[Oe List ...] Back issue: 10/24/19: Jessica Shine: Why The Church Must Die - Part 1; Spong revisited

Ellie Stock elliestock at aol.com
Wed Nov 6 10:31:59 PST 2019


Back issue:  10/24/19

 
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!important;line-height:150% !important;} }@media screen and (max-width:480px){ #yiv7615541282 #yiv7615541282templateBody .yiv7615541282mcnTextContent, #yiv7615541282 #yiv7615541282templateBody .yiv7615541282mcnTextContent p{ font-size:14px !important;line-height:150% !important;} }@media screen and (max-width:480px){ #yiv7615541282 #yiv7615541282templateFooter .yiv7615541282mcnTextContent, #yiv7615541282 #yiv7615541282templateFooter .yiv7615541282mcnTextContent p{ font-size:12px !important;line-height:150% !important;} } Churchianity Specifically.  
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Why The Church Must Die - Part 1
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|  Essay by Rev. Jessica Shine
 October 24, 2019 The church isn’t just dying. In many parts of the United States, it is already dead.
  
 At least, its impact is. The pews are still warm, the offering plates clanking with coins, and the bodies are present.  However the church itself is wasting away and has become irrelevant. It has become a hall to rent or a historic building. And that must die.
  
 The Church must die. Churchianity[1] specifically. The elevatin g of an organization or institution, and its importance over that of Jesus, is what I mean by  churchianity. Often in America, the words church and churchianity are virtually interchangeable. And this gospel of its death is really good news.
  
 I know, I know, ‘but my denomination is part of the fastest growing evangelical groups.’ ‘America is Laodicea (an oft misquoted reference to Revelation 3), when will we wake up!’ ‘But the church is growing outside of North America.’
  
 And yet, since 1990 The Pew Research Center reports that Americans have dropped from 92% to 70% reporting they believe  in God. Not a Christian God only, as this statistic includes Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and other faith groups. “The recent  decrease in religious beliefs and behaviors is largely attributable to the “nones” – the growing minority of Americans, particularly in the Millennial generation, who say they do not belong to any organized faith.”[2] Often considering themselves spiritual but not religious because Churchianity doesn’t align with a current  understanding of social issues, including homosexuality. The church in North America is following suit behind its predecessors in Europe,  where the demise of the mainline institution was exacerbated by its lack of relevance and over emphasis on a constructed  building rather than human presence. In other words, crusades ended and life kept moving and nobody missed the church. Too often it seems the church is creating another crusade to prove its relevance, only distancing those who really want to know more about Jesus and  encounter the Teacher.
  
 Before you roll your eyes, understand I love the Church and what she has given me: rich experiences of building community,  fellowship in other countries, a deeper understanding of scripture, the challenges (and blessings) of building community in  suburbia as a woman of color, the collegiality of (a few) brothers (and more sisters) in ministry who are able to show mutual  support. And yet, I could write a third testament on what Jesus never actually said, but Churchianity has made a dividing line or test of fellowship.
  
 For example:    
   - Jesus never intended to start an institution or another religion apart from Judaism. Spoiler alert: Jesus was a brown Jewish person from north east Africa. (Feel free to argue, but there is no ‘middle east’ state,  country, or continent. That label is for oppressive religious, political and economic purposes).
   - Jesus never intended to compete with other mystical viewpoints of the Divine. I.e. Jesus’ primary audience was his Jewish communities and occasionally their immediate captors (the Roman empire), not Buddhists, not Hindus, not that weird church down the street you keep getting postcards from.
   - Jesus really is the point, not churchianity. In the gospels and the scriptures that follow, Jesus invited his community to two simple practices. These were echoes from the Tanakh (Jewish scriptures most Christians, including progressives, harmfully  label as the old testament). The two pillars of Jesus' community were gathering together for meals and the sharing of resources (communion), and baptism (regular ritual cleansing).
   - The Church is not a building or an institution. It’s people and we’re messy.
  
 Churchianity must die because it is a tool of the modern supremacist empire crafted by political powers who want a system to control rather  than commune. It is ancient, but emigrated along with Christianity to this continent under the guise of fallacies like manifest destiny. Churchianity emphasizes things Jesus never said (or did). Churchianity has bought into the empire ideology that bigger is better, and that  we must have more in order to prove our relevance or importance. I recently saw a billboard advertising a ‘christian’ event that included the word ‘conquer’  in the title. Paul and Jesus had plenty to say about ‘conquering’ ourself and our ego, yet the church has taken these and other teachings and created a mandate for us to ‘fix’ each other, or make each other into an image of godliness the church says is sacred. Stuff Jesus never said.
  
 And yet….
  
 We need connection with each other. We need to sit across from each other at meal time, to laugh together, walk together, talk together. Jesus knew this and surrounded himself  with people who would never willingly choose to eat together, even with someone like him. Jesus often honored and challenged the community that raised him. Honoring his mother’s request for wine at a wedding party or inviting himself to dinner with a tax collecting traitor. Jesus  inserted himself into uncomfortable spaces because he understood the value of communing together. And yet, we face a loneliness epidemic in North America that includes a stark disconnection to the communal spirituality of our ancestors. In fact, most Americans aren’t even  conscious of how their ancestors viewed the Divine.
  
 Friendship expert, Shasta Nelson says, “We know more people in history, and yet we feel like we have no one to confide in… modern day  loneliness is not because we need to interact more, it’s because we need more intimacy. Frientimacy is a relationship where both people feel seen in a safe and satisfying way[3].” Unfortunately, Churchianity defines how we see each other, and horrifically also defines how we navigate friendship. And yet,  according to Nelson, the single greatest factor for life expectancy is meaningful relationship. Not diet, exercise, or social issues like smoking or drinking. Let that sink in. Jesus commanded his followers to love radically, yet Churchianity insists we must modify our behavior  before we can have community. The church has lost its relevance as community and within community, and so it will die.
  
 We need connection with the Divine. Beyond the science that proves meditative and prayerful practices actually help our healing, we inherently have an openness  to God, Wonder, Awe (the Divine who has many names or no name). Writers of Progressive Christian children’s curriculum know this and often invite more of that curiosity forward to help kids become learners, rather than receptacles of pre-decided information. We are born with an inherent  awareness and desire for communion with God, yet so little of our daily routine fosters that. Within the church, connection to the Divine can feel even more narrow and difficult. Stuff Jesus never said or did in his own life has been used to keep us within the confines of Churchianity and out of the realm of communion.
  
 In the tradition I came from, I was inspired by nature based awareness and practices of pioneers like John Harvey Kellogg, who founded  sanitariums (and invented modern breakfast cereal). Kellogg and others wrote about the benefits of fresh air, exercise, moderation. Spiritual teachers embraced this ancient wisdom in a time when our air was being poisoned by gun powder and factory exhaust. The founder of the denomination that  ordained me often advocated for fresh, whole foods, adequate sleep, and avoiding extremes.
  
 Our modern American society hasn’t been built by people who want to make us happy or holy. It’s been built and is still maintained by people  who want to produce more faster, and who have taught us that our worth depends on what we produce. Unfortunately, like many dying corporations, the church baptized itself in a meritocracy mindset. And now, we are reaping the consequences of those ‘founding fathers’ as well  as the Jesus movement (birth of modern evangelicalism) and the Jesus seminar alike. This is something I’ll be unpacking in an upcoming article, please keep reading.
  
 And yet, the Jesus of the gospels stands in stark contrast to production (and deconstruction) as a means to a fulfilled life. For  example, in the book attributed to Matthew, Jesus goes to the desert after a show stopping baptism, complete with descending dove and heavenly  proclamation. Instead of engaging cheering crowds he retreats.
  
 What?!?
  
 Then, when he returns to civilization, Jesus turns down an invitation to power and instead spends time with the homeless, prostitutes,  and is accused of being drunk. Imagine what would happen in your city if Christians did what Jesus did? He loves his small community, this band of misfits and mismatched beings. Then the strangest twist… HE DIES.
  
 Jesus doesn’t ascend the lectern and deliver a speech to the religious leaders motivating them for the next general assembly or offer a vision  of evangelism for the next 10 decades. He dies. And he makes sure his community knows how much he loves them. He offers them bread, wine, and his body. Jesus makes sure his mother has community, that his brother has community[4]. In how he dies and in how he lives, Jesus honors the deep need we all have for communion with each other and with God.
  
 And when Jesus is resurrected , he STILL doesn’t establish himself on a throne or political banner (I don’t actually care if you believe the resurrection part  because it’s not important to my point or the point of the story). Instead, Jesus does weird stuff like sneaking up on two of his friends walking and grieving, but he hides his identity[5]! He hides who he is and asks them questions so he can be with them in their grief. He invites them to be vulnerable, and in their  vulnerability to invite community.
  
 Then he shows up while his community is actually doing what he modeled for them and gives one mandate: peace[6]. ‘Do all of what you have seen and experienced , and trust that the same spirit that empowered me is empowering you.’ Jesus says this to a room of mixed races, religions, and sexes. To a room of people without theological training or certificates, or  linguistic and exegetical prowess. These are the people (not plutocracy) to whom Jesus entrusts the ‘good news.’ People who have serious doubts about each other, and will argue with each other, and may even despise each other. And when one of them can’t believe it because he wasn’t actually  there, Jesus shows up again and offers peace! What would happen if the church offered peace in the midst of doubt? If those who profess to  follow Jesus shared a greeting of peace with those in turmoil? Most of us don’t actually need answers in our doubt, we need communion. To know we are not alone.
  
 And yet, the Church in North America is dying. And the good news is that it must die. Churchianity must die because it isn’t the way of  Jesus. In many ways the church has usurped the place of Jesus in importance. A building, an institution, and a theology have taken the focus rather than the way of peace. In an effort to make things cleaner, decisions easier, and more streamlined, the wrestling and messiness has been  replaced by committees and mandates. In some ways, that has been helpful. However, it has also prioritized uniformity over unity, and  created competition amongst denominations rather than communal compassion for a mutual mission: to further the peace the Teacher offered. In doing so, the  church has also marginalized those varied people that Jesus brought together and trampled on the peace that was tantamount to those  communal gatherings.
  
 So here’s the really hard part (if you’re still reading this ). For those of us who do love the church, where does that leave us? Not just the idea of church, but also the people.
  
 As ministers, we must help midwife a transition. In North America, this means owning the complacency and complicit behavior of the  church, which, through the guise of evangelism, enslaves people of color and indigenous people to white Anglo-Saxon language and culture, and robs them of their legitimate heritage[7]. By leading our congregations to do this difficult work, first internally, then as a community , we can help midwife this transition of death. We must own the white-washing of Jesus that we inherited from Romanism, Europeans, and  those early pioneers who weaponized it against Native Indigenous people.
  
 We must midwife the church to die a good death by living differently in our world. Not just driving less, or driving a different car, but  by detaching ourselves from a narcissist capitalist system that keeps us in debt and addicted to what we do not need to be happy. Rather than industrializing the church, we as clergy, must help make the church smaller and more relevant. We must be willing to return to our prophetic calling of living in commune with each other and the Divine, as Jesus did. We must be willing to live as Jesus lived, and die as Jesus died, not as a  martyr but as a person opposed to a system of oppression who offers themselves up fully.
  
 The church and Churchianity must die. And thank God, it is, so that what can be reborn, or resurrected, is a new Community. Messy,  meaningful, community. I believe when the churchianity of North America dies, or implodes, it will make way for small organic, messy communities to gather like they did after Jesus death. Much like Jesus gathered to himself. Much like they have in villages and tribes for  centuries. In homes, in coffee shops, and in nature we will gather because we are yearning to connect with each other and with the Divine. We will share each other’s joys and burdens, without need for an employed minister or an institutional affiliation. Egalitarian community was the vision of  Jesus and is rising up now in our midst through Black Lives Matter and occupy movements. This uprising is among the greatest fears of  the empire of Churchianity.
  
 The late prophet, Rachel Held Evans wrote, “Death is something empires worry about, not something gardeners worry about. It’s  certainly not something resurrection people worry about.[8]” Death is part of the life cycle, yet so many christians are in denial about the church’s impending death, and even fewer want  to believe that it must die. I was too, until I realized that there was no room for me in the Church. Not for my whole self. What hurt even more was realizing that there isn’t room in the church for the people Jesus called community. Which meant there probably isn’t much room for Jesus. I  wonder how the Gardener will lovingly tend and prune those thorny branches that seem bent on destroying the vine and roots.
  
 Perhaps when the church dies, then we will return to our Communal roots as an ecological partner and child of this planet, along with  our relatives the trees, and winged, and swimming beings. Maybe then we will be true students of creation ever growing in community. Communing with each other and with God. ~ Rev. Jessica Shine 
 Read online here
 
 About the Author
 Reverend Jessica Shine earned degrees in theology and divinity, but still hasn’t figured out how to walk on water. Despite  this, she was ordained to ministry by the Seventh-day Adventist church and continues offering spiritual care as a clergy member of The CHI Interfaith Community (based in Berkeley, CA). With two decades of experience serving church communities, police  officers, hospital staff, and teenagers, Shine has a passion for people and a skill for communicating in transformative ways. Her spirituality began in childhood, was influenced by Jimmy Swaggart and Mother Theresa, and continues in the Pacific Northwest where she  resides on Kalapuya land.
     [1] I first heard this term from The Rev Deshna Charron, who graciously cited The Rev Dr Megan Wagner, PhD. Perhaps  there are others who have also identified this term. [2] US Public Becoming Less Religious, Article, Web:https://www.pewforum.org/2015/11/03/u-s-public-becoming-less-religious/ [3] Nelson, Shasta Frientimacy: How to Deepen Friendships for Lifelong Health and Happiness. Seal Press, 2016. Print. [4] John 19:25-27 [5] Luke 24:13-35 [6] John 20:19-29 [7] Deep Gratitude to my friend and teacher, Patricia St. Onge, and her offerings. Here is a helpful beginning guide  for congregations:https://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/make-it-right/indigenous-rituals-heal-us [8] Evans, Rachel Held. Searching for Sunday: Loving, Leaving, and Finding the Church. Nelson Books, 2015. Print.   |

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Question & Answer
 
 
 Q: By Susan
 I am changing from beliefs I was taught all my young life as the daughter of a minister with Southern Baptist Church. Though I do think my Dad wanted to “step outside of the  box” of traditional beliefs. Ever since being “missionaries “ to West Africa back in 80’s and 90’s and I returned back to US I haven’t been the same as far as my “traditional beliefs” go. I didn’t fit into any Baptist Church anymore. I have wrestled  with this for 20 years. Didn’t think I could talk to anyone I knew fearing I would lose their friendship. I read  most of Dr Spong’s book “Unbelievable “ and realized I identified with most of his thoughts and beliefs. But still how can I be honest and share what I believe with the people I grew up with? Don’t think they will speak to me again. And some are  my family members. How do I share my new beliefs when discussions come up? 

 A: By Toni Reynolds
 
 Dear Susan, What a delicate and powerful question. I can empathize with you in some ways. My parents were raised Southern Baptist and I  have found myself struggling with the same question as I continue to find myself more settled in a set of traditions that often feel like 180 degrees and half a plant away from Christianity. I have noticed in myself that I had to get clear about my motivation to  share my beliefs with my family, and with others in general. I had to decide if I was more interested in being right, or being  understood. Or, if I was more interested in changing their minds, to help them “evolve” like me, or, if I just truly longed to speak with them  about a piece of my spiritual life that was enlivened for me at that time.
  
 That clarity of intention matters greatly. People know when we’re engaging with them for ulterior motives, such as changing  them or judging them. For matters like this, where it can feel like relationships are at stake, it is so important to move with certainty about why you’re sharing such a deeply intimate piece of information. In my own experience, when I offer my new thoughts as  less of my own and more as other ideas that exist in the world, things have gone more smoothly. If I enter a conversation and  take the posture of “I know this better” or some such, it has not gone well. This seems basic, but it’s a subtlety that changes the tone of a  meaningful conversation. Know why you want to say what you want to say.
  
 Another aspect that has mattered greatly for me is adjusting what I expect of my family. I wouldn’t go to Dunkin Donuts and  expect to order a Big Mac. As we grow and change we have to continuously check in about what we need and where we’re able to get  it. If talking theology and spirituality enlivens you, and you don’t feel safe sharing those truths about yourself with your family, it may help to  find some place to share your spiritual truths. If that’s the case, it will be important to properly mourn what it means that  you’re family can no longer offer that for you. It need not mean that you disengage with them, but that you become more careful with yourself about how and what you share with them.
  
 We’re all on different journeys. Even that truth can be difficult to say in certain company. Still, when I can remind myself  that everyone has the freedom to journey as they see fit, it helps me respect that mine may not be so well understood by others. So, when I find myself in conversations like the one you have in mind, I imagine finding a way to be “the curious one” in the conversation.  Instead of answering their questions about what I believe, I often try and hear more from them about why they think and feel  what they do. Are there things they believe that cause them to feel they’d be outcast if they said them out loud? Have they ever experienced something unexplainable?  Something that doesn’t quite fit the traditional understanding of what’s possible or “allowed” by their faith tradition. Underneath the scripts and narratives they’ve memorized, are their differing thoughts, experiences that cause them to question. By centering my family in those conversations I have found that they share more similar feelings to me  than I expected. And, I can leave the conversation with a better sense of the boundaries, what else actually can be talked about. A latent effect of this centering of their perspective every once in a while is that they have learned quite a bit about me, without my need to say anything specific. They have gathered enough  information about my growth from my questions. Every once in a while they even surprise me with an intuitive read of where I’m located on a certain issue. It seems that we’re always learning about one another, even if it’s not explicit in a conversation.
  
 Susan, another challenging reality may be that you aren’t able to share your beliefs with your family. That may be a territory  that you explore with a different set of select people in your life, people who “get you” in a way that your family used to. It may be that you only suspend this type of sharing with family for a short while. Change is happening all the time, they may be the next person you know to read Unbelievable and want to talk to you about it. Until then, ask yourself some questions about how you can feel like yourself without  exposing so much of yourself that you lose precious relationships. Every relationship goes through seasons, and has its own set of expiration dates and limitations. It is possible, and normal, for this to happen between you and your family.
  
 I hope this was helpful in the midst of an uncomfortable aspect of human growth. I wish for you to find a way forward  with your family that doesn’t jeopardize your emotional safety or integrity. There is definitely a way forward, I trust it will emerge smoothly ~ Toni Reynolds
 
 Read and share online here
 
 About the Author
 Minister Toni Anne Reynolds is committed to singing flesh onto the bones of the Christian tradition by incorporating  recently found texts of the ancient world into liturgy, sermons, and poetry. Toni’s Christianity forms a holy trinity with the  psychological medicine of Tibetan Buddhism and the eternal Life found in Yoruba traditions. Balanced in an eclectic  faith and focused in theology, Toni’s ministry offers a unique perspective on life, theology, and spirituality.  |

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Bishop John Shelby Spong Revisited
 
 
 
The Universe, the Star of Bethlehem
 and Professor Alex Filippenko
 
 Essay by Bishop John Shelby Spong
 April 30,2008 Whether I am on the lecture circuit, where I spend most of my time, or in my home a normal day for me starts about 6:00 a.m.,  when I go either to the hotel’s “fitness room” or to the first floor of our home to spend an hour or more on a treadmill. It would no longer be accurate to describe what I do there as “running” since, except for my warm up and cool down periods, I average a pace of  somewhere between four and five miles per hour. My minimum goal each day is four miles and I rarely go beyond five. My other  ambition is to burn over 700 calories each morning. Together my wife and I put over 2500 miles a year on a treadmill. I am confident that I would not keep up this long standing routine were it not for a second factor. While working on that treadmill, I am listening to books or  lectures that come to me via tapes and CDs, or viewing and listening to university courses via DVDs.
 
 Reading books on tape has been a passion of mine since 1976, when I became aware existentially that the life of a bishop  required an inordinate amount of time in an automobile. That was when I discovered that I could rent books on tape from a company in Long Beach, California, or get them free from my public library. The process transformed driving from drudgery into sheer  pleasure. In those years I “read” on tape an average of 80 books a year. I am not a devotee of fiction, though I did read the complete works of Charles Dickens on tape about 20 years ago. My tastes rather run to history, biography, philosophy, science and studies in the  fields of art and music. I like to read the classics that everyone knows about, but few have read in their entirety. I think of  Charles Darwin’s “Notes from the Voyage of the Beagle” and his On the Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection. I have also read the multi-volumes series such as The Story of Civilization by Will and Ariel Durant and The Second World War by  Winston Churchill. Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire was another reading adventure.
 
 When I retired in 2000 my time in the car diminished so I transferred my passion for learning through recorded books to  a treadmill, to long walks that I take with my wife and even to my hobby of cooking. To bake a strawberry-rhubarb pie while listening to a book being read on tape is a double source of joy. I carry a tape player with me like a piece of clothing.
 
 About a decade ago, I discovered through my public library something called The Teaching Company. This company  searches out the best professors in America at universities and colleges, large and small, and contracts with them to put their courses on tape, CDs or DVDs, so that people like me can sit at the feet of the best teachers in this land, in effect returning to the  university classroom. In this series I have taken such courses as the “Religions of the World” with Diana Eck of Harvard; the history of music, the history of opera, a course on the symphonies of Beethoven, the works of Mozart and the operas of Verdi all with Robert  Greenberg of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, perhaps the finest teacher to whom I have ever listened; the “Great  Artists of the Italian Renaissance,” taught by William Kloss of the Smithsonian Institution; “Shaping Philosophers of Western Civilization,” a  course that began with Plato and Aristotle and journeyed through Augustine and Aquinas, before winding up with  John Locke, David Hume, Benedict Spinoza, Emmanuel Kant, Rene Descartes, Blaise Paschal and many others, taught by Alan Kors of Princeton of the  University of Pennsylvania. All have been thrilling breakthroughs for me in both acquiring knowledge and gaining insight. It is this learning experience that keeps me dedicated to the routine of daily exercise on my treadmill or in the hotel.
 
 I just recently completed the lectures, I think there were 48 in this series, entitled “Understanding the  Universe,” taught by Professor Alex Filippenko of the University of California at Berkeley. Seldom have I experienced a more expansive vision of  the size and majesty of the universe and of our place within it. Professor Filippenko is relatively young, obviously brilliant  and clearly in love with his subject. He travels the world to view full eclipses. He follows every space probe, from the moon landing to the unnamed spacecraft that took pictures of Jupiter, with the glee of a schoolboy eating a banana split. He relates the debates among  astronomers over such topics as whether Pluto should be called a planet or not with the same passion that marks the  Yankee-Red Sox rivalry in baseball. He uses models to illustrate the relationships between various heavenly bodies. He explains why the  consensus among astronomers is that the moon was created early in the earth’s history by a collision with the earth  of a giant heavenly body about the size of Mars. This collision sent a massive chunk of the earth’s material into orbit around this planet,  first as debris, but over an expanse of time, this debris formed itself into a heavenly body called the moon.  Read On...  |

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Announcements
 

  
 
Aquinas @ Orvieto with Matthew Fox
   Deepen your own spiritual journey as mystic and prophet with a 5-Day Retreat, July 5-10, 2020 in Orvieto, Italy with Matthew Fox, Claudia Picardi, Meschi Chavez, and Gianluigi Guglielmetti – Featuring a Special Visit by Rupert Sheldrake. 
 Study the spiritual teachings of one of the greatest minds of Western civilization–Thomas Aquinas– with a preeminent scholar of Christian  spirituality, Matthew Fox, in the amazing Italian town of Orvieto, famous for its views and art, where Aquinas himself taught and preached. Orvieto is located two hours from where Aquinas was born in Roccasecca, and where he died at Fossanova Abbey. And 90 minutes from Rome or  Assisi!
 Register by October 31, 2019 for early bird price of $995.  READ ON ...  |

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