5.26.2006

church? aliens? what?

i just finished reading an article my dad forwarded to me. it's a few years old, by dr. thom ranier, and is called "ten surprises about the unchurched: understanding their hearts and minds."

i have a couple questions that arise from my reading of this article, and they stem more from feelings i get while reading and thinking than from fully developed thoughts. i would like to state them for you to help me with my thinking - agree, disagree, help!

first, read the article.

second, i don't like the term, or the way the term is used, of "the unchurched." that people are placed into this category of unchurched feels to me of us/them-ism. my question is this: how can we speak intelligently and gracefully about the reality of the difference in people before an encounter with the living God and after, without categorizing and making an in/out, us/them kind of environment or way of thinking? the way dr. thom speaks of this group of people makes me feel (as one who is not unchurched, but indeed seeks to spread the message of jesus) like a missionary with all the answers looking to help the poor deluded savages. i don't think that way of thinking is helpful, respecful, or in any way good. yet i also recognize an element of truth (albeit easily twisted into error) that we have the love of God "shed abroad" in our hearts and must share that with those who don't (the error being a belief that we have the message of God and all who would find that must find it from we few who hold the truth). how can we begin to speak and think in a way that balances the truth that we have a relationship with a person who others need to encounter, without somehow placing everyone who doesn't have this relationship in an outside category. i find it frustrating even knowing how to express my thoughts in words, for as i type i find thoughts colliding. i sense in my heart there is something wrong with how we have long engaged those who need jesus. i respect the heart of what dr. thom is trying to say and do in this article. i have no issue with him, but would like to use that article and the language used in it to point out what i think is a cronic error easily made (and made by myself for many years). i would like your engagement with this issue to help me sort my thoughts out into a more understandable way of explaining what i am feeling. i hope this makes at least a little bit of sense.

thirdly, my second question/issue arises with the conclusion implied in the article, expressly or otherwise, that church (or more church) is the solution for the "problem" of being "unchurched." i would like to suggest, rather adamantly, that more church is not what people need, if by church people think religion or religious activities. if by church dr. thom and others mean engagement with the living God through community with other jesus-followers, then by all means, invite people into the midst of that! i fear, however, that the language and wording of church, unchurched, and so on leads more to religion and religious activities than it does to real engagement with God and others. i fear that too often the religious activities we engage in when we attend "church," and the satisfaction we feel from participating in something deemed good by society and larger than ourselves and shared by people across the world, mask the ability of people to really engage with the truth that is jesus christ. i know that this is probably not true in your church, but how many people do you know that attend church because they think they need some religion in their lives, or because they like the positive things they get from going on sunday mornings? how many people think they need to attend church because religious activity is deemed to somehow be a positive thing in their lives? now, i recognize that their are many positive elements in religion, but there are also many horrible elements. i propose that following the way of jesus is not a religious activity, but a completely upside down, transformational way of living that encompases, envelops, enhances, transforms, and overwhelmes any religious activity. the way of jesus forces us to move away from our "me-me-me" focused living toward a "service to others" focused living. but how often are we taught this in church? too often it is about living right, doing the right things, and all kinds of religious stuff that are usually good at heart but lose their meaning and usefulness when focus on following the way of jesus in the kingdom of God is forgotten or ignored. i fear that inviting the "unchurched" to become "churched" is a fruitless endeavor. what can we do to help people move from not following jesus in the context of healthy community to following jesus in said community rather than merely helping them move from not religious to more religious?

those are my thoughts so far. what are yours?

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Brando!

Congrats to you and Karen both on expecting a little Shillington. Megan and I are expecting in 2 weeks time. I am so excited to be a dad as I'm sure you're feeling the same. What is new? Where are you working what have you been doing since the last time I saw you? Do you have a myspace? Talk to you soon.

Chris

Robin said...

Brando... I've read Rainer's book and thought it had a lot of good insights. And surprises, as the title implies. You raise some good questions, though, about how we talk about and interact with the "unchurched".

My first advise would be not to get hung up on semantics. I know you weren't criticising Rainer, but make sure you don't tune him out just because he uses some terminology you may not particularily like.

You are, right, though, in that "churching" the "unchurched" isn't necessarily the answer. The interesting thing is that according to Rainer many unchurched would glady come to church if invited by a Christian friend... The real issue then is this: Are we as Christians engaged enough with our culture and our peers to have relationships with non-Christians in order to invite them? And then, are we inviting them? And then... What are we inviting them to? And on the other hand, is there something we should be doing to GO to them instead of always hoping for them to come to us? (maybe that's where your issue is, if I'm hearing you right)

Not sure I have any answers for you, but thanks for making me think.

Rachael said...

Good stuff everyone! I like the questions you pose Robin! But yeah...I'm tired of the questions and ready for the answer and to see stuff change. I want to see people come to God, I want to see God MOVE. Then again maybe He is, and its just me that isn't moving???

b.rando said...

chris, thanks - and congrats! been roofing, no myspace but i do have a purevolume space.

robin, semantics...maybe. i think it's bigger than that. i think the words we use reflect a deeper reality of the way we often think about others. i am sure ranier's book had some good insights. there were some in the article as well...i just focused on the points where he pricked my ire because it was more interesting to me. i'm not talking just about what words we use to describe others, i'm talking about how we think about, approach, and categorize others in an often degrading manner - and i got the impression of a little bit of this from the article. a little bit in the article, a whole heap of it in most churches i have attended, a barrel full in my own self that i'm working through - i think there must be a better way of talking about, thinking of, and approaching those who have not embraced jesus as saviour than we have been doing.

i also have to disagree with your "real issue then is this" statement. albiet it is vital that we engage others in places that provide opportunities for relationship with those outside of our religious bubble, i think we must be very careful that our motives do not become to befriend them for the express purpose of "inviting" them. we should befriend them because it is the right thing to do, because everyone needs dependable friends, because jesus loves them and wants to love them through us, because we love them or want to learn to love them. it's a subtle difference, but huge, and i find myself often falling prey to ingenuine motives in relationships with people.

i like your "what are we inviting them to" question. honestly, i haven't attended very many churches where i would feel comfortable inviting someone to attend. not sure if that's a sad commentary on the churches or on myself... i guess i haven't felt excited enough about the church i was in and what God was really doing there to think that someone unfamiliar with our religious rituals would catch much life-changing there. maybe i haven't trusted God enough, or maybe some of our churches are too religious. maybe some of both.

love ya robin, thanks for sharing your thoughts.

rachelle, yes, talking grows tiresome. it is much better when we can begin to act on what we have learned. i feel that i am just now beginning to move into that place after the topsy turvy growth i've been going through. much more satisfying. i hope you can begin to catch onto what God is doing out where you are and see some great things happen!

Robin said...

Good thoughts, Brando, and semantics and such aside I know your heart's in the right place in asking these questions and I love that. I'm with you.

Robin said...

PS - You should update your link to my site (www.robinwhiteonline.com). And then you should go there and check out my new music page and take a listen.

Erskine said...

Labels are annoying, B, but what do you call those whom Ranier calls "unchurched?" I haven't come up with a good name.

Not to beat a dead horse here, but the Church is rarely the solution to anything, if we think about it as a body of imperfect people that occupy imperfect space and worship God imperfectly.

If, on the other hand, we believe that we Christ-followers are the actual body of Christ, and if we believe Christ when He said we would do greater things than He did, then the Church is actually a group of people under the authority of Christ who are up to a lot of good.

My question is, Do we really know who the real Church is? It's certainly not everyone who attends church buildings.

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