Tag Archives: consumer church

Dealing with church hoppers

Go_to_church...This week I’ve been reflecting on a quote from Stanley Hauerwas and combining his thoughts with some things that have been on my mind lately. First off, let’s hear Hauerwas again, in a quote from a recent interview:

But one of the great problems of Evangelical life in America is evangelicals think they have a relationship with God that they go to church to have expressed but church is a secondary phenomenon to their personal relationship and I think that’s to get it exactly backwards: that the Christian faith is meditated faith. It only comes through the witness of others as embodied in the church. So I should never trust my presumption that I know what my relationship with God is separate from how that is expressed through words and sacrament in the church. So evangelicals, I’m afraid, often times, with what appears to be very conservative religious convictions, make the church a secondary phenomenon to their assumed faith and I think that’s making it very hard to maintain disciplined congregations.

This lower-than-my-personal-experience view of the church leads us to a consumer attitude toward the church. We “church shop.” We test drive a church. Over time we continue to evaluate that church, comparing it to our own view of how church should be. Inevitably, most of us become dissatisfied. And a good percentage leave.

I live in Abilene, Texas. Though the city is only about 120,000 in population, we have dozens of Churches of Christ, as well as many, many other churches. In my opinion, this increases the pressure to church shop and church hop. Don’t like what’s going on? Have a problem with someone? Did something that you’re ashamed of? Just go somewhere else.

The churches on the receiving end of this situation often swell with pride. “Look, we’re growing! People want to come here. People want to be a part of what we’re doing.” And we gladly except the church consumer. “Well, it’s better than letting them go to the world. Or worse… to the Baptists!”

In some religious groups, when a person goes to a new church, they need to present a letter from their old church in order to be received as a member in good standing. We’re far too autonomous to have any sort of practice. We’re also very informal about church membership, so much so that in many cases, people never formally place membership.

It’s said that David Lipscomb taught that it was wrong not to attend the congregation nearest to your home. I’m beginning to agree with him.

If I had my druthers, here’s what we’d do when people come to us from another congregation:

  • Ask them pointed questions about why they’re wanting to transfer. I don’t mean that we should be hostile, but we should let them know that this is something we take seriously.
  • Contact leaders at the previous church. Find out if they know their members are wanting to leave. Find out if they know why and if they’ve made an effort to resolve the issue.
  • Tell the prospective member that any unresolved issues with the old church need to be resolved before they can be considered for membership. You don’t want people who are running away from a problem. It’s not good for them and it’s not good for either congregation involved.
  • Encourage people to remain where they are in the majority of cases. There are legitimate reasons why people need a change. They are the exception, not the rule. We need to discourage church hopping except for serious circumstances.

What do you think? Should we make it easy for people to go from place to place within the same city? Do churches have a right to refuse membership or to restrict the movement of believers? How can we better deal with the dissatisfied and disgruntled? Or is the status quo the way things should be?

Church members and the church

church-487980_640I included recently in the Links To Go a couple of articles Jay Guin published with reflections on statements by Stanley Hauerwas. Here’s one Hauerwas quote that caught my attention:

But one of the great problems of Evangelical life in America is evangelicals think they have a relationship with God that they go to church to have expressed but church is a secondary phenomenon to their personal relationship and I think that’s to get it exactly backwards: that the Christian faith is meditated faith. It only comes through the witness of others as embodied in the church. So I should never trust my presumption that I know what my relationship with God is separate from how that is expressed through words and sacrament in the church. So evangelicals, I’m afraid, often times, with what appears to be very conservative religious convictions, make the church a secondary phenomenon to their assumed faith and I think that’s making it very hard to maintain disciplined congregations. (found here)

That quote fit with some things I’ve been thinking on, namely the concept of church members as consumers. In my experience, we talk a good game about all of us together making up the church, yet all too often we find ourselves talking about the church as something external to us. We talk about what “they” are doing at church. We talk about a dissatisfaction with our local church and a desire to look elsewhere. When church isn’t what we want it to be, there’s little sense of personal failure; “my church” isn’t doing things right, instead of saying “we” aren’t doing things right.

So help me as I start working through some of this, using blog posts to think out loud. To what degree should our identity as a Christian be tied into our local congregation? Is it enough to feel loyalty to the universal church and not to the local expression of that church?

What about the concept of submitting to the leaders of that church? Seems like that gets harder when they are your peers, or worse yet, people younger than you.

How should we be expected to react when those leaders make a decision that goes against one of our convictions? Not just an opinion item, but something that we strongly hold to be true?

What responsibility do congregations have to one another when members want to stop attending one place and start attending another? What if there has been sin involved?

Lots of questions, and I can think of more along these lines. So I’ll stop muddying the waters and ask you to help me find some clarity. Let me hear some of your thoughts on these issues.

(Oh, and I know that those who belong to other religious groups may find all this a bit baffling, as does Hauerwas when observing Evangelical churches. If that’s the case, I ask that you bear with us as we discuss things foreign to your thinking.)

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