Well it has taken me three weeks to figure out how to write this. With my emotions all over the place it has been hard to discern how to convey where I am right now. But maybe this cathartic exercise of blogging will help straighten these emotions out.
For many years now God and I have been wrestling over the question, "What is the church?" In the Christian sub-culture we tend to reference the "church" by whatever building we happen to wind up in on Sunday morning. I call this iChurch or the Institutionalized Church. It is where the "body of Christ" comes together for corporate worship (singing), hand shaking (fellowship) and trivial information sharing (or gossip). In the Christian sub-culture the more people you can get to come and do these things at "your" building, the greater the success you can boast about. Sure, some bitterness maybe setting in over my current situation (which I will get to latter), but all in all, I doubt very seriously that the time and effort placed towards producing (and I do mean that in the Hollywood form) our Sunday morning experience, is what God had intended for God's church. No, I know it isn’t. Reading the first four chapters of Acts gives a very clear look at some of the things that iChurch is not doing. The first century church was first and foremost not institutionalized. It was however: hospitable, loving, generous, kind and thoughtful.
So where have I seen this church? Amazingly enough it's been in places where most devout Christians would never look. I have found the church on TV. At place called 'Extreme Home Makeover', ironically enough which airs on Sunday nights. During this hour-long program hundreds of people gather together to lovingly and generously take a week of their time to help a family better it's standing in life. This is done by the complete remodeling of their home. It's incredible to see how people without any tie to the family can put so much thought and energy into making someone else’s life a little better. I was honored last spring to see the church at work in Thailand when I went to help with Tsunami relief on a little Island. It wasn't the church because some Christian missionary relief organization had set up shop to help with the efforts. It was the church because hundreds of young and old people from all across our planet came together for one common cause to help others with no benefit to themselves. Neither of these sightings of the church where labeled "Christian", but both fully represent what the church should be.
Maybe that is why I don't see the church in iChurch. Very little of what is done in the name of Jesus on Sunday mornings is done selflessly and, as the book of Acts puts it, "of one accord".
Tuesday morning I awoke to an astonishing email from a youth pastor friend of mine who I will call "Nel". In his short message he communicated that the day before he had been, "let go" by his current iChurch. Nel's background in ministry is very impressive. He graduated from a prestigious southern seminary. He has written numerous articles in "trade" magazines for youth ministry . He is a well-known speaker at local and national youth ministry confrences. And he even has a nationally published book on the market. Nel and I met over the Internet two years ago, when both of us where headed for transition in our then current ministry positions. We laughed, cried and supported each other during these transitions. Nel's took longer then mine. I moved from one position to another, while it took Nel almost eight months to find an iChurch that he felt called too. Nel moved his family literally half way across the country to, at the start, a part-time youth ministry job he wasn't even getting paid for (or at least very little). After three or four months the iChurch started paying him and then four months later told him his services where no longer needed. Nel was told the iChurch needed to "go in a different direction" (this will become eerily familiar soon). When you peel away the excuses, the bottom line reason for Nel's departure was that in less then seven months he had not built a youth ministry of 50+ kids. Instead he had spent that time build relationships, which given the proper time, would have developed into a solid foundation for numerical growth. But in this era of big business iChurches, healthy relationships are sacrificed for numbers, which gives the inaccurate appearance of a healthy growing ministry.
Nel's story is, unfortunately, not uncommon amongst the ranks of youth workers all across this land. At Dead Youth Pastor and other blogs you can hear this same story repeated over and over again. My friend the "Dead Youth Pastor" recently wrote:
"why do you bother to email me at all? I'm as lost as you are, and honestly it would do my head a lot more good if you'd all calm down with the oracle-styled questions about "what do you think of..." and "how do you respond to..." ...
because honestly i'm so under-qualified as far as youth ministry, being the former youthworker of 4 churches in 8 years; that I'd feel better about the climate of professional youthworkers if they didn't trust me as far as they could throw me. Which is not very far, apparently."
iChurch produces this pain, not the true church.
As you can guess where this is going, three weeks ago I was forced to resign from my position at the iChurch I was working at, with the reason being their need to, "go in a different direction". There were a couple of excuses to why I was asked to leave, but nothing so serious that through the grace of God, things couldn't have been worked out. I had suspected that it was coming so in response I wrote my own letter of resignation. It asked for my continued employment for two months, so that there could be a healthy transition for the congregation, students and their parents. The response back form the committee in charge of hiring and firing was, "drop off your keys by noon and have your office cleared out by 4:00pm."
Nel's email made me feel better. It just wasn't me. The iChurch spreads its pain around pretty evenly when it comes to abusing youth pastors. I've known this for a long time, but kept feeling that there had to be an iChurch out there for me. But there isn't.
I'm not bitter. At the base of some of this iChurches excuses and reasons, I was not a good fit there. I recognize this, so I'm moving on. No, I'm moving where I should have three or four years ago. As of September 15th, I will be a full time Executive Team Member of Emergent Leadership Institute. This is a secular nonprofit a long time fellow youth pastor, Neal Gore (not Nel, yet!), Renee and myself are starting from scratch. I've learned a lot about IRS forms over the past three weeks and am looking forward to getting to the meat of what we are doing. But just becuase God "works all things to the good, for those that believe", does not release those that made ungodly and non-Jesus like descisions from the responsibility of their actions.
All that said we are going to be the church, not the iChurch. We are going to care for peoples needs and love them unconditionally, all the while being of one accord. That is where the church is, inside of you and me, and the relationships we have with one another.
Sometimes people say the dumbest things. So dumb in fact that it makes you want to throw down some Kung-Fu on their behinds. At some point I'm sure this blog will make you feel that way.
Sunday, August 21, 2005
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8 comments:
Roger, I happened to stumble across your blog and have found myself moved almost to tears at the truth I feel towards what you are expressing. While I am sure our viewpoints and perspectives are drastically different, there have been few places I have truely felt the church at work, yet many persons I have met that have the same longing and probably Spirit inspired essential need for the community that Christians feel is categorized as the church.(or the Bible stresses in the descripitions of the early church) Thank you for your thoughtful words, they have very ,much helped me in my own personal quest for truth in my life. Keep me updated on your nonprofit, and if you need an RN down the road in about 4 years, I will be more than willing to work with you in this seemingly unattainable goal of "Shalom". please pray for me in college as I will continue to keep you and your family in my prayers. kate :-)
I need just a moment to vent...
I am also disgusted with the ichurch's ability to hide behind its "non-profit" status...in the business community our experience (the "letting go" part) would be chalked up to "wrongful termintation", "defamation of character", and "extortion" (sign this letter..."you're fired", sign this letter..."your family can eat for a month"). I struggle to use the term "church" at all! I agree wholeheartedly with the term "institution", but the church will always be for me, the people of G-d living in authentic community...I am thankful for the few (and I mean few, I'm thinking of specifically three families) that we are in a loving relationship with that I can truly call "the church".
It is comforting to know that we are not alone in our experiences with the "ichurch", but it is horribly disconcerting and I have never been more disappointed than I am now as I exit the so-called Christian community...I'm never going back!
Shalom, Renee
thanks for opening up during this difficult transition. i'm on the other end of the spectrum: looking at a potential youth postition in Anchorage, AK having never been in ministry before. don't worry...your comments didn't talk me out of it. your pain is real. i've experienced similar pain and disappointment outside of the church. let's all determine to keep running the race, keeping our eyes on the prize, Jesus! he's faithful to heal, forgive, and restore!
James, I understand where you are at. But I'm sorry to share with you, after 15 years of being apart of iChurch as a youth leader, I can tell you it doesn't work. And if you know anyone in ministry that is experiencing major longevity (Over 10 years) then you know someone that isn't willing to take the risk of leading like Jesus did. Good luck to you, cause you are going to need it. We all do. Grace and luck.
Hey Roger...After reading your blog I thought about several things. I first thought about how the ichurch does not satisfy ones needs in and of itself. For some maybe it does, but as you said numbers seem to be a priority, and while some growth is healthy, it can also be detrimental to those in the body. When you always want to grow and count numbers people slip through the cracks and authentic relationships are nowhere to be found.
It bothers me how churches go about firing youth ministers, and probably other employees as well...its like they have to let you go by personally cutting you down...maybe it was nothing like that this time, but it seems that way. You would think things would be done out of love....but that rarely happens...
On a happier note, I am glad you finally are getting the chance to start ELI!! I still have 6 more years of school...BLAH...but I won't be that far away that I can come help whenever...I think it is a wonderful opportunity to serve the community!
And one more thing...I love you! You have never stopped being yourself even when you get cut down, I look forward to seeing you and your family cause I miss you guys! talk to you soon and keep me updated!
Heather
I have to say I was waiting for this post for a while now and I'm glad to see it laid out for what it is. It's certainly not a subtle issue that is facing the iChurch. But are we to actually 'give up'? Can we? Doesn't the iChurch still need those who have a clear vision? Not that i blame you or think that you are truly giving up, but didn't 'Christ love the (i)Church' in the way we are commanded as husbands to love our wives. Like a Gomer and Hosea kind of spit in your face love? Not that i'm a practicing participant in that, but isn't that how it "should be"??
Love ya, bro. Keep on keepin on.
Brian,
I read your comment and had to respond...
Sure, the ichurch, ie "Walmart" (or "walchurch") has needs. Namely, the need to look outside itself. The problem is the man (I'd say person, but the fact is there are too many men pastoring congregations) in the pulpit! "He" is convinced that "he" must maintain "his" constituency by making "idol" (I meant to spell it this way) promises...
The "call" is to give up everything! The ichurch has become Walmart...providing services as a vendor, and these services (masked in the name of "ministries" or "service programs") are good for three things-to help ichuch members "feel good", to get ichurch members to give more money to pay the pastor's salary, and to provide more activities that take away from community-building/family time (And, in Rick Warren's case...to sell more books and Jesus junk).
After twelve years of it all...I simply give up! I don't want any part of it...I don't want any part of the politics, the theological incorrectness, the false promises!
I would rather focus my attention on what really counts...authentic loving relationships! These are found outside the ichurch; hopefully the disillusioned ichurch members will come to this conclusion and escape the ichurch boundaries...if they do, they will find the clean air and breathe it in and feel restored. At least that's my hope for them.
Renee, Jewish member of the Church!
I can't say that I am completely abandoning the ichurch...yet...but I can say that I am taking a break from it to see what all is out there. I have really felt blinded by the ichurch now that I am outside of it. And I can't really say that I have found very many authentic relationships in the ichurch. I have met people but the majority are highly judgemental. I have to say that I almost lost several friends for good because I was taught that my friends behavior was unacceptable in the church so I didn't know how to be a church goer and still keep those friends. My college roommates and floormates and other friends provide way more community and authentic relationships. Yeah they may go out and party, yeah they may have sex (no none of us are married), yeah they may be gay, but it doesn't matter everyone cares about everyone else. If people are out drinking, we make sure everyone comes back safely. I have found more community here in 3 weeks than I found in the ichurch for the 18 years I spent there. There is something seriously wrong with that. Maybe the ichurch needs those with a "clear vision" but first I have to find my clear vision because the church freaking screwed it up! After I have that clear vision though I think I won't ever want to go back!
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