Are We Having Fun Yet?

Well, I'm noticing them going somewhere else, and it ain't always First Funny Church of Giggleville.
You see, I think they have enough events to go to in life. Baseball games, football practice, tae kwon do, the neighborhood playhouse and cinema, the local microbrewery, kareoke, all in enough time to get home to watch Survivor, Earl, and The Office. They don't need one more place to go to be entertained. They need Christ and community with His Church. They need opportunities to sing, pray, and learn the Word. This must be our priority.
Now before you start getting all jumpy and threatening to beat someone bloody, I'm not saying every Sunday has to be a Good Friday service, in silence, with black curtains, music in minor keys, a worship leader that looks like Robert Smith, and a moody, self-deprecating preacher. What I am saying is that people are changing. I don't believe they are looking for Pastor Jim Carrey, they are looking for someone to be real, reflect Christ, and teach the Word. If that particular teacher is funny, that's great. I think it's healthy for people to laugh, at themselves and at others. Seinfeld taught us that. I'm not teaching a course on public speaking, sermon preparation, or church psychology. I'm not saying don't tell a joke, perform a skit, or crawl through the legs of a fellow pastor if it crosses your mind. I'm am talking about reassessing our intentions and priorities. If your first comment on Sunday morning was "it was fun" and not "it revealed Christ", you may want to turn in your rubber chicken for a Bible.
6 Comments:
you speak sentiments that i have felt for awhile. i want to be filled when i go to church. i want to grow. if church became an event or just a habit i would stop going, because we need our lifeblood to flow and our curiosities to be peaked and then your only response can be growth.
the two guys in the chair look funny, and i mean that hwoever you need to take it.
well, fussy1, and others, i write my sermons thinking about the judgement the bible promises teachers of the word- a double judgement it says.
When i complete a sermon i usually as my wife or a close friend one question: "was Christ revealed."
Ocassionally a funny (or what i think is a funny thot) goes through my head and i say it. Sometimes people laugh. Sometimes i say serious things and people laugh.
I am not in for people's laugh, or my own measure of my sermon as good or bad. What do those things matter? One makes me a slave to opinion, the other on manic roller coaster of vain approval or vain condemnation.
Was Christ revealed?
....and thank you for being amused at times.
following up on waraxe, among the pastors we have all sort of decided that we are just going to be ourselves, which, as scott reflected in his post, is the best way to be. I tend to be a bit eccentric, and a little quirky at times. I also really like dry humor, the kind canadians and brits are famous for. So, when I'm preparing the public side of my role at TN, whether it's the announcements, or teaching, I try to just be myself. Some sermons lead more to humor than others. And when I tell a joke, it'll be something I find funny. Because, as I said, among the pastors, we have all decided to just be ourselves. I was watching a video of another pastor recently, and he was making jokes and using canned illustrations from the "Sermon illustration book", and he was trying so hard to sound cool but it just came off lame and forced like he had intentially picked some version of cool that he would emulate.
Bottom line, as was said above, it's all about Christ. I've been to the most boring churches in the world where Christ was clearly revealed, and I've thought "I would go here". I've been to trend setting churches where Christ was revealed, and I've thought "I would go here also". That is the bottom line. That's the thing that should'nt change. There was a time when humor and silly skits were required regardless of whether it felt natural or not. Thankfully, the american church landscape is graduating from that wierd unnatural little side road.
Be Natural, Be Yourself, Reveal Christ. That's my summary, I hope that's what guides us at Terra Nova for the forseeable future.
dove, i agree with you.
going to church used to be one of those things i just did in my week, but lately (since attending services at 2 acts29 churches) i actually look forward to showing up.
after worshipping with like-minded Christ-seekers, listening to compelling talks from gifted pastors who inspire me to be more like Christ, i just want it all to continue past the service. i wish every sunday could continue well past the allotted 2 hours mark.
no matter what baggage i enter into worship with, at the end i look around me and everyone i see appears different than when i first entered. i no longer feel compelled to ignore those around me and busy myself with organizing my already organized purse/wallet, i long to connect with them, know them, hear them talk about themselves, hear my own voice speak and be known.
i agree, this is the way it should be; Christ revealed, prying open the doors of our carefully guarded hearts and changing us to become more like Him.
in addition, James 1:22-25
Post a Comment
<< Home