There’s a lot of cynicism about the Church today. And while I am stimulated by argument, by addressing something I identify as wrong, I don’t think of myself as a cynic. Rather, this confrontation with status-quo is inherently hopeful. I invest energy because I think Church could be better.
Before I left my last church, a few people were leaving slowly. And my friends who were staying, they wondered why. “There’s no such thing as a perfect church,” they argued. “So why search for another kind of bad?” Which reasoning rather baffled me. What were they praying for? Why did they do anything in the Church? Didn’t they believe our community could be better? And if we can get better, isn’t it possible that something better already exists?
Now, there may be other arguments for hanging around a church that is not as close to perfect as you hope. But to say that leaving a church is for people with unrealistic expectations is silly. Whatever your choice, your reason for staying should be the same as your reason for leaving: hope. If you stay, be hoping to see God grow your church to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ. If you go, may it be because you hope that God has more designed for the Church than the divided and sterile institution you’re leaving.
I didn’t leave the institutional church in despair. There was hurt and disappointment over the group of people I had been congregating with. But there was joy over the release God had given me – not release from fellowship or love or truth, but release from schedules and structures and enduring a view of Church that I no longer believe. I went out looking for people of God doing life together, praying together, participating together in teaching and worship and celebrating Communion. My search has been for a high view of our Bridegroom as the Head of His Church, of a supernatural (but orderly) view of the Spirit of our God as He orchestrates lives and relationships and meetings.
“These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth. For they that say such things declare plainly that they seek a country. And truly, if they had been mindful of that country from whence they came out, they might have had opportunity to have returned. But now they desire a better country, that is, an heavenly: wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God: for he hath prepared for them a city.” – Hebrews 11:13-16
I am persuaded that there is something better than what I have experienced. And I will desire it and pursue it. The things I write on ChurchMoot really excite me. What I read in the Bible about Church excites me. The gates of hell will not prevail against the Church. Christ is purifying and strengthening His gloriously beautiful Church. He’s preparing a place for us. There are visions of unity and purpose and power. A joy in knowing that we believe in, serve, and wait on an Almighty and Good God.
What’s more, I have hope that the people of God are being awakened to the biblical descriptions of Church. Now when people realize church is broken, they’re seeking answers from God, and acting on them! No longer will they betray the Body of Christ by their silence, by their tacit approval, by being accomplices. They don’t want the world to think that what it knows as Church is the Beloved Bride of a Radiant Savior. He purified for Himself His own special people, zealous for good works! They want the world to see a light set on a lampstand, not some pitiful ember fading into darkness.
We are not a cult. We are the Redeemed. Joyful. Saying so. Hopeful. Believing it is our God who builds His Church. Waiting for our Messiah to come back – begging Him to come quickly! We are loving, caring for each other, not afraid to weep or to rejoice. The God who created the universe, the Spirit who raised Christ from the dead, indwells us. He speaks through us, comforts us, guides and instructs us. The same God who rattled the Early Church prayer meetings with mighty rushing wind is among us. Let that be known. Let it be proclaimed. Don’t contain it in schedules and corporate models. Joy might be practiced, but not rehearsed! Truth should be so familiar that it can be ad-libbed. We share in a life that is saturated with God, with no distinction between the times when we are doing ordinary work and when we are worshiping.
God called His people to abundant life, life in Him. My hope for the Church is that we embrace it.
To God be all glory.
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