Church is always an interesting place. Many of us attend church looking for something. We want to be different. We want to be forgiven. We want to feel better. We want our children not to grow up to be serial killers. We want our spouse to be a better person. We want to meet people. Or the ever popular, there is free food (sometimes). I will admit that some Sundays, even as a pastor, what gets me out of bed, into my clergy collar and onto the chancel is the promise of Eastern NC BBQ after the service. It is who we are as people to assume that the church is here in the world to do something for us. I can't tell you how many times I have heard people say they like a church because it "meets their needs." It makes sense. Every store we go to, every restaurant we go to, almost every place we go to we go to meet our own perceived needs. If they do not have good customer service we go somewhere else. We go to what we like, and when we do not like it anymore we go somewhere else.
Church is different. We "sign up" for church to serve Christ in the church. We go to church not to get something but to give and serve someone else. Often times we get in the habit of believing that we go to church to get our gas tank filled up. But our attendance at church is not only to get something.
I have a friend who might just be the smartest person I have the pleasure of talking with. The other day I called him to talk about J. L Austin's philosophical understanding of performative utterances and constative utterances and I asked him first what he was doing. He told me he was at the church mowing and replacing light bulbs. It struck me as funny. Here we are talking about serious philosophical concerns while doing the simplest tasks of service.
What we do receive at church is sacramental formation. God uses the physicality of the church to train us to service. We are practiced and formed to be Christ in the world. We do receive the grace of God in Baptism and Holy Communion (the 2 sacraments in the United Methodist Church). In that reception of God's grace we are then transformed to be in service. The final prayer that we pray at the end of our time of Communion reads: Eternal God, we give you thanks for this holy mystery in which you have given yourself to us. Grant that we may go into the world in the strength of your spirit to give ourselves for others. In the name of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen
God gives God's self, so that we can become means of grace to others. In other words, be in service to Christ through your church. If you are not in service you are denying God's gifts to you.
Mark
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