Lutheran Pastor Nadia
Bolz-Weber of the House for All Sinners
and Saints in Denver writes in her blog post entitled “The
Problem with Pews” about worshiping in the round. She says:
“This population [her congregation] of urban, postmodern young-ish
people have a deep critique of consumer culture and as such are far more
interested in being producers than consumers. This goes for church as
well. And being able to worship in the round creates an accountability of
presence to each other and a shared experience which allows for the community to
create the thing they are experiencing rather than consuming what others have
produced for them.”
I think Bolz-Weber is onto something – that people are searching for something to belong to, to participate in, and to help create. Bolz-Weber has many ideas about creating a worshiping community organically from mostly non-churchians that are worth examining, and she writes about them in her blog entitled Sarcastic Lutheran. Christian communities can never be about adopting wholesale some other church's idea of how to be and do church, but must always be about creating something authentic where the Spirit speaks to their people and they hear Her.
In a recent reflection entitled “Seven
questions every church should ask,” the Rev. Dr. Gary Nicolosi of the
Anglican Church in Canada writes:
“In fact, I have come to the conclusion that there are no “one size fits
all” answers, but that each church will need to develop its own style of
ministry in connecting with its own unique environment. This is a “bottom up”
rather than a “top down” process that needs to be discerned at the local level
rather than imposed by any hierarchy.”
From my perspective, within a denomination (aka a
hierarchically organized church), there must be not just accommodation, but
true embracing of a dispersed version of church that is authentic to each local
context. Bottom up, not top down – much more challenging to manage than a
turn-key operation where everything is by the book. In other words, no more
cookie cutters, which makes raising up leadership with a different sensibility,
one that is not married to vesting authority only in themselves, a prime
consideration. This means that the way in which we educate clergy and how
seminaries are oriented must also change. You won’t get a new and different
church that meets the future by continuing to prepare clergy using old models.
This kind of change will take time and probably be
evolutionary, which is going to be too slow for our needs. Times of great
change require quicker, bolder responses. Notice that I didn’t say don’t bother
with having the discussions with stakeholders and don’t bother having a plan;
you still need conversation, and you still need plans. You just need them
quicker, and you will most likely have to tolerate conversations and plans that
are works-in-progress and good enough rather than finished and perfect.
Tolerance for ambiguity is a key attribute that contemporary leaders who will
lead into the future will be required to possess.
It would be wonderful if we were able to break out of our
self-images and take some risks, recognizing that some choices will work out
and others won’t. We also need to lift up and embrace those few revolutionary
leaders who come knocking at our doors, rather than sending them elsewhere,
because we need to be challenged to become new versions of ourselves. And it
just may be the case that some of our beloved leaders and clergy won’t be the
right ones to take us into the future. For
everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven.
The challenge is how to support such ministry with
sufficient dollars to pay a clergy person and overhead when congregations such
as Bolz-Weber's often do not generate sufficient plate and pledge revenue to
support themselves in even very nominal settings. Ethnic ministries
focused on serving recent immigrants also fall into this category of
congregations that are unlikely to be self-supporting based on plate and
pledge. We should not forget that ministry to local communities of recent
immigrants is also mission work, just as our focus on churches in Africa or
Haiti is mission work.
Lack of a "church" home of their own has not
prevented Bolz-Weber's congregation from doing some unique ministry, such as
delivering gifts of sack lunches
to people who have to work on Thanksgiving all around Denver, made from real
roasted turkeys and home-baked goodies. [Bolz-Weber's congregation currently shares
space at St. Thomas Episcopal Church while searching for a new space of their
own.] Lack of financial resources likewise does not prevent ethnic
congregations from providing culturally sensitive ministry to their
communities. It just looks different, and all the members of the congregation
have to work hard and work together to support and serve the community. Food
and community meals play a large part in every ethnic church that I know of.
Maybe it's time to question the plate and pledge model of
funding as well as the concept of a church home. After all, plate and pledge
are not biblical, although the tithing and giving from first fruits in
thanksgiving to the Lord are. And maybe as a source of initial seed money for
new ministry to the unchurched, we need to look at releasing some of the
treasure that we have locked up in church buildings to do the Lord’s work.
I just watched the 25th
Anniversary Concert of Les Misérables
and was struck again by the bishop’s gift of the candlesticks to Jean Valjean,
saying “I have bought your soul for God.”
I know it’s just a story, but in the story, Jean Valjean’s story was changed by
the conversion of the church’s silver. Maybe it’s time to repurpose our beloved
church buildings to do more than just serve worshipers once or twice a week and
to repurpose our giving to the church to do more than just support the
spirituality of those already within our communities.
Nicolosi closed his reflection with:
“Churches that can rethink their assumptions of ministry, reformulate
their mission strategy and re-examine their way of doing church are more likely
to revive and renew than the ones that do not. These “missional” churches will
lead us into the future–confident and resilient, open and affirming,
life-giving and liberating, with a compelling gospel message that centers on
Jesus combined with flexible methods of ministry.”
2 comments:
Thank you for these thoughts, Lelanda. There are so many parts of "church" that many feel have to be present to be "church"--what would happen if we started from scratch thinking about what we need to worship and to love our neighbor? Maybe some things could be let go while new things would come into play; some will work and some won't. But haven't we got to try?
Also, seven faith communities in Boulder work with Boulder Outreach for Homeless Overflow (BOHO) to open their facilities one night a week to give our homeless a safe, warm, legal place to sleep when it is dangerously cold. What a loving way to put an empty building to use over night!
Anne,
Thank you for commenting. I agree with you that we have got to try to do some things differently if we want to continue to meet our neighbors where they're at. That doesn't mean that we repudiate our traditions, but it does mean that we open our arms to allow others in to participate in expanding our practices so that perhaps we build new traditions together.
I very much admire the work of the volunteers who are putting together activities such as Boulder Outreach for Homeless Overflow, because the need is great. These kinds of ministries are demanding, too, because the need doesn't stop just because a volunteer gets tired or has other things to attend to. So, thank you for all your energy devoted to helping our homeless neighbors to stay warm and in some instances, to stay alive when it's frigid outdoors.
Lelanda
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