Thursday, March 13, 2014

Those First Seven Words




You don’t have to be in church life long before you hear the depressing stories of congregations who lived and died with those famous last seven words, “We’ve never done it that way before” and their twin sister, “We have always done it that way.” Though I am a traditionalist, I know you cannot keep doing the same thing over and over and hope for different results. We know that as the definition of insanity.

Businesses cannot run the same way they did twenty years ago. Government cannot operate as if the world has not changed. Professionals cannot perform their businesses limited to the knowledge they acquired during college days. Change has to come, and it’s just as true for churches and individuals.

Recently I was reminded of the opposite of those death-guaranteeing words. These are the “first seven words”, and they can make all the difference for a business, a church, and an individual life. Those words are “Not my will but yours be done.”

When businesses don’t change to meet the new market demands, the result is often death whether swift or slow. Preferences change. Needs change. Business must adapt even when it knows its product is still necessary and the best available. A new language has to be learned and spoken.

When a church falls into the trap of believing its traditions are equal to its message, it has moved onto the path of self-destruction. Preservation of the past becomes more important than discipleship and redemption. Change is seen as a threat to what is considered most sacred, the church family story. Allegiance to the sacred traditions becomes the standard for church membership.

Lest we bash churches as a whole beyond reason, we must remember congregations are not nameless entities. They are people with strong beliefs about what is right and proper both for the sacred and the profane. Most often these attitudes are as visible in personal life as they are on the church stage.

I joke about remembering the good, old days which seem to get better the older I become. Our memories become selective as we think about the joys and blessings of a past age as we compare it to the present. Families spent more time together. We moved with less hurry and worry. Life was simpler and offered more occasions to enjoy what the world offered.

Then we remember days that had temperatures in the 90’s and humidity readings even higher with no air conditioning. In the winter we remember going to the pond to cut ice ten inches thick so the cattle could get a drink in the sub-zero weather. Upstairs in the old farmhouse the air would be cold enough you went to bed with three quilts over you and your jeans beside you so they would be warm when you got up the next day for school.

I learned to appreciate water lines that went underground and didn’t freeze, a hay baler that created bales to be carried by the tractor instead of me, and a gas furnace that kept the entire house warm. We laugh about the changes that made life richer and more productive for us today. We need to think about how we do church and live our lives before God in the same way.

Jesus knelt in the Garden of Gethsemane and prayed those special words to his Father after nearly three years of teaching, preaching, and healing all of which called for change. (Matthew 13) He had spent three years getting close to a group of people he said were no longer his servants, but his friends. (John 15:12-17) He was about to give all that up for a cross and the burden of the sins of the world. Yet he could still say, “Not my will but yours be done.” (Matthew 26:36-46)

We each have our traditions. Many of us attend churches where we can enumerate their non-negotiable patterns of sacred practice. Renewal and revival, so desperately needed in our churches and our personal lives, need to begin with that very serious prayer, “Not my will but yours be done.”