I have been in this places as well. I turned my back on the church for about 4 years while I was in college. I was sick of the fakeness, legalism, and insincerity. On top of that, I can be a very cynical and negative person. I grew up in a home where the Sunday ritual after getting home was to start getting lunch and then listen to my parents nitpick and gossip about how people acted in church, so it's very easy for me to fall into that.charl wrote:I think we all go through periods of disillusionment with the visible church, I know I did. However it's good to remind ourselves that the church is made up of a bunch of rotten sinners-people just like me. People who've received the same grace I have, who make mistakes like I do...Our hope is not in the perfections of the Church any more than such in ourselves, but the perfections of Christ who will reign in his church and will conform her to his likeness.
It took my parents constant badgering, military basic training, and the failure of my engagement (plus a HUGE dose of God's grace and sovereignty) to make me realize I was wrong and find a systematic theology that made sense and a church that was full of real people. No more infighting and gossiping. Or at least so much less, that it's hardly noticeable. And the services! I have never felt like I was being fed so much Scripture in my entire life, and I'm lucky if I can make it to church once a month because of my work schedule.
Not to say that I have arrived or anything. I'm still just as much of a sinner as I was then. I fail everyday, and some days I really get down on myself for it. But my focus is in the right place and God has providentially led me to a church where I can finally be proud to say I go to church.
Growing up, I was never made to understand the importance of Communion. It was just a part of the service. Most of the Pentecostal, Evangelical, and Nondenominational churches I went to treated it like an after thought and we just kinda went through the motions when participating in it. I think the fact that we have gotten away from the Creeds and doctrines of the early church is the biggest factor in this problem.Communion is a case in point, do these Christians view this as the body and the blood or something we are supposed to do because that's what we've been told?
I agree. Emergents are not wrong in identifying a problem, but their solution puts the cart before the horse. The centrality of Jesus message is NOT social awareness and social justice and righting the wrongs of the world, it is that we are sinners who need a covering in order to be able to commune with God, and Christ shed his blood to provide that covering. Everything else we do flows from that point.Emergent Christianity I think highlights one of the major problems in the church in the fact that many in that stream claim to love community yet despise authority. I don't think there can be one without the other. As it has been said, no one despises human authority unless he first despises God's authority and I think that such an attitude of individualism plagues the Western church as a whole. This is why there is this despising, a lack of accountability, no church discipline, etc.
Emergents want to skip the part about us being sinners and God being angry and wrathful because that doesn't sound like the nice God they want to believe in. So they make Jesus sound like nothing more than a Ghandi-like wise man who wanted world peace and happiness and wasn't really worried about the fact that mankind is fallen (other than the part where that fact causes injustice in the world). Sorry, but that is ignoring Scripture and making God in your own image. You don't need to have a Jesus stamp on your hand to do volunteer work and care about the environment. If those are your concerns, fine, but don't twist Scripture to fit that agenda.
Numbers evangelism is rather scary, no matter how well intentioned it may be. I can see why people do it given their theology-so what I guess the only option there is is to teach them better theology.

Wow. I feel exactly the same way. (Should I really be surprised?) I can be superbly apathetic when I am not constantly studying Scripture and spending time with God. It's amazing how much more motivated I am and how much I want to improve myself when I do those two simple things.It's probably not a big surprise that I view the gospel as the cure for both legalism and laziness. I am lazy. Nothing makes me feel worse about being lazy than the gospel.
Haha. Stop placating, you silly Baptists! After all, you know Presbyterians have got it right when it comes to baptismCan I just add that I find baby dedications ridiculous? Anyone else? You're Baptists!! BE Baptists!
