Why Bother With Church?

If you’ve read any Christian books, seen any Christian statistics or just attended a Christian church recently, you’ve perhaps noticed that a lot of younger evangelicals are growing disinterested in the whole “being plugged in at a local church” thing, even if they might have a vibrant faith otherwise. The reasons for this are extensive and widely documented. Church is seen as too inconvenient, boring, out-of-touch, irrelevant, inauthentic, hypocritical, too much of a performance, and so on and so forth. These are mostly valid criticisms, and I can’t really blame people for being lackluster about the local church.

But, as a lover of the Church and a believer in the biblical call to following Christ in community, my question is: How do we make the case for attending church? Rather than throw up our hands and declare the end of the local church, what can we do to re-articulate the kingdom dream of Christ, which involves us not just as individuals but as the church body?

I explore these questions in a new article in Relevant, whose 50th issue is out this week. My article is on pages 82-87, and here’s a little excerpt:

Part of the difficulty people have with committing to a local church is that our society has for centuries been on a egalitarian trajectory of asserting individual rights over against institutions, notes Sumner. “We’ve been in a long revolt against authority ever since the Reformation,” she said. “The whole trajectory is about me and my power. We have authority problems.”

It’s an uphill battle to overcome our deeply ingrained consumer mentality and fickle tendency to abandon a church the minute it becomes too difficult. But the truth is, no matter how long someone shops for the perfect church, they’ll never find it. Instead of succumbing to inclinations that churchgoing is about “me” and that it must meet “my” needs, believers should instead look at churchgoing as a chance to get outside of self-serving bubbles and join in something bigger and grander.

The Church is this mind-boggling, mystical, relatively new phenomenon of history in which the God of the universe, through His Son and with the power of the Holy Spirit, inaugurated a revolutionary new kingdom on earth. A kingdom not of kings ruling by force, but of pockets of people united by selfless love, charity and a steadfast hope in rejuvenation and renewal. This church welcomes us into its arms so that, together, we can join Christ in the bringing of light to a dark world.

Read the full article on Relevant‘s website.

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8 Responses to Why Bother With Church?

  1. As I write about in this post, even one hour of church is not enough. I think we have the wrong view of church, as you say, as a place to meet our needs. In the New Testament, the word “church” is used as a group of believers. It’s not about events, sermons or programs, it’s about “doing life” with others. After being diagnosed with cancer, my friends at church made a huge difference in my life. I would never even have known them otherwise.

  2. So what do you do when you do try to “step outside of self-serving bubbles” and plug into a church in various ways of service and then have major issues with leadership playing power games and not being willing to admit when they make mistakes. I recognize the need for community and I have certainly grown a lot due to various church communities I’ve been in. But I keep running into leaders that have no accountability, don’t want to engage in confrontation even when it is necessary and don’t seem to recognize bad doctrine/theology.

    Sometimes there are valid reasons to have authority problems. By far the majority of churches I’ve attended (including the one I grew up in) have ended up damaging my walk with God due to major leadership issues. I guess I would just say there are other reasons why people don’t want to go to church. And there are reasons for a significant portion of evangelicals forsaking evangelical practice entirely in exchange for more traditional liturgical traditions.

  3. There may be a silver lining explanation for this perceived shift! In the 60s and even the 70s, most believers experienced their deepest and most meaningful encounters with Father/Son/Holy Spirit within the 4 walls, and still looked to official “clergy” to feed us what we could not find on our own. Through the explosion of His Presence in our lives and the greater explosion of vibrant worship aided by the raising up of musicians everywhere, people encounter Jesus all day long and their experiences outside the wall eclipse what they had found inside. And He will get even closer and soon the waters will be deep inside and outside the church………what do YOU think?

  4. It distresses me when I see articles of this nature asserting that younger evangelicals are dropping out of or have a lack of interest in the local church. What concerns me is not so much the faith of the younger evangelicals. It is the writer’s limited and un-scriptural definition the term “church.” The church in the New Testament is not the buildings that we have come to call “churches” nor is it the institutions that maintain those buildings. The local church in the New Testament is the people that have been called out from the local population to form a new community in Jesus Christ. If a person is committed to a group of believers who meet regularly to share their faith and are accountable to each other, they are members of the local church, even if the only place they ever meet for fellowship is the local Starbucks. There is a growing spirit of independence and rebellion in our western culture, but that’s a different issue.

  5. Carolyn Spaulding

    I recognize if Jesus could walk with mere men so must I. He could see their hearts, motives, fallen nature in whole yet walked with them and layed down His life for them so must I. I was in a meeting one day (very worldly and in my preception) I asked the Lord, “are You here” and He said I have walked with man in all conditions.” I just get very disgusted at the charlatans in our midst that are fleecing the sheep standing in places to their own betterment NOT ON THE WORD OF GOD and the innocent ones know this not, God have mercy on them. I see those that cause great damage to the single little soul that is trying to walk truly with Jesus yet a little lady if I mentioned her name in my locatliy would certainly be known said, “If you really walk with Jesus it is a very lonely walk” words of wisdom. PRAY.

  6. We as the great emergent generation, we don’t go to church, immaturity, fear of commitment, inconsistency in faith and self-righteousness aside, we simply know how to point fingers away from ourselves. It’s always easier to lay hold of the church and the inherit issues we see in the church from the outside, on the outside it is safe to assume no responsibility for being the church, the kingdom.

  7. My dissatisfaction with the Church comes from leftover feelings of being hurt by so-called Christians.

  8. Pingback: How To Be The Church (You Tell Me!) - something beautiful

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