Sunday, July 31, 2022

The Social Gospel Nag


My wife and I have been searching for a new church in our new city for just over a year. We’ve settled on one, for now. But the search has been disconcerting. 

There are a hundred-and-one reasons. One is my own, slowly, dissolving faith. I keep hoping for a church that will run with my doubts, rather than try to assuage them, or deflect them, or (God forbid) covert me to some sort of orthodoxy.

Rise Up, Social justice Warriors!
Shub Niggurath is a fictional H.P. Lovecraft god.
One that can, apparently, inspire preachers to nag.
The search has also been disconcerting, if I’m totally honest, because many—by far the most—of the churches I’ve visited have been mostly made up of elderly people. They’ve been faithful for long lifetimes. They deserve an opportunity to rest from their labors, to enjoy the next generation take on leadership and choir seats. I remember when—in a different denomination—I preached to churches full of young people, young adults, and young marrieds. It made for better singing, better after-sermon coffee klatches, better bazaars and picnics and volunteers. It’s all gone now—if not in the denomination I used to serve as a minister in—at least it’s very rare in the churches I’ve checked out in my new city.

But among all the reasons (I could go on for a while) why mainline churches (and increasingly, Evangelical churches) are failing, the one that irks me the most is this—they are consumed by a form of works righteousness.
 
Works righteousness is the idea you have to do something to get in good with God. In Evangelical churches, it manifests itself in the preaching of moral codes, which if you keep (more or less, and as defined by your denomination or minister) you get heaven as a reward. The Trumpization of the Evangelical Church in the USA has put the lie to that. 
 
But in the UCC, we have our own unique kind of social gospel works righteousness. It’s the notion that unless we’re busy doing everything in our power to set the powers that be—government, institutions, systems—to right, we’re falling short. 
 
United Church works righteousness is a never-ending list of “to-do’s.” House the homeless. Challenge Israeli apartheid. Fight racism. Pursue peace. Be LGBTQ-friendly. Change the system. Save the planet. Change your habits. Call your MP. Donate. Plant a forest. Acknowledge our wrongs vis a vis First Nations. And on and on.
 
Ironically, there is not a single one of these “to-do’s” that I disagree with. I embrace every one, without qualification. I preached or have written about each one. I have been guilty of what I’m going to rail against in this post.
 
The problem is one of balance. You see, the only church that can effectively make a dent on these issues is a healthy church. Such churches are multi-generational. They play and are fun. They meet in and out of the sanctuary. They are full of laughter and full of informed care for those in the fellowship who need it. They are full of people who are focused on each other as the closest neighbours at hand, a practical training ground for all our other neighbours. 
 
But preachers who wave their finger, endlessly, at people, telling them what to do, how to do it, why to do it all—they are weighing church goers down and making staying church, or coming for the second or third time, very hard. 

The preacher nag inspires the same sort of negative reactions that mask mandates did. It isn't that the mask mandate was a dumb idea. It is that people don't want to be told, over and over. It infuriates most of us--or exhausts us before we begin.
 
The preacher nag, perhaps unintentionally, serves as a constant accusation that we have not measured up. It is imitative, in an odd way, of how newspapers—on TV or the web or even real paper—work. You put the murders first, the car crashes next, and finish with scandal. Op Ed pages are full of negative reads on each and every political decision and economic trend. Good news is either absent or buried. 
 
Our churches are similarly focused on all that’s wrong. We put the latest injustice first, then the worst looming ecological disaster next, and finish with what we better do or else last. Good news?
 
Look. Once again, I’m personally engaged in righting injustices, responding to disasters, and being politically involved. But as much as the church as a public institution and its members as citizens need to address many urgent matters, we should do so because the church has inspired us to gratitude and thanksgiving first. Too much nagging muddies our motivation and saps our energy.
 
Let’s preach dreams rooted in hope. I want to hear sermons that celebrate the good—and even the privilege—that so many of us experience; that celebrate starry nights, great music and art, real caring, an ancient tradition, forgiveness, sex, shared meals, and friendship. 
 
Let’s preach out of our gratitude rather than our civic and cultural problems and fears and injustices. Where is the light yoke promised by Jesus? Where is the community in love with each other—not just for Sunday coffee time—but communities that prioritize the knowing and sharing and mutual support that the New Testament so often speaks of? That’s the foundation of our love for all neighbours and strangers.
 
I long for the consolations of the gospel. I long for a spirituality that isn’t so much marching orders as it a magical spiritual mystery tour. I long to be inspired instead of commanded.
 
Look, the seventy- and eighty-year-olds who fill many United Church pews are true believers in the social gospel. Most of them don’t need to be convinced anymore. They’ve hung around when the UCC was among the first churches in Canada to truly welcome women to leadership. We lost a third or more of our membership making sure that LGBTQ people were not only welcomed, but celebrated, but they stuck with us. Our older members also hung around when we called for an end to apartheid and as we made steps to work out reconciliation with First Nations. The people who still come to our churches have fed the hungry, housed the homeless, donated to the United Church and its favorite causes, and on and on. They don’t need to be nagged to do more.
 
And younger people are looking for hope, for inspiration, for meaning amid so many crises—they don’t want to be nagged to do more and more and more either. They’re busy with families and two careers. They’re struggling to make mortgage or rent payments and to hang on to their temporary jobs in a gig economy. Even if we, here in Canada, are living through the materially best of times, most peaceful of times, many young people don’t experience it that way. What do we have to say to them besides “volunteer. Do more. Support. Vote. Go. Go. Go.”?
 
I’d love to see the United Church commit to some sort of reverse-sabbath pattern when it comes to pulpit nagging. That would be a commitment to limit our nagging to one Sunday in seven. A commitment in the rest of our preaching and lives together to focus on the old, old story (and some new ones!) because the way to change anyone’s heart is through the doorway of the imagination.  
 
I’m not lazy. I do my part. But I’m filled with spiritual yearning. I want meaning. Maybe I'm strange that way. I wake up wondering what it is all about. I feel vulnerable in a world more dangerous than we realize and I want to know whether there is hope. I want my church to have a psychic playground out back, where we can laugh and play together, feed each other and party. Where I can be rejuvenated. 
 
I get that other people might want wildly different things from church than what I want. But if we did a reverse Sabbath, we could use those other six Sundays to explore what other people are curious about when it comes to God and humanity and this planet. Bring it on.
 
But, oh. I’m so tired of being told what to do.
 
 

6 comments:

  1. My friend Benna decided to attend the church in her neighbourhood. She did not want to look for a year. So, she tried three churches in her neighbourhood. She had one requirement. It had to be affirming because she no longer wanted to participate in that fight again. She found one: Presbyterian.
    I also know, John. that retired preachers have a hard time being pew sitters. The most meaningful part of the service for me is often the benediction at the end of the service. Those words give me the courage to step out and keep going. Come see me sometimes and even sit in the pew besides me.

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  2. I could not get my name in there. Think of a Plug. :-)

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    1. Dear D. I have such fond memories of my time in Sarnia, if not of what I preached and taught there! I've spent half of my ministry time in non-preaching roles, so I have experienced what it is to sit in the pew. But you put your finger on a real danger--the "I'd never do it that way! Why don't they do it my way?" syndrome. It would be nice to have coffee, though I don't travel to Sarnia or GR anymore! Maybe you can come out to Kingston. You're welcome, and we have a nice BR in the garage overlooking the lake. Thanks for your note.

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  3. This really resonates. We, too, are searching and align philosophically with the UCC. We share the same values and celebrate their commitment to social justice and inclusivity. I think you have hit upon the reason we are so hesitant to join a church right now. Just thinking about it exhausts us.

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  4. I guess I am a nag. I am doing occasional pulpit supply as a retired minister. My first message this year was about love, stewardship, discipleship, and evangelism and how they are interrelated. It included the importance of worship, prayer, and discussing faith questions with others. I incpuded the concept of stewardship as as a way to claiming our freedom and evangelism as a way to show love to others. I celebrated how their cooperative of nine congregations is already doing stewardship, discipleship and evangelism. My second message to another congregation was about all the horrors coming our way and the importance of nurturing relationships and building communities. I stressed that, while their small faith community may only meet a couple times a year, it will be important as a source of support in the facing of those horrors and will be a centre for building whatever will come next.

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  5. I retired as a full-time minister (from Mill Woods United Church in suburban Edmonton) three months ago, and I have joined "Spiritual Seekers United in Community," which is also still known by its older name, "Southminister-Steinhauer United Church." I am the 13th or 14th retired minister to join this congregation, which I take as a positive sign, and I feel fed there. It is both socially progressive and theologically expansive -- i.e. post-theistic. Not everyone, of course, is on the same wavelength, but the two ministers, Rev. Nancy Steeves and Rev. Chris New are committed to community more than creeds; to healing more than doctrine; and to enlightenment more than belief.

    For me, the challenge is to support social justice while also noting that a) the current moment in Canada and around the world seems dire; and b) the "Good News" is about death -- and resurrection. All individuals and all human institutions are mortal; and finding hope, peace, joy, and love is predicated not on winning social justice battles (although I like engaging in them), but in accepting the Grace to rise to a life that is less egotistical (and less nationalistic, and less religious, and less addicted . . . ) despite political, ecological, and other disasters that often crowd around us.

    Does SSUC duplicate just what I tried to do at Mill Woods? No. But I feel blessed to have this expansive, committed, and grace-filled community -- and a mere 10 minutes from where Kim and I live.

    I wish you the best of luck in finding a community in Kingston and area that likewise feeds you

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What do you think?