I can see how some of my posts might be perceived as communicating disdain for the church. I do get discouraged sometimes, but it's not with the church as such, but with the way Christians often hinder her full potential by an inane adherence to past structures and programs that no longer communicate the beauty and power of the message of Jesus Messiah. The situation is so critical that I am tempted at times to throw away the very word "church" and replace it with some more descriptive word, but, in the end, that word too would eventually become encrusted with ecclesiastical barnacles of the past. It was with great satisfaction, therefore, that I read the following paragraph from N. T. Wright's book "Simply Christian." If you love God's church, read on and be refreshed.
I use the word "church" here with a somewhat heavy heart. I know that for many of my readers that very word will carry the overtones of large, dark buildings, pompous religious pronouncements, false solemnity, and rank hypocrisy. But there is no easy alternative. I, too, feel the weight of that negative image. I battle with it professionally all the time.
But there is another side to it, a side which shows all the signs of the wind and fire, of the bird brooding over the waters and bringing new life. For many, "church" means just the opposite of that negative image. It's a place of welcome and laughter, of healing and hope, of friends and family and justice and new life. It's where the homeless drop in for a bowl of soup and the elderly stop by for a chat. It's where one group is working to help drug addicts and another is campaigning for global justice. It's where you'll find people learning to pray, coming to faith, struggling with temptation, finding new purpose, and getting in touch with a new power to carry that purpose out. It's where people bring their own small faith and discover, in getting together with others to worship the one true God, that the whole becomes greater than the sum of the its parts. No church is like this all the time. But a remarkable number of churches are partly like that for quite a lot of the time."1
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