imagining how the church can reorient around mission

    
Jamie Blog One Photo
“We need to kill
the Church.”  As a lingering skeleton of
good intentions, the Church has become ineffective at relaying the only
knowledge that truly matters in this world—telling all who Jesus truly is.  When I say, “We need to kill the church,” I
am speaking about the institutionalized Church of our current day which caters
to societal trends, fashions, and the myriad of other “things” that draw people
in to church each week.  However,
something is lost when we glitz and glam up our churches to fit the marketplace.  That same “something” is also lost when we stand,
stiffly and uncomfortably, waiting for praise and worship to end, so we can
finally sit down and mindlessly listen (or daydream) while the pastor, priest,
or whoever stands on stage for forty minutes talking about how Jesus died for
our sins.  The same “something” is even
lost in services where enthusiastic worshippers get that “tingly feeling”
during a “really good song” or those chills when the pastor brings a sermon
home.  These “somethings” are
self-edifying, but sadly, they stay within the walls of the church building
never to see the light of day.   What is
lost?  Jesus.  This man who was born as the lowest of low,
who knew ultimate joy, and suffered an unimaginably brutal death is lost.  There is no raw, real Jesus in our
institutionalized church today; we have fashioned Him to be either a condoning
sweetheart (so we can feel good about ourselves and our actions) or a
hardnosed, fire and brimstone bringer of wrath and judgment (so we can look
down our noses at homosexuals, druggies, and all the “true” sinners of the
world).  So, let us, as the Body and
Bride of Christ, choose to shut this “Church” down.  This “Church” that is more a business seeking
consumers than a delightful extension of our missional God. 

    This is not to
say there are no churches doing it right; that would be absurd!  Of course there are churches, many, who seek
after Jesus with everything in their being. 
Unfortunately, our society (even Christians) send these churches into exile
and deem them crazy radicals. Salvation and eternal life are radical concepts;
shouldn’t we believe so passionately to the point of fearlessly seeking God’s
holistic view, and not just pieces of it? 
We understand the world does not know us because our identity is in
Heaven, so let’s not become offended when people disagree with us for making
waves.  As long as our actions are
biblical and in accordance with God’s character and will, we are surely a force
to be reckoned with!  Through community, sensitivity to the Holy Spirit, and the ability to imagine
in radical ways, we can collectively step into our role as the true Body of
Christ, how the Church was intended to be. Arise, Church, as the hands and the feet
and the ears and the eyes of Christ to kill this institutional “Church” and
bring Jesus to the center where He belongs. 
In this way, we, as the body of Christ, and the whole world will be
forever changed.

Jamie

2 Responses

  1. The Western idea of church does need to change. Not just how we do church, but how we live as the church; as the body of Christ. But how is that done? From my past experiences with the Church, I know how hard it can be to try and bring different ideas and a different perspective into a church. I know how easy it is to be caught up in procedure and policy and a “right” way of doing things. So if there is an issue with institutionalized church, do we attempt to bring change from inside that institution? Or start outside of that model, and hope they catch on? I don’t believe we should simply abandon the Church but I also have little hope that change is going to come from within the institution as it is.

  2. You make a great point that even if we feel God in a sermon or in worship, if this doesn’t make it outside of the church walls, then we aren’t truly living the way Jesus did. We have to have a shift in our mindset to allow us to act more radically and accept change in the church.