For we, being many, are one bread and one body, for we are all partakers of that one Bread.
1 Corinthians 10:17
We
went to church today. Our church is a
Congregational church in an upscale, all-white town. It is a welcoming place. I try to understand what element is missing,
for it always seems to me that something is missing. I cannot fault the people for being white or
upscale. They are merely who they are,
gathered together to worship God in the town where they live. I am one of them, or almost one of them. I am white, I am not upscale, but always
trying to keep up appearances of being so in order to fit in and meet the social
expectations of community and family. I
have dropped out of the Catholic church, my childhood religion, and the Baptist
church, where I raised my son. I had
major problems with both of those churches either theological or political, in fact more problems than I have
with the congregationalists. But I think
they had some things that the Congregationalists lack.
The Catholic church had a sense of the
sacred. You could not cross the altar
without genuflecting or say the name of Jesus without bowing your head. The host was said to be the actual body of
Christ, and people prayed to Saints embodied in pious statues at the front of
the church. I do not think this was
always right and good but I just mean to mention that this provided something
the people needed, something sacred, holy awe-inspiring and inviolable.
The Baptist church had less of this. The one thing they had that was inviolable
was the Bible. The Word of God as
inerrant, ‘living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword” provided a sacred center to the service. Compared to the Baptist
church, the Congregationalists lack a sense of urgency. For them it really doesn’t matter what you do
or whether you come to Christ or not.
All are welcome, no attempt is made to make one conform to rules. There are no expectations of a conversion
experience. There is no heaven or hell
mentioned in the sermons. I did think
this was overdone and distorted in the Baptist church,
but without it what is the point of believing in Jesus? Why do we need to spread the Gospel, why
bother with any of it? I have my own
understanding of these things, not entirely reflected in any of these churches,
and I know that with these compromised positions, some things left unexplainable,
some denied, and others interpreted to my own understanding, I could not well be a minister. A minister must have a theology, a guiding
principle, a set of absolutes that he or she stands for so that the
congregation knows what he stands for and where they stand.
However, I must give the Congregationalists
credit for their efforts to reach out into the community, for their welcoming atmosphere, and especially for their Christ-centered theology. The communion service is done with great reverence and it was what Jesus commanded his church to
do.
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