A wimpy interpretation of what is  going on but nonetheless
perceptive to the extent that it is  realistic about American culture
as post-Christian and even opposed  to Christian faith.
BR
 
------------------------------------------
 
 
Episcopal Diocese of  Washington
June 3, 2014
 
The Church Isn't Dying, Christendom Is 

 
I try to keep a tight  lid on my email inbox, but spam still gets through. 
This was a subject line from  an email I received this week: “Is Increasing 
Membership in 2014 a Goal?” Over  at HuffPost Religion, I saw _“Why nobody 
wants to go to church  anymore.”_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-mcswain/why-nobody-wants-to-go-to_b_4086016.html?utm_hp_ref=christianity)
  
Episcopal  Cafe led me to _“The Church must die so Christianity  can live.”_ 
(http://telling-secrets.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-church-must-die-so-christianity-
can.html)   And _“What needs to die in the  Church”_ 
(http://www.dirtysexyministry.com/2014/05/what-needs-to-die-in-church.html)   
from Dirty Sexy 
Ministry has been reposted on my Facebook wall so many times I  lost count.


Anxiety about the state of the church  is everywhere you look. Church 
professionals, lay and ordained, are constantly  bombarded by books, articles, 
blog posts, Facebook updates, and on and on, all  about how the church is 
dying, and why, and what we should do in response: save  it! let it die! Often 
these recommendations come with a handy bulleted  list.




I  don’t think the church is dying, but it is changing. Or at least, the 
culture  around us has changed, and we are--slowly, painfully--changing too. 
The question  is, are these changes a cause for despair? Or hope?


We no  longer enjoy the cultural hegemony that Christendom afforded--those 
many  centuries when culture, political power, and the church were tightly  
intertwined. But I think this is actually a blessing. “Christendom” was 
never  the Kingdom of God--it was just the church stepping into the role of the 
Empire,  the same Empire that Jesus opposed and that put him to death. 
Christendom is  dying, and we need to let it die.

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And  yet, we long to return to the full churches of the 1950s the way the 
children of  Israel longed to return to Egypt, where they may have been 
slaves, but they had  plenty to eat. But going back is not an option. Like 
God’s 
children wandering in  the wilderness, we no longer have the oppressive 
stability of Empire to keep us  safe. We “must learn to operate once again as 
part of a movement” (Lloyd  Pietersen, Reading the Bible After 
Christendom)--more like the way Jesus and his  first followers operated beneath 
the surface 
of the Roman  Empire.

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There is hope in this change,  if we can stop longing for the way things 
were and start imagining the way  things might be. We can’t recreate the 
church of the 1950s, no matter how hard  we try--and why would we want to? With 
God’s help, the church that we are  becoming will be more faithful, more like 
the topsy-turvy Kingdom of God and  less like the hierarchical, 
power-and-money driven ways of the world. A church  better able to preach peace 
and 
pursue it, to stand up for the prisoner and the  captive, the poor and the 
oppressed. Not a bad trade-off,  really.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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  • [RC] An... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • Re... Dr. Ernie Prabhakar

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