Friday, April 5, 2013

Sins Against Singles: How the church is failing singles within it's community


Come back and see us when you’re married.”
         For many millennials (ages 18-29) this is the perceived attitude in the church. Several articles have been released recently (one by Slate and one by The Atlantic, among others) wondering why those same millennials are getting married at the oldest average age in the history of the United States. To some like my friend Drew who married young, it was a pushback against a society that tells you it’s simply better to wait until you’re done with college and have a career before you get married.
How does that look for Christians? What if there is a pushback within a pushback? While society also tells us it’s more beneficial to wait until you’re older to marry, the church has done the same thing. The church, intentionally or not, has sinned against its singles. A number of ministries are geared toward members of the church who are married or have children. With more and more people waiting until they have a career and finish college to get married, the church has for years now geared activities towards those people because they have the money and means to support the church.

            Many churches care about the singles within their church; they just care for the wrong reasons. I believe that life is full of seasons. One of the most important in the life of any Christian is the period of singleness. This is when you develop who you are and set goals for who you want to become. The problem is the Christian church as a whole has not taken this approach. In The United Methodist Church, we provide outstanding youth ministry, but when those youth go away to college, we lose them. It’s no surprise that as we cut back funding for Wesley Foundations and campus ministries across the country and depend on the local church to minister to college-aged students, many of whom are the “singles” the church needs, that millennials leave the church at an alarming rate because we are not funding the ministries during such a vital time for millennials effectively.

              Most of us who were plugged into a local church for college and the time thereafter experienced these efforts first hand. The problem is that many churches treat these singles as if they are “broken.” I once heard a woman remark to her daughters after meeting an 18-year-old young man who was single, “18 and not married? What a shame.” It’s this attitude that permeates our churches and causes these sins against the singles.

               Here’s what I mean: If you visit the average large United Methodist church in a decent-sized city there will undoubtedly be some type of singles or college-aged ministry. The problem with these ministries is in their goals. While invitations to singles groups at church are often done with the best intentions, the groups end up resembling a Christian dating website. If you sit in on one of these ministries, you will often find it run by a married person with or without their significant other. You will often find the group studying books like “The Five Love Languages.” You may also find the group doing Bible study about what qualities you need to learn or exhibit to be a “good Godly man or woman” that someone would “want to marry.”

                 It ultimately comes back to the goals of the church. Whether the church will acknowledge it or not, our activities are simply not friendly toward singles looking to get involved in a community of faith. That’s why the churches with the biggest singles and college-aged student involvement are the ones that invite them to be the body of Christ without having to “fix” them. They are the churches that plan longer mission trips so someone who is single with no family or child attachments can go for a long-term mission. They are the churches that plan local, inexpensive mission projects where singles and college-aged students can give back their God-given talents if they aren’t financially stable. They develop singles who are equally happy and developed single or in a relationship. They avoid the trap of hosting a singles group only to try and get those in the group down the aisle with a ring on their finger.

                   Many in the church will say we have neglected the older generations in an effort to reach the millennials. It’s actually the opposite. The biggest relational sin the church currently engages in is making singles feel as if they can’t contribute to the community and be part of the body of Christ because they aren’t married with kids. The ones who are pointed toward the married couple that sits in the front pew, has been married for 40 years, comes every Sunday, and tithes more than 10 percent and told, “That is who you should want to be like.” Marriage is not the end goal of Christianity. Developing a deep relationship with Christ that forms and molds you into a Disciple of Christ that works to bring His kingdom is the goal of Christianity, not marriage. Marriage allows you a partner along the way to accomplish this goal who you can love as Christ loves His church

                      We must view singles as equals in ministry, walk alongside and guide them toward Christ and what Christ calls us to — not what we think is success. Admit we are all broken but that being single isn’t one way we’re broken. Realize that the humble Rabbi from Nazareth we follow was single until his death in his 30s, and he and his 12 friends managed to do outstanding ministry in that time. We all have a role in the ministry of the body of Christ and part of that ministry is to allow singles to provide as much of a faithful witness as those who are married with kids. We must stop systematically ignoring what is for most people a huge season of their life. Being single does not mean you’re less of a member of the church. It doesn’t mean you’re broken and in need of fixing. It doesn’t mean you “just haven’t met The One yet.” It means that this is a season in your life, and as with all seasons of our lives, combined with the grace of the powerful God who we serve, great things can happen.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Why I'm jumping on a sinking ship

The United Methodist Church is a sinking ship. Amid dwindling numbers and fewer new professions of faith the church is dying. Truth be told by it's founder John Wesley's definition the church is already dead.

“I am not afraid that the people called Methodists should ever cease to exist either in Europe or America. But I am afraid lest they should only exist as a dead sect, having the form of religion without the power"-John Wesley

There is no power in a lot of the worship within the United Methodist church. Children who are born and raised in the church are leaving Christianity at an alarming rate (6 out of 10 men will walk away from their faith in college) those that are hanging around, are finding spiritual fulfillment outside of the Methodist Church. An example of such an event can be found on one of my previous posts. So why jump on a sinking ship? Why move towards ministry in a church that has hit an iceberg is going down fast? Because I believe in Jesus. I believe in redemption. I believe that "There is no pit so deep that God's love is not deeper still"-Betsie Ten Boom).  I believe that there is a better way than what we are doing now. I believe we can remove the fluff and regain the power. I believe that we can hold ourselves to a higher standards of our interactions with others without defending it with "i'm just a broken person". I grow so tired of seeing Methodist Pastors resort to snark and name-calling as if it somehow improves their point. I often find this occurring in articles posted by United Methodist Pastors. It's not a single place it happens either it's a total top to bottom epidemic. It occurs in letters coming from leaders of General Agencies all the way down to pastor's personal blogs. Look no further than the latest post on RethinkChurch. While my brother in Christ Morgan makes great points they are delineated by his name calling and snark used when dealing with Albert Mohler. I'm no fan of Mohler's either and goodness knows I've been way too snarky and condescending with those I disagree with but to do it on a nationally published article is not the time or the place. The points made in the post were outstanding (I would rather see an easter doodle from Google, but it's important to know the role faith played in Chavez's life) but I found myself wondering if using terms like "outragicals" did anything to improve the quality of the article. We must move on to better things. I'm jumping on the UMC boat because all of the work of going through candidacy has taught me that helping is a spiritual gift. I see people on this sinking ship grabbing as many buckets as they can working and working to bail out water and keep the ship afloat. It's time for me to roll up my sleeves and start bailing out water and lend a hand. How do we "fix" the UMC? Can the UMC be fixed? I believe it can because I believe in Christ's ability to redeem the broken and the UMC is most definitely broken at this point. I'm not anyone special. Just a small certified candidate for ministry in the UMC, but I do have a few ideas about how to fix the UMC.

1. Trim the fat (General Boards and Agencies all the way down to local congregations have too much fluff and fat. Get rid of it. Better budgets and more efficient use of mission shares.)

2. Accountability (As a pastor you swear to uphold certain ideas and rules. If you can't uphold that deal there need to be consequences. Ineffective leadership with zero accountability is killing the church)

3.End Online Seminary (Sorry I know it's "producing lots of UMC pastors" but it's killing the church because it's producing pastors that are the same person they are when they started seminary because they were never forced to interact and grow. This is really an argument of quantity over quality. Online or predominately online seminaries are producing large numbers of pastors but if 10 out of every 100 they produce is effective it's still a failure)

4. Increase educational requirements (Many Pastors coming out of seminary are ill equipped. Pastors get to small churches and realize they have to lead "Children's Church" with no training or idea how to most effectively communicate the Gospel of Christ to young children. That's just one example of how ill equipped some seminaries are leaving pastors)

5. Establish a better balance between personal and social holiness (Wesley tells us we need both, but right now the UMC is so sold out on social holiness at the expense of personal holiness that we're creating form with no power. I can hear the arguments coming in now "social holiness leads to personal holiness" that may be true in some cases not all. Whereas Wesley interprets the Bible to say in James that our works are an outpouring of our faith. )

6. Make room for more voices (right now there is no room for middle ground. If you want to have a voice in a conference, agency, church, etc you have to have a certain voice. You have to agree with the views of those allowing your voice to be heard. I despise the IRD, but their article about the revolving door at the general agencies has some truth to it. I as a moderate Methodist would not be allowed a place at the table at most of the general boards and agencies or even some local churches. That must change. We must quit seeing every issue in the church as win/lose and view it as a chance for holy conferencing and hope)

These are just thoughts. They are things I hope can happen and I feel would help the UMC regain some of the power to go with it's form. It's the hope of these things that leads me to grab a lifejacket, hop on board, take a bucket, and start bailing out water. God can redeem all. Maybe there's hope for the UMC yet.