In September of 2007 I went from working 70 to 80 hours a week to about that same amount every month.  It has gotten even worse since then.  Back when I was so busy I barely had enough time to read some news, check television schedules and pay my bills while online.  I had heard of bulletin boards, forums, blogs, and other forms of communication on the internet but had never read or participated in them.  When the work schedule changed so drastically, I started reading more but I also started stumbling across blogs and forums and such.  Sometimes I wish I had not.

One of the first things I stumbled across was a site where a lot of ministers in my own denomination hung out.  It was also right before the General Assembly which is when the Church of God votes on change of leadership and other important issues.  I learned way too much.  I read a lot of things that ministers were saying and are saying and it makes me just want to run.  I want out of my denomination, out of my church and sometimes wish I was even out of the Kingdom.  If it truly could just be about me and Jesus, all would be fine.  But it can’t.  It is about relationship, community and the mission.

What I see coming from most Christians though is that it is about them.  Or for some, it is about their denomination.  If I hear another minister say how great a man of God someone is because they have did so much for the Church of God denomination instead of for the Lord of all the Church, I think I may explode.  I love the COG, it has done so much for me, how can you not love this grand old institution; these are a few of the many types of things some, and sadly they are usually the older ministers, say to anyone that questions the corruption that is so evident from the facts.  The corruption I am speaking about is the corruption of the mission.  But there is obviously even more.

I just finished reading Forgotten Ways, The: Reactivating the Missional Church by Alan Hirsch.  He wrote the following statement in it.

“In catering to the religious needs of some (largely the insiders) it has as a consequence failed to respond to the wider spiritual hunger of not-yet-Christians.”

sunset_large_yelloworange-760x600He is referring to the institutional church; the denominations, the buildings, the hierarchy, the dogma, and the self-righteousness of our religion in conservative American Christianity.  We do not seem to want to do much more than token mission anymore.  We do enough to feel good about ourselves and even then, we ask those that need us to come to us instead of us going to them.  My own denominations problems seem to bear Hirsch’s thoughts out exactly.  The leaders at a certain level seem to only care about themselves and the continuance of the institution that caters to their aggrandizement.

This book has opened my eyes to a lot of things that I was already seeing and feeling.  I was just too busy to notice it until about the last year and a half.  The book is about becoming missional again.  The early church was missional but some of the older people in the COG seem to think this is some new spiritual fad or something and that we just need to get back to the old ways.  They don’t know how wrong and how right they are.  They are wrong about missional being a fad and right about needing to get back to the old ways.  But the old ways are much older than they think.  They are pre-Contantinian.  The early, persecuted church had it right.  So that is pretty old ways.

I think all ministers should be required to read this book and see if it does not check their spirit.  It has my own and I am nothing but a layman.  I am just so tired of seeing the people of God the same way I saw them when I was an atheist.  And I am not forgetting that I am one of them now.  I am going to figure out a way to be the person God needs me to be in His Kingdom today.  If it means changes are in store, then that is what will happen.  I wish more would join me in this endeavor to become what God meant for us to be.

One of the first things that I wish would be gotten rid of is this almost idolatrous view of “my” church, “my” denomination, “my” leaders, “my” ministry, and anything else we are so proud of because we see it as “ours”.  All of these things belong to Jesus, if they should really even exist.

I am sorry if anyone takes offense at anything I have written.  I know there may even be repercussions if I keep on saying some of the things I am saying.  But I am more concerned with the eternal repercussions if I keep quiet.

We do seem to have forgotten that it is not about us.  It is not about our comfort, our contentedness, or even our happiness.  Church is not an institution.  Church is a living, breathing, organism that is gasping for the breath of life because that breath, the Holy Spirit, seems to be slowly being pushed away by our inward instead of an outward focus.

Get the book.  Read it.  Come back and let me know if it woke anything in you.  It certainly has in me.  And not everyone will like it.

Love you all

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This entry was posted on Friday, May 1st, 2009 at 1:17 am and is filed under America, Blogging, Body of Christ, Church, Church of God, God, Kingdom, Leadership, mission. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 comments so far

 1 

After I read The Forgotten Ways by Hirsch, I too felt as if he was articulating a burden that was in my heart that I didn’t know quite how to put into words. And the amazing thing is that Hirsch is a denominational leader, whose denomination is open to his critique and guidance in turning things around for the better. Hirsch admits that he doesn’t have all the answers, but what he does (in my opinion) is to help the church to ask the right questions. I highly recommend this book as well. Sonny, I’m glad you read the book. Which books are you currently working on? (As the saying goes, “Good leaders are good readers.”) :D

May 4th, 2009 at 12:48 am
 2 

I have been trying to look into this math stuff. (And really still not retaining or remembering what I do not already know). So the reading has not been kept up with. Mere Discipleship or Boyds newest is next though.

And speaking of leadership, I hate it but I am not a leader in our church. To some degree I may have some say but not enough for what this book of Hirsch’s has challenged me about. That is what bothers me. I really just want to leave a denomination that seems to be so totally focused on itself and try to figure out how to get to being and doing as this book challenges me to. It was possibly one of the worst books that you recommended to me for the time and thought pattern I find myself to be in. It awakens in me once again the idea that I am just spinning wheels and not really getting anywhere.

I’ll just keep on praying and hoping something comes to light that will enable me to see a way to do as God wants me to do.

Love you all

May 4th, 2009 at 12:27 pm
 3 

Maybe starting tomorrow, the math stuff will come more readily to both of us. As far as the next book venture goes, I don’t think that you can go wrong with either one. I really enjoyed Camp’s book and think it is an important resource in our research concerning the project that I mentioned to you a while back. But, at the same time, Boyd’s book (by what I see in the chapter titles and introduction) seems to be spot on as well.

I wonder if it would be fruitful to try a book study with Hirsch’s book at the church. This way, folks of various ages would have opportunity to dig in to the study, fellowship a bit more, engage in dialogue about the topics at hand, and maybe get on the same page concerning its overarching message; kind of like, Theological Table Talk for about a 6 week session, held during choir practice or immediately afterward. I know so many are already traveling quite extensively throughout the week, so maybe we can do it on a day that dovetails nicely with another program/study. Just trying to think of a way to get others critiquing or engaging Hirsch’s (NT) material in our current context. In my opinion, if we don’t make room for such critique (in our context) and subsequent (intense) dialogue, then Kingdom advancement in Alabaster will continue to be stifled.

May 4th, 2009 at 5:53 pm
 4 

If you can get every one to read it then you might get some dialogue going. Personally, I have already been incorporating some of it in my Wednesday night discussions. The last time I tried a strict book study it did not go over very well. You might also test it out as a teaching study at the Bridge meetings maybe once a month.

I do agree about Kingdom advancement at ACOG. And probably in a lot of places. The leaders are who must be on board for change to occur.

Love you all

May 4th, 2009 at 6:13 pm

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