Look for these Three Cs at Church

>> Wednesday, November 18, 2009

I find myself ever pondering why people go to church. One of last Sunday's texts talked about the confidence that comes from knowing forgiveness. Since last Sunday's service, I've added two more "C" words that one should expect to find at church.

Comfort. Most of us attend a church whose worship experience we find comforting. This is particularly true when we consider the music the church offers, but other elements such as hearing scripture read from a familiar translation, or the administration of the sacraments help us find comfort in a chaotic world.

Confidence. Being reminded each week that when we confess our sins, our sins are forgiven gives us the confidence to do some of the things that Jesus asks of us (even if we sense we may fail more often than not). The reminder of God's spirit that lives within us and moves among us also gives us confidence, as does a daily walk with God.

Challenge. But if we go just for the easy stuff, we miss a big part of what church should be for us. Church is a place where we should regularly experience a challenge to take what we know and experience and apply it to the world in which we live. God desires that the experience of Christianity not be limited to the church, but that the teachings of Christ be carried out in the world outside the church.

But, to accept (and live by) such Challenges, we need the Confidence that comes from sins forgiven and a walk with the king, supplemented by the regular Comfort we find in the familiar that worship among friends offers us.

So, when you go to church next, look for these three "Cs" and your experience might just be the richer for it.

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I Then Shall Live

Since I met them first in my recording studio outside of Chicago in the late 1960s, Bill and Gloria Gaither have ministered to me with their music and lyrics perhaps more than any other musical ministry. I saw one of their TV specials last night, and heard for the first time a set of lyrics that Gloria had written for Jean Sibelius' time-honored tune "Finlandia." I was quickly on the Internet looking for the lyrics.

I found not only the lyrics, but a video of the Gaither Vocal Band performing the song. May it enrich your soul as it did mine.

Ernie Haase & SSQ + Gaither Vocal Band - I Then Shall Live

Gaither Vocal Band I Then Shall Live lyrics

I then shall live as one who’s been forgiven;
I’ll walk with joy to know my debts are paid.
I know my name is clear before my Father;
I am His child, and I am not afraid.
So greatly pardoned, I’ll forgive my brother,
The law of love I gladly will obey.

I then shall live as one who’s learned compassion;
I’ve been so loved that I’ll risk loving too.
I know how fear builds walls instead of bridges;
I’ll dare to see another’s point of view.
And when relationship demand commitment,
Then I’ll be there to care and follow through.

Your kingdom come around and through and in me;
Your power and glory, let them shine through me;
Your Hallowed name, O may I bear with honor,
And may You living Kingdom come in me.
The Bread of Life, O may I share with honor,
And may You feed a hungry world through me.
Amen. Amen. Amen.

Text © 1981 Gaither Music Company.

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At the stores, it's already Christmas

>> Monday, November 16, 2009


Only church people celebrate Advent. The commercial world celebrates either "Christmas" or "the Holidays." But I'm getting ready to celebrate Advent at our church, and I'm trying to wrap my mind around how to make it meaningful to my parishioners.

Recently, I saw a television ad where a major national retailer was reviving an idea that's been around since I was a kid: lay-away. With lay-away, you don't just go to the store and drool over the things you want (for yourself and for others); you actually put those things in the shopping cart. But you don't take them home with you. You put them on lay-away, where they'll stay as the price for their purchased is paid in installments. (Yes, that sounds like a reverse form of credit cards, where you can now pay for your gifts after they've been taken home and given to the person on your list.) With a credit card, there's no anticipation. With lay-away, there is.

I guess Advent is something like lay-away. I can make a list of all the good things that might happen in my life if God actually lived nearby -- in my neighborhood. But that hasn't happened yet (or has it?) Nonetheless, the things on my list are placed on lay-away, in anticipation of that day. I wait, excitedly.

And then, one day late in December, I receive the news that God has come, and is indeed living in my neighborhood. Now, everything in the cart is mine -- to share.

My credit cards haven't taught me to look forward to things. They haven't taught me what it's like to lay in bed at night dreaming about when all those things in that lay-away cart are mine, to enjoy and to share. My credit cards teach me only that, even though I can have it all now, there's a price to be paid off in the future.

I guess I'll just put this Advent thing on lay-away. Maybe that will leave me laying in bed at night dreaming of what might yet happen.

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The Sign Out Front

>> Monday, November 2, 2009

I recently sat through the meeting of a church's Long Range Planning Committee. As with most long range planning committees, the conversation was about "growth." Those on the committee (and many others) want more people to attend the church. So, they talked about putting a new sign out front.

I got to thinking (in the middle of the night, of course) about putting out signs announcing meetings. I was haunted by the following questions:

1. If a sign were to be placed out front announcing "Rock County Republican Party meets here Thursday Night at Seven," certain people would read the sign and opt to attend the meeting. What would these visitors expect? In addition to a formal presentation, they would probably expect conversations to center around the platform of the Republican Party and ways in which Republican ideals could be implemented in Rock County.

2. If a sign were to be placed out front announcing "Rock County Historical Society meets here Friday night at Seven," certain people would read the sign and opt to attend the meeting. What would these visitors expect? In addition to a formal presentation, they would probably expect conversations to center around the history of that part of Rock County, and how the memories of that history could be kept alive.

3. If a sign were to be placed out front announcing "Rock County Grange meets here Saturday night at Seven," certain people would read the sign and opt to attend the meeting. What would these visitors expect? In addition to a formal presentation, they would probably expect conversations to center around farming in Rock County, and ways in which the life and lot of Rock County farmers could be improved.

4. If a sign were to be placed out front announcing "Church Services held here Sundays at 10:45," certain people would read the sign and opt to attend the meeting. What would these visitors expect? In addition to a formal presentation, they would probably expect conversations to center around .... I'm afraid these visitors might hear the same conversations that they might expect to hear in options 1, 2, and 3 above. For those are often the conversations heard in many churches on Sunday mornings.

In option 1 above, what would visitors do if they attended the meeting of the Republicans and heard no discussion of Republican ideals? In option 2, what would visitors do if they showed up to a meeting of the Historical Society, and heard no discussion of the history of Rock County? Or, if they attended a meeting of the Grange and heard no discussions about farming? Most would never return.

Then, I ask myself, what might visitors do who show up for church on a Sunday morning and hear little conversation (outside of formal presentations) about God?

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