Why Churches Must Build Spiritual Community

Why Churches Must Build Spiritual Community

We all need to feel like we belong, right? It’s essential for our mental health, happiness, and productivity, especially as we navigate life after a global pandemic, church disaffiliations, and membership decline. One of the most critical ways churches can help their communities is by building a strong sense of spiritual community.

 

Belonging Matters

Being part of a community is more than having friends or sharing similar interests. It’s about actively participating in big and small groups that shape who you are. Whether singing with the choir at church, organizing a family reunion, or planning a work event, each group you belong to affirms your sense of belonging and boosts your self-esteem.

Harvard researchers found that close relationships are key to keeping people happy and healthy throughout their lives. Social connections with family, friends, and community can delay mental and physical decline. Meanwhile, neuroscientists at MIT have discovered that the same part of the brain registers cravings for human interaction and food. At the same time, the pain of being excluded and physical pain are also located in the same area. This suggests that belonging is just as essential as our favorite foods.

 

What Happens when Churches Build Spiritual Community?

Pastor Sharon Cochran, a participant in the Creating a Culture of Renewal® community, knows how hard it can be to build spiritual community. Worship attendance decreased by around 50% over the pandemic. The church felt empty and sluggish. It felt like she had to do everything.

Then, Pastor Sharon began to incorporate principles of building spiritual community.

She started a newsletter, with a lot of information about activities, and gave people reasons to return to church. She also began a new evening Bible Study.

She invited others into leadership of worship, and let them know their voices were valued.

Worship used to be solely pastor-led. Now the laity, especially the youth, have actively jumped in to lead. Worship has more active engagement; in fact where people were reluctant to share their voices, prayer time has expanded in length and diversity.  It’s not uncommon to participate in the laying on of hands, or praying aloud with each other. Now worship attendance is back up 30%!

These things in and of themselves, are excellent.

But when you build spiritual community, engagement goes up in a number of ways.

In Pastor Sharon’s church, five new people have joined the Missions team. They are so engaged, that they have decided to meet more often. Their engagement is up 300%. There has been a 100-% increase in volunteers at the Client Choice Food Pantry. Even committees have seen a 5% uptick in participation as new people have gotten involved in being of service.

All this missional engagement has led to a financial turnaround. For the first time in a long time, giving is now outpacing expenses.

This church is alive, active, engaged!

And it all started with building spiritual community. In other words, Pastor Sharon created spaces that promote conversation and connection, heard people’s needs, and invited them all into a new way of being in community. Building a sense of community is vital.

 

The Principles of Building Spiritual Community

1) Include Time for Talking

I arrived early for worship one morning and headed straight for the front chancel area since it was my turn to serve as liturgist. I was invited to join the small choir leading the singing as soon as I arrived. While preparing for worship, Linda, Dana, Susan, and I chatted about Linda’s recent doctor’s appointment, Susan’s preparation for the children’s sermon, and Dana’s impeccable sense of timing. I’m not super close to these folks, but this kind of informal talk pulled us together as worship leaders and prepared us to enter into the spirit of worship by giving us a sense of belonging. Being social, even as informal as this was, can bean intentional part of what it means to be spiritual. For instance, I noticed that as worship unfolded very few people moved or had speaking parts in the service. Along with the preacher and the musician, the small choir and I were responsible for all the service’s active parts. There wasn’t even an official time to say hello to each other.

This dynamic could be changed by asking people to exchange a few words with someone sitting nearby—like introducing themselves, sharing something they are grateful for, noting where God was present the previous week or exchanging a prayer concern. Those online could post something in the chat to share with others participating virtually. Even small social interchanges can create a greater sense of community.

 

2) Include Food

Weaving the social and spiritual together can take place at a programmatic level by gathering folks around common interests and needs. Take cooking and eating, for example. Consider the meal Abram and Sarai made for the angelic visitors at the oaks of Mamre. Or the many times Jesus ate with others as occasions for fellowship and teaching. Resurrect the practice of building a social and spiritual community around food by intentionally hosting classes or experiences that encompass these themes. For instance, teaching people how to garden or cook could offer a store-to-plate or farm-to-table experience. As you first shop or garden, prepare, cook, and enjoy the food, you can interweave biblical themes like hospitality or care of the body into your discussions. Then invite the Risen Christ to join you at the table. Not only will community form around these experiences, but these experiences can lead to community-oriented projects or congregation-community partnerships.

 

3) Get Hands-On

People love to know they are making a difference in the world, that their actions are meaningful. Consider hosting missional activities allowing individuals to experience this connection directly, such as community workdays or projects like Habitat for Humanity or packing meals for the hungry. Think of creative ways to involve the children and young people. These experiences enable people to creatively collaborate in service of something larger than themselves and create a sense of community as they work towards a common goal.

Joining hands in service as a community can lead to incredible results. Just look at Sharon’s church, which experienced a surge in worship attendance by implementing this principle. By calling for unity and collective action (spiritual community in action), they saw a remarkable rise in volunteerism: a 100% uptick in volunteers at a local food pantry, a 150% increase in the ministry of Backpacks 4 Kids volunteers, and a staggering 600% increase in unchurched individuals seeking pastoral care. This is the power of mission meeting community: it transforms lives and creates a better world.

 

By designing gatherings that include the social, missional, and spiritual, you promote spiritual and emotional growth while building community between and among members. The bonus of creating a spiritual community is bolstering mental health. When you belong to groups, include time to talk, and share a meal, you help create a more robust church – one that is both social and spiritual. It’s not hard to do, and it may seem too simple to be true, but it makes a world of difference.

As we navigate the challenges of declining church attendance and the aftermath of a global pandemic, creating a sense of spiritual community is more important than ever. I’m excited to invite you to my upcoming workshop, “How Christian Ministries are Achieving Success: An Introduction to Creating a Culture of Renewal®,” where you’ll learn how to build a more vital, more vibrant ministry that serves your community and glorifies God.  Or reach out for a one-on-one conversation. We’d love to hear hear from you.

 

Adapted from “Forging a New Path: Moving the Church Forward in a Post-Pandemic World” (Market Square Publishers, 2022).

 

Copyright © 2023 rebekahsimonpeter.com.  All Rights Reserved.

Can Pastors Be Too Humble?

Can Pastors Be Too Humble?

Humility is touted as an expressly Christian attribute.  But I wonder if excess humility, or better said, false humility, is a hidden dynamic of decline within the church.

Over the years as I’ve traversed the nation to meet with pastors, an unsettling truth has become apparent: a large contingent of spiritual leaders harbor an insidious fear that they are inadequate to fulfill their heavenly mandate. They are masters of masking it with deflection. Showered with praise, acknowledgments, and commendations, they deflect it all away, minimizing their vital role in the lives of their congregants. The credit is shifted solely to God.

Could this discounting of the self be dangerous? I think so. In fact, this very real fear and the humility that cloaks it, is getting in the way of the unfolding of the Kingdom.

As a human being, you are created with agency. Agency is the capacity to choose what you think, decide what you believe, select how you feel, and chart the actions you take. Agency implies your inborn capacity to live a purposeful life. Interestingly, your agency is influenced by your belief as much as by your skill.

According to Jesus, owning your agency is critical. Your beliefs are intimately connected to your ability to co-create miracles with God. Jesus was fond of pointing out, “Your faith has made you well,” to those who sought healing. If your well-being, or lack thereof, unfolds according to what you believe, what else does belief impact?

Back when I was single, I used to take ballroom dance lessons hoping I’d be swept off my feet by someone on the dance floor. At first, other than the fact that one partner led, I didn’t understand the mechanics and art of dance. I discovered that the graceful art of dance involved a great deal of partnership between the dancers, or the “lead” and the “follow.” One exerts very firm pressure against the other’s hand to steer. But the one who follows couldn’t be guided, or engage in the dance, if they didn’t exert equally firm pressure in return. This isn’t a case of overpowering. If return pressure is weak, the lead partner simply can’t lead. If they meet their firm pressure with their own, they can steer them through intricate steps they had not even known before. While I didn’t meet the partner of my dreams through ballroom dance (that came later through a country two-step class) I was able to tango, foxtrot, and waltz as if I had been dancing these graceful steps all my life!

Exercising your God-given authority and agency is like ballroom dancing. As you enter the divine dance, you soon realize that it’s not just about having faith in the leading partner; you must also exercise faith in yourself. You are a critical part of the equation. The Bible makes this clear: wherever people had great faith, Jesus performed great miracles. Where they lacked faith, not much happened. Miracle-making requires equal partnership where both parties show up, equally ready, willing, and able to do their part (Matthew 13:58).

Jesus never intended to keep his wonder-working, miracle-making power to himself. Again and again, Jesus invited his disciples and apostles into this realm. Now he invites you. Jesus wants you to dream like him, claim authority like him, and exercise agency like him.  Your fears are getting in the way of the divine calling.

You are invited into the unity of God and Jesus to be one with God and one with Jesus. You do that by matching God’s faith in you with your own faith in God and yourself. While you won’t have the same unwavering purity of faith or depth of belief in God or yourself, that God has in you, you can rise to much greater faith.

Maybe humility, at least as we have defined it, isn’t what the church or the Kingdom needs right now.

The church needs you to unleash your agency and embrace your God-given authority, like an elegant dance with God as your partner. Just as dance requires trust and self-belief, so does this divine partnership. Miracles happen with great faith, and today, I invite you on a transformative journey of faith and self-discovery. As a spiritual growth coach, I offer my services to help you unlock your potential, overcome fears, and embrace the extraordinary life God has planned for you. Now is the time to be a catalyst for change!

 

Adapted from Dream Like Jesus:  Deepen Your Faith and Bring the Impossible to Lifeby Rebekah Simon-Peter, 2019.

Copyright © 2023 rebekahsimonpeter.com.  All Rights Reserved.

Are You Reaching the Spiritual But Not Religious?

Are You Reaching the Spiritual But Not Religious?

Is your church reaching the spiritual but not the religious?  This is a growing population of individuals seeking a connection with something more significant but not aligned with any particular religious tradition. Many churches struggle to provide meaningful engagement opportunities for these individuals, as they may feel out of place or unwelcome in traditional worship services.

Spiritual-but-not-religious (SBNR) individuals describe themselves as having spiritual beliefs and practices but do not affiliate with organized religion. This population is becoming more prevalent, with surveys indicating that almost 30% of millennials consider themselves SBNR (Pew Research 2017). However, there are misunderstandings and underestimations from the church community towards this growing population. This blog post will explore the reality of the SBNR community, the church’s viewpoint, what SBNR individuals offer the church, learning from megachurches, and the importance of understanding and catering to the SBNR population.

 

The Reality of Spiritual-But-Not-Religious Community

SBNR individuals come from different backgrounds, belief systems, and spiritual practices. They may identify as agnostic, atheist, or spiritual but do not want to be constrained by institutionalized religion. Age, race, gender, and socioeconomic background also influence SBNR beliefs. It is essential to acknowledge the broad spectrum of SBNR practices and beliefs. Serving this diverse community requires recognizing and understanding their unique ideas and practices.

They have no spiritual community per se, just a sense within that there is More to Life than Meets the Eye.  Others, however, are deeply embedded in a community of every kind—unaware they should be missing us.  They sense the transcendent in the ordinary, the Divine in the everyday.

I have also heard pastors remark that the church can provide what these spiritual but not religious people identify as needs—community, people who care about each other, significance over success, and a deep relationship with Something Bigger than Us.  If only they knew about the church and would adapt a bit to it, they would find everything they are looking for!

The church’s narrow approach to serving SBNR individuals is a significant limitation. The church believes that everything the SBNR population needs can be found within the walls of the church. Underestimating the needs of SBNR individuals can lead to negative impacts, including alienation. According to a 2021 Pew Research study, church attendance and affiliation have decreased over time, potentially indicating that the church’s narrow approach may be ineffective.

Bottom line:  We have this sense that if we can figure out what’s wrong with them or what they’re missing, then we can get them “back.”

I want to propose a new way of relating to the spiritual-but-not-religious crowd.  Instead of seeing them as missing what we are offering, we should see them as providing what we are (or may be) missing.  I want to share three gifts we can glean from them.  And how to incorporate them into your congregation.

 

Three Gifts From the Spiritual-But-Not-Religious Crowd

They are a living reminder of our roots.

Every significant moment in the Bible is defined by someone walking away from known reality.  Abraham leaves his father and is kindred to follow God to a new unseen land.  Jacob wrestles with a Divine figure which is part human, part angel.  Moses serves an invisible god who identifies as Being itself.  Ruth gives up her cultural identity to identify with her mother-in-law’s people.  John the Baptist leads people away from their daily lives into the wilderness.  Jesus himself ushers in the long-awaited but previously unexperienced Kingdom.  Just as these people walked away from known reality for something new, so did the spiritual but not religious.  Rather than see them as lacking something, consider that their spiritual journeying reflects the essence of Biblical stories.

They remind us of the value of experience over form.

For the spiritual-but-not-religious, the direct experience of God is the goal, not doctrines or dogma, which point the way to the experience.  Jesus, while faithful to Judaism, experienced oneness with God.  He even taught others that “The kingdom of heaven is within.”  Why should we be surprised when people discover direct access to the Holy and prefer that over the form of religion?

They point to the convergence of science and spirituality.

Quantum physics points to a conscious universe and the deep interconnectedness of all life forms.  While some Christian believers fight over science and religion, the spiritual-but-not-religious folks are moving beyond duality by seeking how science and spirituality inform each other. This is cutting-edge.

 

Applying the Gifts

How can we apply these three gifts from the spiritual-but-not-religious crowd in the life of the church?

Encourage spiritual adventuring.  For instance, you can offer classes on centering prayer or meditation.  Build a labyrinth and encourage people on their spiritual journey.  Invite a Spiritual Director to affiliate with your congregation.  Ask for testimonies from congregants who have had a near-death experience or other spiritual awakening.  Give people the tools to experience heaven here on earth.

Follow Jesus by teaching that the Kingdom of God is within.  Then create special times for people to experience God’s presence within themselves.  Encourage creative arts to express this reality—re-think worship to make space for this opportunity.

Don’t be afraid to explore the overlap of science and spirituality.  Read and discuss books that hint at this, such as neurosurgeon Eben Alexander’s dramatic Proof of Heaven.

 

The Spiritual But Not Religious in Action

Some time ago, I visited a spiritual-but-not-religious megachurch.  Megachurch, you ask?  Yes, megachurch.  They exist!

What made this experience work?  Excellent music that emphasized unity over duality.  A welcome that affirmed God’s unconditional love indwelling all people and their congregational acceptance of all people.  Preaching that connected body and soul.  Prayer that affirmed rather than begged.

But most of all, what made this a spiritual-but-not-religious service was that it assumed people wanted to experience God, not just hear about God or work on behalf of God.  So after initial announcements, the lights were turned down low so the collective congregation could spend about 4 minutes in silent meditation.  Likewise, after a rousing blessing was sung at the end, one-on-one prayer was made available to seekers.  In between, the music ranged between the sacred and secular—all of it carrying an empowering message of love.

Churches like this are spectacular, fun, and rare.  Likely, they can’t be reproduced in small-town Iowa, desert New Mexico, or city-center churches in New England.  No matter.   Take some of the principles offered and use them to re-create what the spiritual-but-not-religious can teach us:  the experience of God transcends all.  And it is ever so attractive.

If you want to know more about this, grab a copy of my book, Forging a New Path: Moving the Church Forward in a Post-Pandemic World. In it, I share how the church can minister to the spiritual-but-not-religious crowd authentically and meaningfully. I also show how the gifts of this emerging spiritual demographic can transform our churches with a new understanding and appreciation.

 

Adapted and updated from original posted February 2015.

Copyright © 2023 rebekahsimonpeter.com.  All Rights Reserved.

Is Your Church Practicing Mediocre Grace?

Is Your Church Practicing Mediocre Grace?

Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s classic 1937 book, The Cost of Discipleship, describes cheap grace as the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline and communion without confession. It’s the sort of grace that allowed would-be disciples to avoid confronting the evils of Nazi Germany.

These days, cheap grace has competition. To appease a different kind of cultural complacency, grace has come to mean a bar set quite low. Offering this grace requires little to no accountability, enforces few if any, standards, and bears almost no fruit. This low-level grace is most apparent in churches in our communal and organizational life. It translates into a kind of laissez-faire; you’re off the hook, no accountability stance.

This isn’t cheap grace. It’s worse than that. It’s mediocre grace. Is your church practicing mediocre grace?

Mediocre grace allows seemingly harmless indiscretions, such as gossiping, complaining, a lack of vision, bearing grudges, and lack of accountability to go unchecked. It’s an attitude that says it’s not worth confronting someone because it may be uncomfortable or cause conflict. This type of grace is convenient and comfortable for us.   You might ask how you know if your church is practicing this kind of grace… you know by the product produced.

Mediocrity is not a biblical value, nor does it help Jesus’s church. Jesus killed trees that bore no fruit. He spit out the lukewarm. He counseled followers to let their yes be yes and their no be no.

When it comes to perpetuating a culture of mediocrity in churches, there’s plenty of blame to go around—from the system, to pastors, to lay people, to denominationalism itself. Not to mention the larger culture that is rapidly changing, and lives that are overly busy. The list is long.

However, we are not responsible entirely for them, but we are for ourselves.

But you know the old saying: If you’re pointing the finger at someone else, there are three fingers pointing back at you. The truth is church culture can be shifted. But not by blaming others.

Here are four practices of low accountability/low fruit churches:

1) We neglect the secret of miracle-making.“Your faith has made you well” was a common refrain of Jesus. In the culture of mediocrity, we do not activate our faith in God, or in ourselves, to co-create miracles with the Divine. Instead of miracles we settle for the mundane. Then complain that nothing gets better. It sounds something like this: “Why don’t young people come to our church?” Or “How will we ever get people to help us bear the burden of our bill?”

2) We underestimate the size of mustard seeds. By confusing faithfulness with predictability (instead of trusting God in the midst of the unknown) we stunt our development as disciples. Our faith can’t even reach the size of a tiny seed. The culture of mediocrity means we no longer act as though we have been given the power to heal the sick, cast out demons, or even actively proclaim the kingdom. The church is silent on important issues and passive in the face of injustice.

3) We buy the lie. Churches that dispense mediocre grace buy into the lie that wastes time, energy, talent, and good will. It goes like this: “If this ministry / meal / outreach / worship service reaches just one person then it will all be worth it.” In churches that practice mediocre grace, this is often an excuse for not doing something well. It reinforces setting the bar for success low.

Those 3 are bad. But the worst of all is this one insidious and pervasive practice of mediocrity:

4) We let our yes be no and our no be maybe. You know what this looks like: people who commit to doing things, but never show up to meetings or get stuff done. Here mediocre grace means we can’t hold people accountable or even bring up broken agreements—lest we offend. In its worst forms, those who are authorized to decide, act, and move things forward continually put the brakes on. Meanwhile, the church loses its reputation as a safe place and a trustworthy partner, and as a witness for justice and a voice for the poor. All the while, giving and energy, goes down.

Even more damaging is when a church takes a stance for issues that affect humanity, issues of social justice.  Then allows injustice to creep in by giving a platform to the “maybes”. Taking a real stand against injustice, advocating on behalf of the marginalized, isn’t easy, especially in today’s cultural climate.  But not making the effort is mediocre at best.

 

If we are not accountable in the small things, like our word, then we’ll never have authority over the larger things, like manifesting the Kingdom in our corner of the world.

Our nodding acquaintance with theories about systems and group cultures has gotten us to the point where we don’t believe we can make any changes because we can’t change the system. News flash: we are the system.

One group I worked with shifted its culture of mediocre grace by addressing its habitual lateness. Everything from budgets to annual reports to event registrations to worship bulletins were turned in late. Deadlines were routinely ignored. So things couldn’t be planned or executed well. Occasions that took extra preparation get bogged down because timelines weren’t met. Although the people themselves love God and care deeply for each other, they gave the impression that they didn’t. While accepting this behavior without comment seems Christ-like, it actually fosters resentment, resignation, and bad-mouthing.  Definitely not Christ-like.

The denominational executives started shifting the culture from the inside out. By acknowledging how they themselves have participated in promulgating a deadline-amnesic culture, they made gains. 

It’s powerful to start a culture shift at the top. It demonstrates a willingness to take responsibility for what’s not working. It’s the opposite of the blame game. 

Where can you start?

If deadlines are routinely ignored, or people come to church meetings unprepared, introduce the idea of a guilt-free accountability plan. Start by holding yourself to higher standards. Visibly write down dates, or enter them into your calendar, and ask others to do the same. If you miss a deadline or don’t make good on a promise, be the first one to speak up about it. No need to wallow in guilt or excessive apology. Simply owning the behavior is often enough to clear the air. This guilt-free process reinforces safety and trust. It also allows others to own their mistakes more easily.

One pastor I coach has decided to address the culture of mediocrity in her mid-size church by suggesting church teams create a group covenant. Intrigued by the idea, two teams have taken her up on the idea. They spent time hammering out the kind of agreements they’d like to operate with, and how to get there. Including a low-key, high-impact process for communicating lateness or the inability to follow through on a commitment.

Buoyed by their initial success, they now begin each meeting by reviewing their covenant out loud. Team members are encouraged to speak up about agreements not honored. As well as those met. No, it doesn’t change the past. But it does create a strong foundation for honesty respect to flourish. Instead of hiding out and counting on mediocre grace, this church is practicing the kind of straightforward communication that Jesus counseled. Friendships are being strengthened and new ministries are taking root.

Shifting a culture from the mediocre to the miraculous takes skill and intentionality. The good news and the bad news about this is the same: it all starts within.

I’m tired of mediocre grace and the poor results that come from it. That’s why I developed Creating a Culture of Renewal®. As a church leader myself, I was tired of myself and others making constant excuses for poor behavior. If your heart beats as mine and you know you’re ready for something new, register for a free seminar, “How Christian Ministries are Achieving Success.”  Learn how to lead people out of mediocrity and into miraculous.

 

Adapted, updated and reprinted from original posted February 2016.

Copyright © 2023 rebekahsimonpeter.com.  All Rights Reserved.

Does Your Church Have Laryngitis?

Does Your Church Have Laryngitis?

Does your church have laryngitis? You’ll know by how you answer this question: What is your church speaking up about? Or, What is your church known for? If you answered: We are known for being friendly or we welcome anyone, then chances are what you’re really saying is “not much.” In that case, your church may have lost its voice. It may have laryngitis.

As people committed to the Kingdom of God, the Beloved Community, we are also called to make ethical decisions about right and wrong: what you will stand for, and what you won’t.

While laryngitis is mostly benign in humans, it’s usually indicative of a systemic problem in churches. I want to share with you what that problem is, three fears that drive the problem, and three ways to transform the fear so that we can speak with a clear, strong voice.

 

Losing Our Native Tongue 

The problem I see is that churches confuse ethics with politics. If it’s being discussed on the news or in Congress, then it must be politics. For many churches, that means the topic of conversation is now off-limits. But that kind of self-censure limits our ability to speak our native tongue: the language of ethics. Ethics encompasses values, principles, ideals, right and wrong, virtue and sin. Meanwhile, we have left ethics to the politicians. While we claim laryngitis.

I’m not saying that re-claiming our voice is easy. It’s not. Whether we’re talking about chronic poverty, immigration, human trafficking, gay and transgender people, economic injustice, gun violence, or human impacts on the precious planet we call home the ethical issues before us are tough, tough, tough.

Reclaiming its voice is the hardest thing a church will do. But it is also the most freeing.  Because it causes us to truly depend on the grace of God, to walk in the footsteps of the great Hebrew Prophets, and to emulate Jesus himself.

 

Fears

While Adam Hamilton has done an excellent job of “Confronting the Controversies,” I’d like to address 3 fears that often get in the way of churches dealing with ethical issues:

  1. The fear of alienating people through controversy, or causing division, which in turn could mean losing financial givers.
  2. The fear of delving into politics, especially if it puts us on the wrong side of where our people are, either red or blue.
  3. The fear of losing a focus on the love of Christ, or straying too far from the spiritual.

 

Fear of Alienating People through Controversy: Though the church needs money and tithes to operate, being clear on issues of ethics, is of extreme importance. As a church leader, our congregations listen to, and often, respect us and our views.  If we don’t possess the courage to name as sin the assaults on transgender and people of color, or the abuse of immigrants, mass shootings. Or if we are not able to stand up against laws that favor corporations at the detriment of the poor, then are we being true to Christ’s teachings? Are we being true to ourselves and our vocations? We can’t be ambiguous on issues that affect our fellow travelers on this planet, or the planet itself.  We must have the courage to risk speaking up.

Speaking Tip #1: It’s not easy to speak truth to power. And sometimes it’s not easy to speak truth to those we know and love, to our faithful congregations. But overcoming the fear of controversy is essential to creating a planet on which we can all live in peace. You may lose people. But you may end up gaining more than you lose. Either way, you’ve done what Jesus would do.

 

Fear of Politics:  I understand the fear of delving into politics. That’s shaky ground and sure to turn off some people. The trouble is, the public arena is where ethical issues are often debated and outcomes determined. I suggest bypassing political parties and personalities while exploring the underlying ethical issues being debated. When we deal with hot issues from an ethical or biblical standpoint, we put things on more neutral ground.

Speaking Tip #2: Dealing with ethics does not mean telling people how to vote or think. It does mean helping people explore the sources that can inform our thinking, especially scripture, experience, tradition, and reason.

 

Fear of Straying from Christ:  People want and need to be grounded in the love of Christ. Dealing with ethical issues actually aids this. I think of ethics as the love of neighbor in action. Why would we leave that to career politicians?

Speaking Tip #3: Frame ethical matters in terms of love. This brings issues back into our territory and allows us to speak with authority and confidence.

 

The Power of Speech

While Martin Luther King Jr’s example has guided several generations of dreamers, a new incarnation has taken center stage recently, Pope Francis. In his brief tenure, he has managed to speak up on key issues facing the world from re-establishing good relations with Cuba, to living wages, to climate change, to the humanity of the LGBTQ community. Is he dealing with the political? Or the ethical? I’d say its love of neighbor on a grand stage.

Speaking Tip #4: Not sure how to begin speaking up? In the style of the prophets, we can use our voices to ask: Who is hungry? Who is thirsty? Who is rich? Who is poor? Who is included? Who is excluded? Once those dynamics are identified, we can approach it from the perspective of Jesus and his ministry. WWJD?

 

Finally, be sure to immerse yourself in prayer and study. Let the still, small voice guide you in reclaiming your own voice from the malaise of laryngitis. Who knows…it just might change the world.

If you are having trouble as a Christian leader reclaiming your voice, I would love to help. I have coached many leaders, successfully reclaimed their voice and found new strength in speaking up to injustice in the world. Reach out if you need coaching or just to share your thoughts!

 

Adapted, updated and reprinted from original posted February 2015.

Copyright © 2023 rebekahsimonpeter.com.  All Rights Reserved.

How Long Will We Put Up with Mass Shootings?

How Long Will We Put Up with Mass Shootings?

In 1999, I was co-pastoring a church in Parker, Colorado when the Columbine shooting happened in the community next door. At that time, school shootings were relatively infrequent. It was wholly unbelievable that it had happened in our community. Even more unthinkable was that it would be the beginning of a decades-long battle, where these kinds of events became increasingly frequent.

The church was flooded with broken-hearted people who wanted to know why such a tragic event had taken place. We led a series of healing services in an attempt to deal with this devastating reality.

Pictures of the victims were in every newspaper and on every broadcast. I aimed to remember the name and story of each student and teacher who had been killed. I never thought I’d see the day where non-stop shootings made it impossible to remember all who have been lost.

And now, here we are. In a time and place where mass shootings have escalated to the point that we can’t keep up with the names, the numbers, even the cities, towns, or states where they happened.

 

The Intensifying Problem of Gun Violence

On a single day this month, April 2023, there were seven mass shootings in the United States.  So far this year, there have been more mass shootings than days. And if we keep going the way we’re going, nothing is going to change.

Do churches have a say in the matter? Can faith leaders weigh in on this? You may be afraid to speak up for fear of alienating gun rights activists. Instead of thinking in the categories that society dictates, like pro-gun and anti-gun, let’s place this issue in the context of the Gospel.

Here are some questions to ask: When it comes to mass shootings, what does love look like? What does good news look like? What does faithfulness look like? How do we love our neighbors as ourselves?

Our public spaces, once considered safe, are no longer. Mass shootings take place in schools, stores, medical clinics, and churches. Add to that nightclubs, festivals, synagogues, mosques, homes, and places of work. Now, horrifyingly, sweet sixteen birthday parties. How long will we in the faith community put up with mass shootings?

 

The Church’s Role in Gun Violence

My friend James, who pastors near Tulsa in Oklahoma, insists that the church can play a positive role in ending mass shootings. “Prayers are appreciated, but the best thing we can do is to put pressure on politicians to get real about addressing the root problems. These include inadequate mental health, lack of common-sense gun policies, the pervasive culture of hate and violence, and deflecting of responsibility.” James himself has preached on these issues and encouraged members of his community to take action.

I appreciate the way James uses his pastoral authority. His courage and clarity are a great example of the way churches can take action. After all, our baptismal vows call us to resist evil, injustice, and oppression in whatever forms they present themselves, and to be a witness for the Gospel of good.

 

Next Steps

As part of my commitment to act, I’d like to offer some suggestions for next steps you can take today or in the coming week:

  • Create space for conversation in your ministry setting. Gun violence impacts everybody, and everybody is concerned, no matter what their answers are for how to deal with it.
  • Plan to preach a series on these topics.
  • Hit the streets, make calls to your congresspeople, write letters to the editor.  There are many organizations out there, many of them founded by survivors of mass shootings, working hard to change gun legislation and take positive steps in educating the public. Check them out and find concrete ways to take action.

Finally, come to my free workshop, How Christian Ministries are Achieving Success: An Introduction to Creating a Culture of Renewal. Learn how you can create a culture of renewal in your ministry and in the community around you. Because creating a new culture is integral to creating a better world for us all.

 

Adapted, edited, and re-published from The Role of the Church in Gun Violence, Rebekah Simon-Peter, June 2022.

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