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30 May 2012

Why Do We Gather?

Why do we gather each week as a church?

Your answer might be one of the biggest assumptions (and therefore, trickiest set of unspoken expectations) you have when thinking about the weekend service. It affects everything! What to sing. How loud it should be. What kind of songs to sing. Whether or not to use theater lighting. How to preach. How to “do” the offering. How long to go. Who’s allowed to lead. Who to invite. How big of a screen to use. And how many. Really...everything.

Well, let’s keep this discussion somewhat manageable. I’m reminded of some marketing copy I wrote ten years ago for one of the best coffee shops in Lancaster: “When the world is swirling around you, find the way back to a simple & livable life - back to Square One.”

To my ears and heart, this is a great place to start when we’re talking about why we gather. Even though (or maybe because) I get to experience such a wide variety of churches, I find it difficult to call all of us to a single reason (and therefore style) for our gathering. Honestly, this is my attempt to process through writing. I really want this to be a conversation starter.

As a worship leader, I believe my role is to create a space where we can meet with God. (Thanks Dan Wilt for that fantastic verbiage!) It seems to me that there’s a lot of “Re-ing” that goes on when we gather.

Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
 These are some of the things I believe we should do when we gather each week.

Re-Orient
Life is disorienting. There’s lots of things to look at, to want, to have to take care of, to understand. Gathering allows us to once again “Set our faces like a flint.” (Isaiah 50:7) We look to Him and our faces are made radiant. We say “This is what I believe. This is Who I belong to. This is what’s true.”
Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
Re-Imagine
Life is disappointing. Man, it’s sick out there. Hurting, oppressive, ugly. I see the affects of sin in my life and in the world around me. There’s something transforming about meeting with the One who says “go and sin no more,” who shows up where there’s need and switches superb wine for tap water, who feeds half of LCBC with my tuna salad footlong combo meal. He just sees in other dimensions, other realities, with another imagination.
Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
Re-Position
Life is pushy. Usually downward. I’ll never get over the reality that in one moment I was dead in my transgressions, stuck in sticky, smelly muck. And as an 11-year-old on my Noah’s ark bed, the extraordinary happened. I was re-created, a new creature, and suddenly I was home...seated in the heavenlies with Christ. #canyoubelieveit?! We celebrate this.
Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
Re-Define
Life is ridiculous. Why would we work so hard to define who we are by what we do when He’s already named us. It’s like I’m Jarrett all week...except for that 60 minutes on Sunday when I remember I’m actually David. As a son, there’s no earning. Intentionally listening to the Father together powerfully sets us back in the right context.
Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
Re-Connect
Life is frenzied. We rush. Especially on the way to church! We’re over-connected online, under-connected when we’re breathing the same air. Beyond just a shared experience, we get the chance to respond to God and each other in the same room. Touching God-with-skin-on has a similar effect that the Ezekiel-37-dry-bones experienced.
Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
Re-Direct
Life is idolatrous. Our charge as disciples is to bring an offering that is not for us. To acclaim, honor, magnify, worship, bless, praise, extol, love...Him. As Christ followers, we need a place to once again, as a set-apart group, express love and devotion to the Center around which our lives satellite.
Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
Re-Believe
Life is challenging. It should be faith-draining. Or said differently, it should require faith. We need the belief-fuel of faith. Faith comes by hearing the Word of God. Hearing it in the company of other witnesses emboldens our faith.
Re-Enact
Life is forgetful. We get wrapped up in the latest song, outreach program, and small group system. It’s cool stuff. But the Church has been doing it’s offensive on the gates of hell for a very long time. Sacraments, liturgies, rituals, and ceremonies connect us to the Church throughout history. We need that context. His body broken. His blood poured out.
Stained Glass by Lawrence OP
Re-Interpret
Life is...not always as it seems. When someone has received truth from Truth and gives it to us, our moments are interpreted. The lies that have been thriving in our heads are exposed and shrivel in the Light. It’s beautiful, really. Whether in a sermon, a prophetic prayer, an encouraging word, a song lyric, the power of Truth translated in the language of love always sets us free.

I started out on this written journey, in part, to see if a more “missional” or “attractional” or “believer” or “seeker” or “traditional” or “contemporary” or “blended” or “un-church” gathering was more fitting for “Church circa 2012.” At this mile marker, it seems that if we’re all doing the “Re-ing” the other labels become pretty unimportant when describing why we gather weekly.

But I know there’s more. I’m just one perspective. I need to hear from you. I need the whole picture! Why do we gather?
 


4 comments:

Brett said...

Hey Dave,
Great post, very thought-provoking. All your "re's" are really great things, but for me it comes down to Jesus. Jesus manifests his glory in the gathered body in a way that is totally unique from anything anywhere, and I don't want to miss out on that. Music is good, but I could find better. The relationships are good, but Ive heard that church people can be pretty mean sometimes. Preaching/teaching is good, but I've experienced a few clunkers in the past. But add Jesus to those things and they become glorious, life transforming means of grace. With Jesus in our gatherings, we have everything. Without him, we have nothing. That's why I gather.

Unknown said...

That is stellar, Brett! Interestingly, the strips of stained glass left out the one that includes the face and head. (it was Mary, not Jesus, but that's beside the point). So let me try to articulate this in similar format:

Re-Glorify
LIfe is dusty. We, the created, stand up in our wonderful earthiness and begin to act, to do. But let's be honest. It's not that impressive. Without the glory, the breath, the life of Jesus, full of resurrection power, we're empty. Flat. A punctured bladder, vapid and limp (Psalm 37). Let me be clear: Two or more aren't gathered as the Church until we encounter the revelation of Jesus. He is central. He is everything!

Does that say it well? How would you say it?

Dave

Adam Ranck said...

Yeah, Jesus is central. :)

Actually thinking on that a little, thinking simply and centrally, Jesus is what binds the local and global church together, regardless of our preferences, personalities, similar and different interests and lifestyles. So with what you just said and thinking from what Brett said, Jesus is why we gather.

And then, your re's help us center and recenter on Jesus, following Him, and loving one another.

So Brett has a point, but Jesus and other authors of Scripture gave us instructions and wisdom to live by as well as telling us that 'without Jesus, His death and resurrection, our faith is meaningless'.

So we gather to worship Jesus, learn more about and how to be Jesus, and love one another (and our "neighbors") as Jesus loves. And the "re's" can help guide us on how to do that.

Any thoughts on that?

Dave Helmuth said...

Good word, Adam. I think that's probably why I didn't articulate anything specifically about Jesus, because I assumed that He's the very fabric of everything. But I also think that it's important to name it, since we can/do drift...

Dave