful thing we have experienced is gossip.  Once, a 6ft. 300lb. ape of a man made threats and then showed up in person to deliver on them.  Still, the gossip and betrayal from physically benign Christians was far more traumatic that that incident.  

Believe me when I say that I understand the hurt that is associated with words and tone in the context of Chruch.  Wounds that we often call "small" are in fact very painful.  

I would choose violent threats over personal attacks on most days.  

What I am telling you is that your hurts are real; they just aren't a good reason to leave the Church.

Perspective

Before offering up a litany of reasons why you should not forsake the church, I would like to share some information that might put things into perspective:

  • Currently, a pastor named Saeed Abedini is being tortured in an Iranian prison, because He loves Jesus and refuses to renounce Him.  He has been in prison for 3 years now.  He has a wife and two young children.  He is part of the Church. Read more.
  • In Syria, ISIS is beheading, torturing, and otherwise executing Christians who choose Jesus over their very lives.  They are part of the Church.  Read more.
  • In China, followers of Jesus meet secretly in quiet, low-lit meeting spaces, knowing that at any moment they could be caught and prosecuted. They are part of the Church. 
  • In Cleveland, OH, church planters are threatened with eviction for holding small gatherings with other Christians in their home.  The are part of the Church. 
  • Converts to Christianity in Saudi Arabia face death and abuse from their own families for trusting in Jesus. They are part of the Church Read more. 
  • Christians who share their faith in Morocco risk losing their jobs and severe punishments.  Read more. They are part of the Church.  

I'm sharing these stories to give us all a sense of perspective and solidarity.  I don't want to walk away from a body of believers that is suffering so severely for their love of Jesus.  Suffering like this makes my hurts seem insignificant.  I don't want to leave the Church when my brothers and sisters need me most.  You shouldn't either.  

Your Involvement Matters

It is easy to look at the plight of Christians in Syria and China and think that your attendance at a local assembly of Christians matters little.  But, you would be wrong.  I have had the rare honor of conversing with missionaries that spend time in closed countries.  They never ask for sympathy and they never "play the martyr" (ironically).  There are a few things they always need, though:

  • Prayer
  • Solidarity
  • Support

They need to know that there are groups of Christians meeting together freely, praising Jesus and lifting them up in prayer.  The more Christians gathering to pray for them and lift up Jesus, the more their hope is kindled and God moves.  Financial support is pretty important too, but most of them will tell you that they need prayers more than anything.  

The best example I have is family.  Imagine your brother was somehow kept from being with the family for a really special holiday.  There is great comfort in knowing that the family is still gathering around the table together, that they are laughing, telling stories, and making memories.  Even in his absence, there is great encouragement in knowing that home still exists, that there are people somewhere who love and support him even if he is far away. Yes, uncle Jonathan farts at the table and tells offensive jokes and Aunt Ava is still crazy as a loon...not to mention the fact that Sarah hurt you more deeply with her remark about your kids last year than you ever thought possible...but your brother is calling in during Thanksgiving dinner.  He is homesick and afraid, and he desperately needs to see that home in all it's disfunction is still there...and he would weep tears of joy be there, even with all of it's drama.  Make sure you are there when he calls.  

The writer of Hebrews says, "not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near" (Hebrews 10:25).  He notes that the closer we get to the return of Jesus, the more important congregating becomes.  

Let's also consider the fact that the Church is the Bride of Christ.  Jesus cares deeply about the Church and doesn't take kindly to those who would berate or abandon her.  He knows she has flaws, but she is His.  Be careful how you treat her.  

Beyond that, the church is you!  You can't leave yourself.  You are a living stone fit together with the rest of the stones in this grand temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Peter 2:5). This in addition to the fact, that your individual body is a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19).  

Still further, you are the sinew and bone of the Body of Christ, of which Christ is the head (1 Corinthians12:27). You could no sooner choose to leave the Church than your knuckle could choose to leave your hand.  

You are a part of this body (1 Corinthians 12:27), a stone in this temple (1 Peter 2:5), a member of this family (Matthew 12:49-50).  You could leave, but you would still be a part.  

Legitimate Frustrations and Helpful Truths

Let us face some realities with that may be causing us some frustrations:

  • Many church settings fail to fulfill the Great Commission.
  • Churches are made up of broken people in the process of sanctification, not the completion of it.  These who are on the continuum of growth harm one another on the path.  
  • Many churches both large and small are driven by programs rather than relationship. This can be both stifling and lonely.  
  • The absence of biblical ecclesiology (church) has led to traditions that waste time and limit community.  
  • The presence of Jesus and power of the Spirit is often neglected in favor of the talents and resources of men.  

Let us also employ some helpful truths.  

  • Staying in the Church doesn't necessarily mean staying where you are. 
  • God is working.  You can go where you see Him moving.  
  • The Church is wherever God's people are gathering (though there are some key ingredients).
  • Jesus will build His church, and nothing can stop Him (Matthew 16:18). 
  • Jesus has plenty of disciples that are a joy to be around (John 13:35). 

Find a Church

My advice is to find a church where Jesus is honored as King and making disciples is the first priority.  Most people seem to have an idealized view of this, but taking part in a Church like this (as it is described in the First Century) isn't all fun and games. 

  • Reaching the lost means forsaking your preferences.  
  • Being relationally committed means dealing with your deepest insecurities, often in the midst of conflict with people that you don't always like.  
  • Church means increasing your dependence on Jesus.  
  • Sometimes you are the problem.  Jesus wants to sanctify you.  Sometimes you need to change. 
And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.
— Hebrews 10:24-25

Foolish But Effective

Foolish But Effective

There are days when I think about how foolish this must seem to mega-church pastors.  We don't have much money (We remain about two low giving months away from not being able to pay me).  We don't have many people (35 on a good Sunday).  Our organization structures are lacking in the absence of multiple staff (Volunteers are stepping up, though!).  We have no building to mark our presence (And no payment!).  

However, if we are comparing stats:

  • 3,000 people spend 3 million dollars to make 15 disciples in a year in a large church context. That is 1 disciple for every 200 people (0.5% disciple-making rate) and $200,000 per new disciple.  
  • 8 people (plus a whole lot of other people praying, giving, encouraging, and supporting) spend about $40k to make 9 disciples in a year in a house church context.   That is 1.125 disciples for every 1 person (112.5% disciple-making rate) and $4,444 per new disciple.  

Obscuring the Heart's Condition

Obscuring the Heart's Condition

I have come to a disconcerting realization that church people avoid sanctification by adhering to rules rather than allowing God to transform their hearts. Recently, I found myself in a discussion about alcohol in response to an article in Relevant Magazine about Christianity's Most Famous Beer Enthusiasts.   The discussion, while good natured seemed to quickly stray into the bounds of legalism, a religious predisposition that is more dangerous than any other I know.  It reminded me of the dangers thereof as well as the good intentions that often fertilize it's root, inspiring me to address the issue here.  While the example I am sharing relates to the use of alcohol, the issue is much further reaching.  

John Oliver Hilariously Exposes a False Gospel

John Oliver Hilariously Exposes a False Gospel

The fundamental truth of the gospel is that Jesus has paid our sin debts, and salvation is free (Ephesians 2:8).  When you Trust Jesus, you follow Him.  Jesus is the God of creation.  He owns everything, but He chose to become as a servant (Philippians 2), to live as a homeless man (Luke 9:58), and to spend his time with broken people.  Following Jesus doesn't mean you have to be poor, but it does mean that you cannot serve riches.  

Making Noise

If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give away all I have, and if I deliver up my body to be burned, but have not love, I gain nothing.
— 1 Corinthians 13:1-3

Christ-like love gives meaning to action. 

Has anyone ever done something for you that was supposed to be good but felt empty?

I had a boss who was coercive and blamed staff for his mistakes but would unexpectedly plan a “work fun day” when everyone was mad at him. It was bull crap.   He didn’t want to deal with the real problem but wanted to feel better about himself.  It was noisy.  It was empty.  

Sometimes people volunteer at a hot meals program and return talking about how good it made them feel to “give back.”  They get to feel like better people, but they never interacted with anyone there.  They didn't sit down to eat with anyone there.  They didn’t learn anyone’s name.  They were motivated by the desire to feel like a better person, not by love.  It is noisy.  It iss empty.  

Action without love is like a crashing cymbal clanging on without a band.  It is worthless noise.

It brings attention to the doer, but it's value is at best temporal and never eternal.   

Without love, ministry is selfish. 

When ministry is motivated by something other than love, even good deeds reek of selfishness.  

I’ve seen ministry manipulate people to get their way and then pout like a toddler or hold a grudge when their idea didn't get used.  I've seen spiritual mentors hold a grudge when someone didn't follow their advice.   How can selfishness be so prominent in actions that are supposed to be fundamentally others-centered.  

In the absence of love, pride becomes the motive for good deeds.  Instead of doing good out of love for God or love for people, it is done out of a desire to feel like a better person or to perceive oneself as having value in his or her ability to do something.  

Prideful motivation can't hide.  It manifests in all the things that love is not.   

Notice that as the Apostle Paul tells us what love is, he also tells us what it isn't. 

Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.
— 1 Corinthians 13:4-7

When good works are motivated by pride, the root of selfishness finds its way to the surface.  The pride motivated doer will lack patience and kindness.  He/she will insist on his/her own way.  The unity Paul refers to in 1 Corinthians 12 will be eaten away by irritable and resentful behavior.  Deceit will creep in.  The pride-motivated doer will not bear with the burdens of others.  They will not believe the best or hope the best.  They won't endure.  

On the other hand, when love is the motivator, the smallest act of kindness has eternal significance.  

When I was at camp in 7th grade, a counselor named Steve Classble told me that he would pray for me that year.   I never forgot him.  Once, in a moment of profound grief, my friend Ryan Aldefer gave me a bear hug as I wept over a loss.  I cannot overstate the value of his support. Though the action was small, his love was great.  My wife once sent me a note on a hard day, telling me that I was a good man.  I still live off of that compliment.  

More important than than the action is the love that motivates it.  

Gifts are temporary; love is eternal. 

As for prophecies, they will pass away; as for tongues, they will cease; as for knowledge, it will pass away. For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when the perfect comes, the partial will pass away. When I was a child, I spoke like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I gave up childish ways. For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known. So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.”
— 1 Corinthians‬ ‭13:8-13‬

Paul reminds us that the spiritual gifts he listed in 1 Corinthians 12 are temporary.  They exist as a means to advance Christ Kingdom in love. Like warships in an eternal peace, their necessity will pass when Jesus' eternal Kingdom is fully established.  

There is no place for impatient pastors or resentful disciple-makers.  In the Kingdom of God there are no free passes for gifted leaders who lack love.  

Never treat the gift as something greater than love.  

Evaluate Your Love

We operate on the default assumption that we are loving.  Pride's poisoning effects are self-blinding.  The destruction of selfish motivation is only possible through the Holy Spirit's convicting work.  Take a moment to review Paul's description of love, but place your name in place of "love." If the Holy Spirit reveals you are lacking, abandon your pride and let God fill your heart with the love that comes from Him.  

_____ is patient and kind; _____ does not envy or boast; _____ is not arrogant or rude. _____ does not insist on his/her own way; _____ is not irritable or resentful; _____ does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth. _____ bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. _____’s love never ends.
— 1 Corinthians 13:4-7

Let us seek to love like Christ, because love will remain when all else has passed.  

 

Image Credit: mwalshhome

 

 

Steps to Make Disciples

Steps to Make Disciples

Consistently, I come across church people that have never made a disciple.  Spiritual self-centeredness is antithetical to the Christian life.  To experience the gift of God's grace and keep it to yourself is one of the most selfish and least Christ-like thing a Christian can do.  

Be it for apathy or ignorance, too many of us have ignored Jesus' greatest call to action (Matthew 28:19-20).  Have we forgotten that we were once dead and now alive?  Do we neglect so easily the gumption of the Holy Spirit?  Or, do we simply not know where to begin.

Avoid Controversy

Avoid Controversy

Transcending Camps of Opinion

There are some issues that I seldom discuss, especially in the context of social media.  I find our current culture at large intolerant of nuanced opinions.  Anything less than unilateral agreement is labeled rather than understood.  Forgive my disgruntled comments.  I've grown weary of watching fruitless battles result in deeper encampments.  

I love truth, and I love people.  Understanding is a bridge between the two, and I can't build that bridge with labels.  Perhaps most disheartening is the knowledge that the greatest offenders in these wars of controversy are the least aware and most prideful.  

It is a frustrating thing to have an opinion that exists neither within nor between prominent camps. This is the lesser of two reasons why I haven't posted anything about recent SCOTUS rulings or battle colors associated with confederate states (save for comedic statements meant to lighten the mood at a very serious time).  I've avoided commenting, because there is no room anyone that doesn't fit in a "camp." And, Jesus doesn't fit into a camp, because He is King.  

Rational Belief

Rational Belief

Following Jesus should never involve a blind leap of faith.  

The idea that faith should be blind is false.  Due to an array of causes, some have falsely promoted an idea that religious belief somehow requires the suspension of logic.  The indication seems to be that religious matters are outside the scope of rational and scientific thought and are therefore false.  

First of all, the idea that matters of faith do not intersect science and rationality is a false premise leading to a false conclusion.  However, the idea that something is false simply because it cannot be tested scientifically is itself a false assumption.  It is akin to saying, “Since I have never seen a virus it doesn't exist.”  The limitation of knowledge is not an indication of existence beyond knowledge's limits.  

Without giving you the whole back story, much of this thinking came as a result of an array of philosophers who subscribed to Isaac Newton's view that the universe was a vast machine of cause and effect that could not be influenced by anything outside of itself.  This erroneously ruled out the miraculous work of God and led to a few of theology that puts the human subject at the center of knowledge, rather than viewing God as the source of knowledge about Himself.  This view led to many arguments against God's existence, as well as to a vast array of liberal theology that denies the essentials of faith listed in the last chapter.

Newton's mechanistic view of the universe has since been supplanted by Albert Einstein's theory of relativity, which aligns quite well with the Christ-centered worldview that sees God as the revealer of truth.  While the truth of God stands regardless of trends in the sciences, it is nice to see the realm of physics start to catch up a bit with what God has shown us in His Word.  

Beachheads: First Steps in Planting a House Church

Beachheads: First Steps in Planting a House Church

When we planted our first house church our planting coach, Todd Sovine said that we needed to establish three things from the beginning: 

  • Beachheads of prayer.
  • Beachheads of relationship.
  • Beachheads of discipleship.  

Before anything else happened, we started praying, building relationships, and intentionally discipling one another.  That was all we did at first.  We didn't have services.  We didn't advertise.  We didn't plan events.  We focussed on prayer, relationships, and discipleship.  

Church Multiplication and Giving Up Control

Church Multiplication and Giving Up Control

Dear Pastor, Jesus is King, and you are not.  

The hardest thing for people to admit is that Jesus is King and they are not. We all want to be in control.  We want to be the masters of our own destiny, but fundamental to Trusting Jesus is surrendering to Him.  It's no different for pastors. Pastors, like kings can fall into the self-deception that everyone is better off when they are in charge. "If everyone would just listen to me, everything would be ok." This is one reason why churches don't multiply. 

Multiplication means pastors aren't as important as they might think. It means their vision language will get diluted as the church becomes decentralized.  It means people won't hear their sermons every week.  It means they can't manage leaders within a church structure.  It means they lose control.  

I'm not saying pastors have sinister plans to control people. Their control doesn't usually come out of selfish motives...usually. It comes our of fear. They want the best for people, and they are afraid of what will happen if they aren't in control. They forget that Jesus has been leading the church since before they were born, and He will be leading it after they are gone.