Re-Posted from "Meditations of a Charismatic Calvinist Who Does Not Speak in Tongues"
I remember being involved in a church that was going through a
wringer. It had had problems before I got there, including the exodus
of a large part of the congregation. Soon after I got there the pastor,
who was burnt out by previous problems, left, and a certain part of the
congregation left with him. We got a new pastor, but many of the
officeholders of the church dropped out, either entirely from the
congregation or from the carrying out of their office (some later came
back; others did not). At one point the active leadership in the
congregation seemed to consist in the pastor and five other people, and
one of them kept explaining how their family was soon going to move out
of town. Things came back together, but we kept having periodic minor
conflicts, losing a family here and a family there.
One
day I was praying through the sanctuary during a time it was empty.
And the thing God impressed on me was, "If the center holds, you will
make it through." (I know this ultimately comes from a pagan source,
but when God brings things to my mind He normally uses the baggage that
is there.) I took this as meaning that if the core of the church would
stick together, we as a church would make it through.
Later,
I was in a different congregation that appeared to be doing well. I
knew there were potential problems, but I thought we could avoid them.
Then one day when I was walking through the sanctuary, I felt the
familiar nudge, "If the center holds, you will make it through." And I
asked myself, Are we in that much trouble? Not long afterward we were
involved in a major conflict, resulting in the loss of about half the
congregation. Later, the pastor was promoted to a position in the
denomination, and the new pastor had to deal with a series of problems
and aftershocks. But we stuck together and made it through.
I
do not want condemn people who switch churches. I have switched
churches myself for various reasons on more than one occasion. But I
think there is too much tendency to desert simply because things get
difficult. Now there are things worth splitting a church over, and
there may be individual congregations where it is just as well if they
close their doors. But I do believe the Biblical exhortations to unity
imply we need to stick together and work out our problems, where
possible, rather than leaving at the first hint of trouble (Philippians
2:1,2; Ephesians 4:1-6; Colossians 3:12-15). One of the great
innovations in ancient warfare was the shield wall. Instead of each
warrior fighting for himself, they made a row of interlocking shields so
they protected their neighbor's flank. We Christians need to do this
for each other. Perhaps then more ministries would make it through,
rather than collapse.
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