frogg files

"She could never be a saint, but she thought she could be a martyr if they killed her quick." --Flannery O' Connor

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Thinking About Church

In church today, while we were singing one of the songs, I suddenly had a flashback to my time in Thailand two years ago, and a night when I attended a worship service among Thai Christians who were jumping up and down as they sang loud praises to God, in a room with no walls. They sang in Thai, but I knew some of the songs in English, and though I knew little of any of the people around me, I felt a unity with them that made me smile.

There was a simple beauty in that moment, in that place, that I have let myself forget in the intervening time, growing disillusioned as I have with myself, my faith, and my God. I was glad for the reminder today.

I don't know why I go to church sometimes. But after remembering that moment in Thailand, I thought that maybe part of it is because I can look around and see the antidote to my pride, my arrogance, my critical judgmentalism. What is that antidote? It is...other people. Ah, they can be the poison, too, I don't deny it. But I believe in grace--ah, grace, the undeserved favor of a God who loves people regardless of whether they always love him back. And I cannot believe in grace as an abstract theory, but as a vital reality working itself out in people's lives. And so the antidote, the cure, is in knowing that if God can work miracles in me (and I pray that he does), he must be working them in the people around me--even the ones I see in church! And none of them are perfect yet, and lots of them might annoy, bore, or anger me, but perhaps I do the same to them. God knows what he forgives me for, every single day.

It's true that I still do not like "church," the formal, programmed routine with its endless join-the-club type activities that takes up Sunday mornings and various weeknights in buildings across the country, and around the world. But I don't believe that God hates it. I believe he is sorry about it, but he is able, as I rarely am, to look past the program, the imperfections, the posturings, the studied piety, and see individual hearts that are broken, weary, and struggling to be good and love him--just like mine.

I would do better to remember that more often, than to recite the critiques and grievances that are so often nothing more than the litany of my spiteful arrogance.

I am glad that God is love.

4 Comments:

  • At 2:54 PM , Anonymous skwerlman7 said...

    This may be one of your best ones yet...i thoroughly enjoyed reading it.

     
  • At 1:13 AM , Blogger Single Proposition said...

    Imagine for a moment, what God hears, 24/7: people all over the world full of sin who sing up praises to him, knowing that every breath we take requires an ounce of grace for the next. Imagine the sound God hears when millions of churches around the world like the one in Thailand sing up praises to him as a collective body. Wow!

    This is church! Church is not an agenda. Church is not a show. Church isn't a big recruitment center either. Church is about glorifying God. And you're right gracky, many churches have forgotten why they gather - but even then, I don't think God is sorry to see us gather - he is afterall, full of grace. We shouldn't let this discourage us or let it cause us to dislike the system so much that we check out. We have to look beyond the people in church and up into the sky.

    It's about HIM!

     
  • At 5:06 AM , Anonymous Porter said...

    God is "able to look past" a lot of things, but that is hardly a recommendation of the things.

     
  • At 6:45 AM , Blogger grackyfrogg said...

    i recommend nothing but that we have our Father's eyes, as best we can.

     

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