Posted on 09/19/2017 6:22:17 PM PDT by hiho hiho
Dear ones,
I know youre tired. Run down. Sad. Fed up. Angry, even.
I dont blame you one bit.
I know the deep paucity you feel in your bones. The worst possible Sunday afternoon tragedy used to be a dry pot roast, a brown, leathery consequence of post-benediction parking lot conferences with Tom or Betty.
Now you go home, exhausted from the noise, bothered by the blatant emotional manipulation, haunted by the poverty you see. Youve gone home angry and annoyed. Youve wept over what theyve done with your church, with THE church.
You know worship is supposed to be more than a rock show.
I know the people around you dont get it, either. Youve been told that youre doing Satans work by daring to question the church growth strategists leaders in front of you.
Theyve said youre hindering the work of the Holy Spirit.
Youve been called a Pharisee.
A baby.
A curmudgeon.
An a-hole.
Its been alleged that youre callously indifferent to the eternal souls of the unchurched.
Even the ones you count as friends think youre just pining for the good ol days. At the very least, youre laughingly dismissed.
Your gifts have been shunned, ignored, wasted. Heck, Ive been there, too, that time the paralegal became my boss.
Maybe youve been barred from your former places of service, replaced by an American Idol wanna-be with a hot mic and a six-string Ovation.
If you feel like youre just barely hanging on, please let me offer this one piece of advice.
Leave. Just leave it all behind.
Dear brothers and sisters, if this is you, hear me out.
You can go. Yes, you can go.
I dont say this lightly. There is real, unabashed grief in this prospect.
I know you have friends at your church. Maybe its the only spiritual home youve ever known. Youve witnessed marriages there. Youve rejoiced as your community has been shaped by water and Word. Youve said goodbye to loved ones. Youve given faithfully through the spiritual Advents and Christmases, the Lents and the Easters. Youve cared together for the communities and the world around you. But its not the same place. Somethings changed, and its something that was never supposed to change. Not like this, anyhow.
Please know that if nobody else gets you, I do. I stand with you and honor you in your grief. Youre not being selfish or petty. You dont have an attitude problem.
But lets face it. Its just not the same.
This beloved community, which once marked Sundays by coming together for the work of Gods people, is now a haven for entertainment. Its a concert venue, really. If it werent for a few casual mentions of God and Jesus you wouldnt even know they had anything to do with this whole thing.
Hale and hearty strains of disciplined worshipers are gone, and in their place, an electronic assault of primal, orgasmic ad libs.
Your script, your job, your voice have all been taken away, and now you just sit there, empty-handed, and empty-souled.
Songs of faith have been replaced by remarkably vapid, thoroughly mundane jesusy ditties.
The rhythm of the church year has given way to the mixed-metered syncopation of popular whim.
Sermons are guided by what the pastor says God is telling him (and its usually a him, unfortunately), not by a lectionary or a liturgical calendar.
Sacraments? Whats a sacrament? Commercial pop music is our new contemporary pseudo-sacrament.
There was once appropriate room for a complete range of human emotion, freely flowing from the retelling and reenactment of Gods mighty acts in Jesus Christ. Sobriety, grief, intentionality, urgency, repentance, lament resolution, thanksgiving, joy. And so forth and so on. Now, were expected to have fun. Church is the place for a good time, in Jesus thoroughly amusing name.
Ive seen it too. This is how I grew up, in fact. I had a sneaking suspicion that there was more to church than the derivative music and self-aggrandizing topical sermon series. If there wasnt, Id have been through with church as soon as I moved out on my own.
Thank God that wasnt it
Worshiper, please be honest. As tough as it is, you know you cant stay here, biding the months or years or decades until by Gods grace you grow deaf, blind, and senile. You are right to feel this way. It isnt a matter of taste or preference, whatever the entertainers may say.
Youre not being selfish. This is so much deeper than that.
The impetus for your grief is not hurt feelings, or even whats happening with your own church. You grieve over whats happened to the church.
This is worship, for Gods sake. And theyve pulled it up by the roots. Dear Christian, just go.
You have my blessing, even if you have no one elses.
Go home and rest. Go home and heal. Go home, and dont come back.
Go home and stay, if you have to. For a while, at least.
When your alarm clock chimes next Sunday, hit the snooze. Turn it off. Let your pew stadium-style seat stay cold this week.
And next week, maybe.
Really, stay home for as long as it takes.
But dont stay there forever.
After all, there are others who feel like you.
And there are still faith communities that have resisted preferential worship and consumer, little-C christianity.
You may have to look a little harder for them. They dont have billboards. They dont usually have huge crosses announcing their presence just for the hell of it. They probably dont have TV commercials or radio spots or celebrity pastors.
You may have to go outside the faith tradition thats become part of your identity. They might not sing all the same songs or use all the same language you remember. You might not agree with all their theology. There may be faithful followers there who vote differently than you. They might not even agree with you on every hot-button political issue. Thats okay. The churchs worship matters more than any of those things.
So when the buzzing in your ears has finally faded. When the fog has lifted. When the menacing waters of the entertainment church have finally receded. When you can breathe again, get back out there. When the post-traumatic worship disorder has released, start burning the early Sunday oil again.
Find a place where you can sit and rest and not be triggered.
Find a place where you can go and participate and just be part of the church once more.
Find a place where all voices have a prayer to pray, a song to sing, a sermon to say, and a common story to tell.
Find a place where The body of Christ, broken for you, means so much more than Its who I am, its who I am, its who I am.
Find a place where Table, Font, and Pulpit havent been displaced by drum cage, music stand, and Madonna mic.
Find a place where the generational arrogance doesnt obscure the multi-directional vision of true Christian worship.
And be a part of the worshiping community once again.
I wont blame you if you go and never come back.
Ill understand. That could have been me, too.
But, dear brother and sister, you matter.
And the church matters.
So, please go, but dont stay gone forever.
Love,
Jonathan
We do - we attend a home church.
The raucous modern music is designed to guilt trip the money to fall out of your pockets.
Not the sermons, the songs. Some are written to stir emotions, not necessarily spiritual introspection.
The newer ones are better by: Gettys, Redman, Balosch, Philips, Craig and Dean are great. The 7/11 songs were bad.(7 words/lines sung 11 times)
“Songs of faith have been replaced by remarkably vapid, thoroughly mundane jesusy ditties.”
Like this guy’s writing if you ask me.
If you don’t like modern worship - don’t go to that service, or don’t go to that church. I like traditional, but can tolerate modern worship. (Our church does both). The main thing to me is Biblical based preaching. Left our family’s long-time church when it strayed from that. Yes it was difficult, but often doing the right thing is.
No, I mean the guilt-inducing, emotionally manipulating sermons. I found them the rule in Southern Baptist churches, getting less so as one moves toward the more liturgical denominations But yes, songs can be like that, too.
The reason I (we) need rest is my spouse and I are both employed there. We do too much other stuff which has nothing to do with our supposed gifts. Gifts are ignored if those in charge do not respect those God given attributes.
We are burned out, but need the $$$.
Let me get this staright. The author thinks sermons should be based on a liturgical calendar? Wow.
No, a reverent, holy place...
There were those who infiltrated to co-opt the church.
And some congregations haven’t taken it lightly.
In Houston there was a battle within a Presbyterian church to break away from the Leftist overrun CPUSA, but there was a vote and the nationalist church pwns the real estate.
You can “leave” but they keep the wealth. And the messaging.
Same as with corporations, they’ve infiltrated them and are willing to see them collapse.
So much of what “was” is just a shell/husk these days. Malls, newspapers, news broadcasts. Political leadership. Higher learning.
A lot of my family attends a church where a stage has replaced the altar and a giant screen has replaced the hymnal. It’s like they go to church to be entertained rather for worship. I prefer a small, traditional church.
Find another Church. There are many to suit your needs. Don’t get all the bluster.
Unfortunately, you can’t even post this article without somebody coming along trying to flame you. Lots of venom on these forums.
Songs of faith have been replaced by remarkably vapid, thoroughly mundane jesusy ditties.
Very true. Well said.
Bump
I’m a Catholic convert (and Lord knows contemporary Catholic worship is mostly ghastly), but I always appreciated the old style Protestant hymns. This letter (assuming it is written by a Protestant) makes me wonder if Protestants even sing the old hymns anymore?
I can relate to this article.
We left a larger church (1500 on Sundays) where we attended 18 years for a smaller church (400 on Sundays). The size of the church wasn’t the issue, but the “worship” service had become a problem.
When we first began attending our old church we had an orchestra and choir and decent Bible teaching.
Then in a drive to become “relevant” to the community the choir and orchestra disappeared and we got a loud rock band with mood lighting followed by a 20 minute “talk” sometimes without even using the Bible. The relevancy brought in new people, but others left frustrated with how the “worship” service had become about the 45 minute rock concert with a manic drummer and guitarists showing their skills by ripping Led Zeppelin runs in the middle of a “worship” song.
We also finally left. It took us a while to find our current church. It also meant sitting out of church for while until we found one that concentrated on scripture. It is a smaller church without a glitzy rock band or mind-numbing repetitive phrases to sing.
Our new pastor teaches for a solid hour in exegesis format. Our songs are a mixture of hymns and praise songs that incorporate Bible truths.
The new church is not glitzy and not on TV but our pastor delivers solid biblical teaching twice a week.
What a refreshment to our souls this has been.
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