An Un-Truth I Learned From the Church … And What I’ve Un-learned About It
A blogging friend of mine, Monte Asbury, chimed in on what he learned from the church that didn’t ring true. Thus, I’ll divulge what it started me thinking about.
The church has taught me that to be the church means to be attractional. Authentic Christ-followers should, indeed, lead irresistible lives. But this is not the idiom of attraction I learned. Apparently, the church is most effective when it attracts not-yet believers to its gatherings. I learned this from Vacation Bible School, Caravans, Bible Quizzing, intramural sports leagues, block parties, fall festivals, harvest celebrations, huge Easter celebrations that require hiring a string section, Easter pageants, revivals, missions weekends, back-to-school parties, special concerts, etc., etc., etc.
The thinking was that the more special the event, the more spectacular the goings on within the church building walls, the more readily not-yet believers would be awed into a pleasing relationship with Jesus.
I learned that a lot of effort goes into these special events. I learned that if we build it, they will come. I learned that Jesus was a great spectacle, a bastion of entertainment, a religious-colored festival. I learned that Jesus was into crowds.
I’ve discovered this is an un-truth.
As I follow the lectionary and read from my family scrapbook (Scripture), I’m convinced that Jesus — and thereby, the gospel — isn’t about an attractional event.
Instead the gospel is about an incarnational life.
Jesus did occasionally preach / teach to great crowds. Yet, when he plainly extolled the cost of discipleship, the crowds dwindled. Near the end of his public ministry, he was the focus of crowds once again. Yet, this time they killed him.
Jesus’ most effective ministry happened one-on-one and in small groups. Jesus cared about individuals.
Jesus did not ask the thirsty to come to the great big water fountain at the synagogue. Instead, he went to the well that thirsty people frequented and gave a woman living water.
Jesus didn’t have a big potluck in order to feed people’s bellies while feeding their souls. Instead, he gathered with twelve around a small table and gave them his body and blood.
Jesus didn’t build magnificent buildings and point to them saying, “Here I have built my church.” Instead, he called his disciple with the most leadership potential an adversary, then promised to build a community of hope on his shoulders.
Jesus didn’t teach every Sabbath. Instead, he took his disciples with him through a field on the Sabbath, picked the grain for breakfast, and lived the gospel right in front of them.
How can the church I serve become incarnational? It won’t happen with great programs. Nor will it happen by meeting in the building we mistakenly call “the church” once or twice a week.
But it might happen by remembering that we are now Christ’s body. It might happen by rehearsing what Jesus did. It might happen by sacrificing all our false realities for a gospel that is lived and breathed in our communities.
Redemption begins when un-truths are un-learned. Then our hearts of stone are replaced with living hearts. With so much body-talk in Scripture — and a God who inhabited a body like mine — how can I call myself a Christ-follower if I’m not living a mission of incarnation all the time?
The beauty of this redeeming process is that the very church which taught me the un-truth is the church that shows me how to un-learn it and to live differently. For all the church’s flaws, it’s still the church through which God reconciles the world. I choose to be part of the reconciliation.
SO TELL ME SOMETHING:
What’s an un-truth that you’ve learned? And how are you un-learning it?
——
Brian Niece
www.brianniece.com
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Tags: church, attractional, Jesus, incarnational
Category: Christianity, Emergent, Mission, Sacramental Living, The Church 2 comments »

August 31st, 2007 at 11:02 pm
Radical. Beautiful. Mysterious. Wonderful.
It’s Jesus.
Thanks.
Monte
September 1st, 2007 at 11:23 am
Excellent thought s on unlearning things. I like the way your thinking! I have been reading a lot of Yancey lately and he speaks on some of the same themes….why does “the church” today look nothing like Jesus “church”? As “the church ” we should attract the type of people that our leader (Jesus) attracted…and for the same reasons, namely love, grace and acceptance. Undesirables should not exist to the true church…