Monday, August 3, 2009

Are You Being Served?

Over more than a decade in ministry, I have watched an interesting phenomenon occur. There are a group of church-attenders who leave another church, show up at ours, stay for awhile, and then leave to go to a new church down the road. There, presumably they repeat the process.
Upon their arrival, they generally have something negative to say about their previous church and upon leaving, they generally have something negative to say about us.

The most common reason that I have heard is, “I’m wasn’t being fed.” This is then followed by some need that they have that wasn’t being met by the church: “no one came up to me and talked to me on Sundays” or “my marriage was in trouble and no one helped me” or I really want a small group for singles over the age of forty.”

Each of these reasons goes back to the original, “I’m not being fed.” Can you hear the selfishness and laziness of that statement? Several of the Proverbs speak of the ‘sluggard.’ My favorite is, "the sluggard buries his hand in the dish; he is too lazy to bring it back to his mouth.” I love the picture here of this lazy guy putting his hand in the bowl of food and just being too lazy to lift it back up to his lips. The application here is obvious. “I’m not being fed” translates to, I want someone else to fill my needs and I am too busy to do anything about it myself.

The writer of Hebrews says, “We have much to say about this, but it is hard to explain because you are slow to learn. In fact, though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you the elementary truths of God's word all over again. You need milk, not solid food! Anyone who lives on milk, being still an infant, is not acquainted with the teaching about righteousness.” Did you hear that? He says, “Quit being babies and grow up!” He tells them that they ought to be able to teach themselves and others by now, but they are so immature that they aren’t ready for it.

I cannot speak for every other church, but this one has some excellent teaching. Our preaching pastor is an expert in his field, he teaches other pastors how to preach. He is gifted at combining the art and science of hermeneutics and homiletics into an interesting and informative lesson. We also have small groups with good teaching in them. Also, almost every other church that I have visited falls into this category. The teaching is usually very good. It has been a rare occasion indeed when I have left a sister church taking issue with their teachings. This tells me that the food is there, it just isn’t making it to their lips.

The picture we need to get is of a giant Thanksgiving dinner. The whole family is there along with many guests. There is a spread of food on the table, enough to make it sag. There is turkey and dressing, mashed potatoes and gravy, cranberry sauce (the real kind with whole cranberries, nuts, and orange peels), green bean casserole, hot fresh bread with real butter dripping off of it, mincemeat, sweet potato pie, and all the other fixin’s that you could imagine. Much of the family and guests are eating, but there are a few that are just sitting there. Grown adults, salivating at the smells, their stomachs are grumbling, but they just sit there with their hands at their sides, their plates empty…waiting for someone else to put food in their mouth.

That is not what the Christian life is.

There is no call for servants of Jesus to sit there and let others do for them, in fact, quite the opposite. All of the New Testament is a call to action. It is full of verbs:
Make disciples, Serve one another, Be, Do, Love…

The message of God’s Kingdom is not, what has the church done for me lately; it is, How can I serve God and others. It has nothing to do with my own entertainment and everything to do with the sacrificial giving of my time, money, and self to God’s work.

In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul compares the church to a body. We are all parts (eyes, hands, feet, stomachs, etc) and all of us have parts to serve the body as a whole. It is time that we separate our consumer-driven culture from our church body. We are not a business, we are a Body, a community, a family.

Picture that Thanksgiving dinner again. This time, we work together. I’ll roast the turkey because I have a wonderful recipe for brining it that makes it extra juicy. Aunt Meg will bake the bread because that’s what she does. Dad will make the cranberry dressing using grandma’s old iron crank grinder bolted to the edge of the kitchen table. My friend Kris will bring over her fancy china and we’ll ask Denise and Hazel to make a beautiful centerpiece. Grandma Ruth Gonzeles will bring the giblet gravy and all the little girls will set the table while the boys bring in a bunch of mismatched chairs for everyone to sit on. Dan Vincent will make the pumpkin pies and Chip will say the blessing. Theo will show up bringing a homeless person that he just met and Earl will be ready to take the leftovers from the meal to the rescue mission. When the meal is done, we’ll all clean the dishes and then sit down on the porch and talk with each other while the kids play in the back yard.

That is the body of Christ, each person actively doing their part and all of us spending time in community…In communion.

If you want to be fed, pick up your Bible and start reading

If you want to be fed, volunteer at the church or at a service ministry.

If you want to be fed, begin introducing yourself to others at church.
If you want to be fed, join a small group Bible study.

If you want to be fed, stick around after church and get to know others.

If you want to be fed, you’ve got to do some of the work - feed yourself.

If you are one of those who tells me that you aren’t being fed, don’t be surprised if I don’t have a sympathetic ear. In this house, if you don’t work, you don’t eat! (2 Thessalonians 3:9-15)


Each one should use whatever gift he has received to serve others, faithfully administering God's grace in its various forms. 1Peter 4:10

4 comments:

  1. I agree and disagree. I agree that we all need to step up and be a part of the church- a church is a group of people and it needs the whole group to participate to run well. However, I think there is a time for some people to leave a church and I think it is wrong to make people feel guilty when they have done so. I think that if you have a need you first look to your church to fill that need. For example, if you are looking for a small group then you look to your church, if they don't have one then you can try to start one. However, things will not always work out. And if you have done what you can and your need is still not being met then I think it is appropriate to find another way to fill that need- even if that means joining a small group from another church.

    I also think we need to stop this view we have of churches that there is some sort of competition between them and therefore a stigma when you choose to leave one and join another- for whatever reason. We only have individual churches because we can't all meet together because of time and distance. This is one of the reasons that I dislike churches that have memberships- we only have one membership and at is the one we get when we become followers of Christ and it is between us and Him- not any church. We have gotten to the point that churches segregate Christians instead of bringing us together. We shouldn't look at it as if people are 'leaving' because they aren't, they are still Christ followers, they are just choosing a different building to worship in.

    Combining the two thoughts- it isn't fair or right to expect that single 'churches' should be able to meet every single need of every single person that attends their church. We need to see the bigger picture and make sure that all of us who are members of God's church are meeting the needs of all of His members.

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  2. BTW - THe picture is of a statue called, "The Sluggard" By Frederick Lord Leighton.

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  3. Kimberly, I believe that you missed the point. If someone moves to another area or marries someone at a different church or if they go to serve in a new ministry, I don't see any issues.

    What I am referring to is the lack of commitment to a local church combined with the consumerist attitude of 'how can the church (as a business) serve me' instead of how can I serve those around me.

    Those that bounce from church to church to church are not healthy and will never be so because the do not get real inside a community.

    Here is an excellent article: http://kentdelhousaye.com/?p=133

    Truly, we must remember that the church is not a business that needs to meet our needs, it is a body that needs to serve God. When we focus on our perceived needs, we are self-serving; I would suggest that we are called to be a part of a local community who serves God and serves others, taking faith as a serious call to outward action and not a call to pleasing ourselves.

    This blog is a call to that, faith in action.

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  4. A further note - This in no way refers to leaving a church due to actual errors in teaching or heresy. It only refers to those who bounce around looking for the latest and greatest entertainment to serve themselves while critisizing each stop along the path for not doing enough for them.

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