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attend, belonging, church, community, God, habit, hope, invite, Jesus, journey, love, meaning, purpose, worship

Photo: Hickory Neck Episcopal Church; reuse with permission only
I spent the last almost three weeks on vacation. It was a time relaxation, refreshment, and restoration. It was a time of unplugging, unwinding, and uninterrupted space. It was a time of sabbath. And because most Sundays I am in church, I experienced not going to church. On Sundays, it turns out lots of people are eating brunch, exercising, spending time with their families, enjoying nature, working, or just enjoying a good read. And for a couple of weeks, I did just that.
The weeks away got me thinking: why do we go to church on Sundays, when there are so many other things we could be doing? As I contrasted the time of not going to church with my years of going to church, I realized I go to church for so many reasons – some big and some small. The big ones may be obvious. I want to connect with, learn about, and feel loved by God. I want a sense of community, where I belong and am known. I want a sense of purpose rooted in Jesus’ command to love God, self, and neighbor.
The small ones are less obvious. I love the beauty of the people in church: the elders laughing heartily, children and their looks of wonder and their awesome questions, people caring for the needs of others when they think no one is looking. I love the power of music: from the familiar song that takes me back to fond place, to the unfamiliar song with a lyric that blows my mind, to the transcendent way harmonizing voices can bring me to tears for some unknown reason. I love the little moments: when an invitation to prayer reminds me of a hurting loved one, when sharing the peace with someone with whom I have had hard feelings dissolves all tension, when the burn of the communion wine down my throat lingers for several minutes – as if Christ is not ready to leave me yet, when the light shines just so on the cross, reminding me once again of the big stuff of Church.
Going to Church every week gives me a sense of belonging – to God and to other people, gives me a sense of meaning in a world that is often confounding, and gives me a sense of hope. Maybe you have gotten out of the habit of going to Church, for a hundred little and good reasons. If so, I invite you to shake things up this week and try Church again. Maybe you left the Church in hurt or never really were introduced to Church. If so, I invite you to consider stepping in the doors and giving the Church a chance to share Christ’s love with you. Or maybe you go to Church every Sunday, but things have begun to feel stale. If so, I invite you to take a deep breath, sit in a different place, or simply allow yourself to be surprised by the Holy Spirit. I invite you to my Church this week – for some of the reasons here, for your own reasons, or for reasons unknown to you. I will be there with open arms, ready to introduce you to a group of awesome people, on the same journey to know our awesome God.
Jennifer,
Thank you. A very beautiful meditation on Sunday. I hope it reaches the non-churched and once-churched members of our community. I spent last Saturday and Sunday on grandparent duty, ferrying my 10 year old to soccer games and a sleepover. The Warhill fields were packed Sunday morning, and I thought how do we compete. I must admit to being stumped.
Love to talk to you about this sometime.
Bob
Sent from my iPad
Remind me to tell you about the mobile church I saw at General Convention. I think there is hope for us all, if we are willing to take the Church where the people are.
I found little faith, much talk of it, in church, over 40-odd years. Left there with a serious dose of PTSD after abusive relations, many of them pastors. See Revelation 18:4 and Ezekiel 9:7
I’m so sorry to hear about that. I know the church has a lot of repentance to do for the ways it has harmed people. But my hope is there is redemption for all of us – that we might find churches that are striving to be better example’s of Christ’s love, and both be healed.
Why would we need churches? Jesus didn’t come to start them, especially not in the current format.