
This week’s reflection is a follow-up to last week’s reflection by my friend Patrick Sullivan.
Christian environmental change means that our churches must be not only supportive caring communities but up to date biblically and historically, and always open to discovery and development.
Changing the church environment, for all Christians, must be a prophetic movement forward. Today, I suggest six ways to change, improve, and move ahead.
(1) We must move from living in the past to engaging with the present and thinking creatively about tomorrow. This means moving well beyond, for example, antiquated understandings of human sexuality and gender, prejudice against women, and distorted biblical and historical understandings.
(2) We need ongoing education that moves people from boxed-in perspectives to open and developing theology. All doctrinal statements are provisional understandings. We are all learners. No one has all the truth. There is still much to learn and discover.
(3) We need to shift from self-protective bureaucratic hierarchies, whose vision is to protect and save the institution, to being supportive communities of faith. Ideally, the institution is the medium for conveying the ministry and message of Jesus. Unfortunately, too often the medium becomes the message. People forget that Jesus did not exercise power over people. He empowered people to take responsibility in living, learning, and caring for one another. Jesus did not control people through authoritarian decrees, nor by setting up institutional structures. The Roman Emperor Constantine the Great (272 – 337) was the great institutionalizer. At the Councils of Arles (314) and Nicaea (325) he passed on the institutionalization fervor to Christian bishops.
(4) We need to abandon religious arrogance and move into humble inter-church collaboration. No Christian and no Christian tradition can be regarded as superior to others and therefore act in a haughty or snobbish manner. Some Catholics still think they have all the truth. Some evangelicals think that way as well.
(5) We need to stop being energetic and proud temple-builders and start being traveling pilgrims. What do people today really need? An impressive and bigger cathedral or a roof overhead, a meal, health care, childcare, compassionate understanding, and a more secure and hopeful life. It is a values question.
(6) We must not focus on just schooling professionals but mentoring spiritual leaders. When it comes to Christian ministry, the mentality of the professional is often not enough. I trained and taught seminarians for many years. We need pastoral leaders and ministers who are much more than professionals. We need leaders who are men and women anchored in deep faith and who, as our fellow travelers, understand us and support our own faith development as compassionate and genuine spiritual guides.
Christians must stop seeing the world as their enemy and start appreciating the world as the real place where we live and meet the Divine. As Hildegard of Bingen (1098 – 1179) wrote: “The truly holy person welcomes all that is earthly.”
Jack
Dr. John A. Dick – Historical Theologian