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Blessed are the Uncool PDF Print E-mail

7/17/2011 - by Chuck Monan, Preaching Minister

Jesus teaches us to invite the disenfranchised, the down-and-out, and the outsiders to our dinners (Luke 14:12-14).  He reminds us to reach out to “the least of these brothers of mine” (Matt. 25:40).  James condemns treating the rich who come to our assemblies like dignitaries but the poor like nuisances (Jas. 2:1-9).  Paul instructs us to be willing to associate with people of low position (Rom. 12:16).

So why aren’t we more willing to do this?

Too often today Christians only want to be around these like themselves in tightly scripted & rehearsed services with no distractions. Rachel Held Evans offers up the following missive on such a mindset:

People sometimes assume that because I’m a progressive 30-year-old who enjoys Mumford and Sons and has no children, I must want a super-hip church -- you know, the kind that’s called “Thrive” or “Be” and which boasts “an awesome worship experience,” a fair-trade coffee bar, its own iPhone app, and a pastor who looks like a Jonas Brother.

While none of these features are inherently wrong, (and can of course be used by good people to do good things), these days I find myself longing for a church with a cool factor of about 0.

That’s right.

I want a church that includes fussy kids, old liturgy, bad sound, weird congregants, and -- brace yourself  -- painfully amateur “special music” now and then.

Why?

Well, for one thing, when the gospel story is accompanied by a fog machine and light show, I always get this creeped-out feeling like someone’s trying to sell me something.  It’s as though we’re all compensating for the fact that Chrisitanity’s not good enough to stand on its own so we’re adding snacks.

But more importantly, I want to be part of an un-cool church because I want to be part of a community that shares the reputation of Jesus, and like it or not, Jesus’ favorite people in the world were not cool.  They were mostly sinners, misfits, outcasts, weirdos, poor people, sick people, and crazy people.  

Cool congregations can get so wrapped up in the “performance” of church that they forget to actually be the church, a phenomenon painfully illustrated by the story of the child with cerebral palsy who was escorted from the Easter service at Elevation Church for being a “distraction.”

Really?

It seems to me that this congregation was distracted long before this little boy showed up!  In their self-proclaimed quest for “an explosive, phenomenal movement of God -- something you have to see to believe,” they missed Jesus when he was right under their nose.

Was the paralytic man lowered from the rooftop in the middle of a sermon a distraction?

Was the Canaanite woman who harassed Jesus and his disciples about healing her daughter a distraction?

Were the blind men from Jericho who annoyed the crowd with their relentless cries a distraction?

Jesus didn’t think so.  In fact, he seemed to think that they were the point.

What Jesus taught is that when we throw a banquet or a party, our invitation list should include “the poor, the crippled, the lame and the blind.”  So why do our church marketing teams target the young, the hip, the healthy, and the resourced?

In Bossypants (a book you should really go out and buy this very instant), Tina Fey describes working for the YMCA in Chicago soon after graduating from college.  This particular YMCA included, “a great mix of high-end yuppie fitness facility, a wonderful community resource for families, and an old-school residence for disenfranchised men,” so Fey shares a host of funny stories about working the front desk.  One such story involves one of the residents forgetting to take his meds, bumping into a young mom on her way to a workout session, and saying something wildly inappropriate (and very funny -- you should definitely go out and get this book).  Fey writes, “The young mother was beside herself.  That’s the kind of trouble you get when diverse groups of people actually cross paths with one another.  That’s why many of the worst things in the world happen in and around Starbucks bathrooms.”

Church can be a lot like the Y -- or a Starbucks bathroom.

We have one place for the un-cool people (our ministries) and another place for the cool people (our church services).  When we actually bump into one another, things can get awkward, so we try to avoid it.


It’s easy to pick on Elevation Church in this case, but the truth is we’re all guilty of thinking we’re too cool for the least of these.  Our elitism shows up when we forbid others from contributing art and music because we deem in unworthy of glorifying God, or when we scoot our family an extra foot or two down the pew when the guy with Aspergers sits down.  Having helped start a church, I remember hoping that our hip guests wouldn’t be turned off by our less-than-hip guests.  For a second I forgot that in church, of all places, those distinctions should disappear.

Some of us wear our brokenness on the inside, others on the outside.

But we’re all broken.


We’re all un-cool.

We’re all in need of a Savior.

So let’s cut the garbage, pull the plug, and have us some distracting church services -- the kind where Jesus would fit right in.
 
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