The mission statement,
written on the front of our weekly bulletin, says that we are a church that
1. loves God,
2. loves and serves
others, and
3. makes disciples for
Christ.
Indeed this mission
statement takes into consideration and includes the Great Commission and the Royal
Commandment given by Jesus Himself to His followers. Looking at what is going on in my
congregation, however, I worry about how well we are doing as a church in
fulfilling the three claims we make and wonder what kind of report card grade
God will give us when He Himself evaluates us.
Many of our members
stubbornly insist that we are doing exactly what we’re supposed to be doing
while others challenge them by pointing out our continued small attendance for
worship service and a lack of participation in our fellowship programs. We
have had several members graduate to that glorious heavenly kingdom in the past
four or five years, but we haven’t added any new members to replace those
precious, departed saints in our pews. Many of our members complain that “we”
aren’t going out beating the bushes to find new members; but, for some reason,
the “we” never seems to include “them”.
Looking at the first
criteria in our mission statement: Yes, we love God, or at least most of us—or
many of us---do, or at least we claim we love God; but do we love the God we
make in our own image or in whose image we are made? And if we love Him,
we should want to serve Him by loving and serving others.
Considering the second
item listed: Yes, we love and serve others, but do we love and serve only those
others who are friends and family and are almost the same kind of people we are,
or do we love and serve all our neighbors as much as we can even if they have
different life styles, are of different races, ethnicities, or even of different
religions? Are we an inclusive or an
exclusive church? Do we really want to move out of our comfort zones to seek
and invite those who are socially, economically, and politically different from
us? I guess what we need to ask
ourselves is how much we honestly love
our neighbors---all our neighbors, which means all those in our world whose
paths intersect ours. I believe we can serve without loving; but can we truly
love others in Christian love without wanting to serve them?
Like many small rural
churches, my church was founded over 200 years ago by a few families, and many
of their descendants are members today. It is easy for newcomers to be
intimidated by the exclusive intimacy of the family groups. It is also easy for
the old-timers to want our church to stay the way it has always been and to be
intimidated by threats of change suggested by newcomers or “new-blood.” If each
of us truly loves Jesus and wants to share the message of His love and His
kingdom and the message of salvation with others, we must all sacrifice our
selfish motives and ideas of what church is supposed to look like and act
like. We must, however, always keep our
minds and hearts focused on glorifying God and doing all things in accordance
with His will, not our personal will.
When it comes to making
disciples for Christ, I think my church is very weak. When it comes to going out and inviting
people to join us for our church services, we fall short. At the moment we don’t have much at all to
offer our children and teenagers which means they are often absent from Sunday
school, worship service, and we don’t have an active youth group for them to
attend. How are we going to train people to be disciples for Christ, and how
are we going to share our love for Christ with them if we rarely see them? Again, I hear people giving their opinions on
what “we” need to do for the youth; but I don’t see anyone coming forward with
the love and vision needed to make a difference in their lives. As one of the characters in William Faulkner’s
short story “The Bear,” said, “We don’t have the dog yet,” meaning we don’t
have the person, who can make a difference, coming forward and saying, “Here I
am, Lord; use me Lord.” We need people
who are willing to come forward, to accept Christ’s call not only in developing
youth programs, but in developing other programs in our church.
I love my church, and I
pray for her. She is the bridegroom of
Christ, but she needs to be getting herself ready for His arrival. She needs to
be fulfilling the calling given in the Great Commandment and in the Great
Commission. She needs to show her love for God by loving and serving others and
by making disciples who will go out into the world to tell others of the love
and sacrifice of Jesus Christ which makes our restoration and salvation
possible. As John Piper says, if we do
not do this, we waste our lives, and life is much too precious to waste.
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