T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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515.1 | perhaps a confession | OLDTMR::FRANCEY | M/L&CE SECG dtn 223-5427 pko3-1/d18 | Wed Sep 02 1992 22:12 | 43 |
| Dot and I haven't been to "our" church since the Sunday after Easter.
Now you might think that's a little strange, and maybe it just is, that
one heading toward being a minister finds it intolerable within one's
own church setting. Dot and I study scripture almost every day and are
on a one-year tract going through what we think is a rather hilarious
version of the bible. We're thankful that we've got a better grip on
the word than this particular "interpretation", ie. not a translation.
We've also attended other distant churches and are in the process of
circulation of our profiles.
But, back to the point. I feel so strongly that the "new" minister of
our church has so completely hosed the congregation that I cannot be in
the sanctuary listening to his spiritual guidance. I feel betrayed by
him as he is one who became the minister thru what I call foul play.
You see, he was the interim minister who contractually signed a
statement that he would not be a candidate for the position of minister
as a condition for his being the interim.
Nobody in the congregation that I know of seems to have an inkling of
hosed they have been. I, except for Dot, stand alone. I am
psychologically blocked, unable to move, out of this frozen terrible
state of mind. I know that I should love all, that I am called by the
Christ to do no less than that, yet I must admit that all I feel is
hatred for this person.
When Dot and I are ordained and if we are to follow the typical pattern
during the ordination ceremony, we will be ordained at our current
church and under the placing of the hand which includes the new
minister.
How am I to attend our church, to mix with the people of the church and
to be honest when asked about how great it is to have a new minister?
Typically, in our denomination and with our ecclesiastical standing, we
would go to our conference minist4er for advice and support - to the
minister of ministers as they are known. In our case, the conference
minister wholly endorsed this action.
God forgive me and help me some way to move thru this mess.
Wishing Shalom to Dot and myself and to you,
Ron
|
515.2 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Keep on loving boldly! | Wed Sep 02 1992 23:09 | 11 |
| Ron,
I'm certain that .1 was not an easy thing to talk about. I appreciate
your unswerving honesty in your self-examination. Naturally, I'm not
inclined to be as critical as you are of yourself, though.
May God be with you in your struggle with this difficult situation.
Peace,
Richard
|
515.3 | lots of reasons to stay home | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Sep 03 1992 08:41 | 32 |
| I was raised to attend church every week but haven't done so in
years. This is for a number of reasons. Primary is that I haven't
found a church that was close enough to be active in and comfortable
to worship in. Comfortable is as good a word as I can come up with.
In some ways this is my fault I guess. I was spoiled as a child, being
a preachers kid I was treated very well in church. I'm not looking for
that sort of treatment but I'm looking for some sort of atmosphere that
seems rare.
Also my father is a very good preacher. There are few preachers who
can match his sermons. If I found a preacher as good I'd probably
attend even if the church otherwise didn't meet all my needs. Worship
is easy to do by ones self, though I do miss group worship, but good
self teaching is much harder.
Other people I've talked to over the years have a wide range of reasons
for staying away. "The members there are hypocrites" is the one I've
heard the most often. Also complaints that church was just a social
place where people were judged by what they wear or drive. Not liking
the minister is also a common reason. That not liking can range from
the way they preach, their "social agenda", the wife working for a
living, to any number of other reasons both trivial and serious.
Alfred
RE: .1 Obviously this is an emotional issue for you but I don't see
this as as big a problem as you do. I understand that this person
agreed not be be a candidate and then accepted the job permanently.
Did circumstances change after that agreement? Where there good or
better candidates for the job? Why does this conference minister
endorse this action? Is he/she so easily snowed as the congregation?
|
515.4 | a few more (my) 1-sided comments | OLDTMR::FRANCEY | M/L&CE SECG dtn 223-5427 pko3-1/d18 | Thu Sep 03 1992 11:30 | 50 |
| re .-1
The "new" minister had his application for the position announced as
the first item of business at the diaconate meeting that was meeting
for the purpose of having the pastoral search committee present their
"finalist's" credentials for the position. The pastoral search
committee had spent 1 1/3 years studying about 60 to 80 profiles, had
interviewed six candidates and had unanimously selected the finalist
who they believed to be the right person as the future minister of the
church.
Interims have a decided advantage over any candidates and it is deemed
unfair and unethical for one to take on the interim position and then
to grease their way into the position as minister. This is why almost
all churches and conferences in my denomination has the contract that
gets signed at both levels. According to another member of the
pastoral search committee, he said he hadn't realized what he had
signed and it he had known about this he probably wouldn't have taken
on the position as interim.
I have a particularly difficult problem with a person who takes such an
advantage for personal gain over the members of the congregation. How
can one trust him in other areas to be honest and sensitive and caring?
In a way this brings back some of the classroom discussions we had at
seminary when studying the historical debates of the "value" of
receiving Holy Communion during the early days of the RC Church from
one who was deemed an "unfit" priest. Did the people actually recive
communion; was the baptism valid, etc..
Sitting in church this past Easter was a horrible experience for me. I
didn't want at all for it to be a horrible experience but for me it was
not a "worship" service.
I feel strongly about other type positions where someone is in a
position of power over people who are in very vulnerable points in
their lives. I quit Prison Ministry because of the junk theology that
was being dumped on people who would cling to anything they thought was
"safe".
Well, I do hope that the new pastor does touch the people in
significant ways and is a source of comfort and inspiration to them. I
hope he laughs with them, cries with them and helps them to know that
God loves them wherever they are and wherever they go, now and forever
more. God's wish for them would then be fulfilled. Thanks be to God!
Shalom (and I think I'll go back into RO mode for awhile longer),
Ron
|
515.5 | | ATSE::FLAHERTY | I am an x xa man! | Thu Sep 03 1992 11:42 | 9 |
| Ron,
Love and healing prayers to both you and Dot as you continue to deal
with this situation.
Warm hugs,
Ro
|
515.6 | Not inclusive enough | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Thu Sep 03 1992 12:49 | 35 |
| I know a lot a very spiritual and therefore according to my definition
deeply religious people who stay away from church because of the rigid
application of doctrine and dogma as part of the liturgy. The Apostles
Creed is a big part of most Christian Churches and many people cannot
accept it. Some accept it symbolically and take the positive from the
services and attend regularly. Some mask or deny there own doubts.
Others are denied the support of the church community because of there
own intellectual and spiritual honesty.
Since my church does not meet in the summer, I have attended three
Christian Churches in my town this summer. At the Lutheran church I
initially felt a sense of warmth but then at communion time I read in
the bulletin "if you accept the real presence of Jesus Christ as you
savior please join us" That for me caused a shift from the experiential
nature of worship to the intellectual. Do I meet the litmus test for
inclusion.
I am definately a Unitarian Universalist but would like to be able to
consider the Christian Church as my extended church family. All the
symbols and tests of faith that act to make the individual Christian
fellowship an exclusive group keep me away and also keep many other
deeply spiritual people away.
The point is, that many people do not attend church because of the lack
of acceptance. If Christianity is defined narrowly, the only option
for many people is to stay at home.
Patricia
|
515.7 | For emergency purposes only! | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Keep on loving boldly! | Thu Sep 03 1992 20:27 | 10 |
| I recall several years ago my spouse inviting the woman who lived across the
street to come to church with us. "What for?" she responded. "Nobody's
dying. Everybody here is pretty healthy."
Seems that she thought she needed to go to church only when there was a
crisis at hand. Church to her was like dialing 911 to God.
Peace,
Richard
|
515.8 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Fri Sep 04 1992 10:41 | 4 |
| Maybe one of the more obvious reasons why some people stay away from church
is that church services can be a crashing bore.
Mike
|
515.9 | doesn't have to be boring and stifled | ATSE::FLAHERTY | I am an x xa man! | Fri Sep 04 1992 11:16 | 14 |
| Mike (.8),
Matthew Fox addresses that issue in his books/lectures. He says with
the hard wooden pews and kneelers, it is extremely uncomfortable as
well as boring to sit in church for services. He feels the church
needs to allow people to feel their connection with the Divine through
active participation through movement, dance, and ritual. Having
participated in services where this was encouraged, I agree with his
theory.
FWIW,
Ro
|
515.10 | the long sleep... | VIDSYS::PARENT | things in the mirror are backward | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:34 | 16 |
|
Ro, I agree.
I attend a UU church and am a member of the choral group. The
congregation is very active musically. I get a the sense of
participation and support for my beliefs. It amazes me that I look
forward to Sunday morning to go out of my way to drive 40 minutes
for a service.
I know why I didn't attend before, spiritual coma. It took a
combination of things to reawaken my inner self(thanks Dave, Nanci, ;-)),
some of them originating here.
Peace,
Allison
|
515.11 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Fri Sep 04 1992 14:21 | 9 |
| re: .9
Then Matthew Fox is a very bright man!
Let us wander back a couple of hundred years, or so, in American
History when the custom was to spend hours, if not all day, in church on
Sunday. Must have been awful.
Mike
|
515.12 | I ain't *that* old! | LJOHUB::NSMITH | rises up with eagle wings | Fri Sep 04 1992 15:17 | 9 |
| Well... camp meetings, revival meetings, and all-day-meetin's-with-
dinner-on-the-ground weren't so bad!!
When I was growing up and there was no TV (in my socio-economic class,
anyway) and cards and dancing were frowned on and movies were a special
treat, long hours at church met social and cultural needs as well as
religious ones...
Nancy
|
515.13 | Sorry, but... | CHGV04::ORZECH | Alvin Orzechowski @ACI | Wed Sep 16 1992 12:08 | 9 |
| Excuse me for nit-picking (which this is), but "people" in the base
question is too broad. I presume you mean (considering the context)
"Christians" or "professing Christians". Certainly us agnostics are
people and so it's obvious why I "stay away from church" (although I'm
told I would find a home in most any Unitarian congregation).
Think "Peace",
Alvin
|
515.14 | | JURAN::SILVA | If it weren't for you meddling kids.... | Wed Sep 16 1992 12:33 | 18 |
|
When I was a kid we HAD to go to church. The routine was exactly the
same every week. After the 11th grade (we made our confirmations) I didn't have
to go anymore and didn't. About 2 years later I went back and found I still
knew the routine, knew what the priest was going to say (except for the
Gospel), when the bell would be rung, what songs would be sung. I went to a
Charsmatic Church in Worcester Ma a couple of years after that and really
enjoyed it. It was lively, had people interested and you didn't have to fight
staying awake. Any church that can have the congregation participating with
emotions (and not just going through the motions) has a much better chance at
keeping the people coming back week after week AND keeping the congregations
attention span. :-)
Glen
|
515.15 | RE: .14 - when I was a child, I thought as a child... | CHGV04::ORZECH | Alvin Orzechowski @ACI | Wed Sep 16 1992 12:58 | 7 |
| An interesting book that offers a "reason", if you will, for the
"sameness" of the mass is _Why Catholics Can't Sing_, by Thomas Day
(Crossroad Publishing Company, publisher).
Think "Peace",
Alvin
|