Friday, October 21, 2011

THE MOST IDEALISTIC PIECE I'VE EVER WRITTEN...?

"But whoso hath this world's good, and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him?" (i John 3:17)

I usually start work at 7 in the morning. Today, I've been assigned an unusual schedule; I'm starting at 2:30 and finishing at 8 p.m. Thus, I was able to do some early morning grocery shopping and now I'm on the computer at the public library, and I'm "musing". I received a desperate e-mail this morning about a truly needy Christian woman. She has lost her husband. She has five kids; the youngest is VERY small. Their housing was tied into the husband's career, and the family is losing that in December. They pretty much have NOTHING. The woman is a highly committed Christian. I received one e-mail from a dear friend of hers, and a forward of that same e-mail from a pastor. (Listen, it IS a "legit" story.)

Thought: there's way too much of this stuff going on in the evangelical Christian community.

I guess the Rev. John DeBrine (of "Songtime") is still around. He's got to be around 85 now. John is a character...a Conservative Baptist minister, a bachelor, and VERY outspoken. One thing I recall him saying often on his radio program is that "Christians just aren't believable" and that "If we're going to win them (family, friends, etc.) to Christ we've GOT to become believable." He's right.

I don't want to write a LOT here about the closing of the small church I pastored, First Assembly of God of Framingham, but one thing I WILL say is that my son Jon commented that while a number of people of means outside of the little church essentially said to us "be warmed and filled" (see James 2:16), few of them really stepped up to help us in tangible ways. He's right.

I served on the Pastoral Advisory Council of New Covenant Christian School (grades K-6 and for a short time K-8) for several years. My wife taught there for years, and all of our kids went there. Back in the 1980s, Christians from Boston's MetroWest suburbs WORKED, GAVE, AND SACRIFICED to start this school and keep it going. I could name five or six families who PARTICULARLY were HEROES for all they did for that school. Sadly, when "the economy hit" in the late 2000s and the school was in financial trouble, that generation of parents and boosters, well, for the most part didn't "boost". After all the years of blood, sweat, tears, and prayer, the school closed a couple of years ago. I served on the Board of New England Aftercare Ministries "The Bridge House" of Framingham for around seven years. Back in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when that ministry had a need or a crisis, the Body of Christ would RALLY. People would show up for special prayer meetings and people would did into their pockets and give sacrificially, if it was $10. or $1000. or any amount in between. Today, that ministry is "hanging by a thread" to use an old expression from my parents' generation. I know appeals have gone out from them, and there's been very little response.

I hope he won't be embarrassed to be quoted here, but my friend Ron Sebastian who is very active at Faith Community Church of Hopkinton (formerly First Congregational Church of Hopkinton) has said that in America even in this economy there's plenty of money around. There should be no churches or ministries "going under". People who've served in ministry, like that woman I started off this piece about just should not be destitute.

All I can say is, I've experienced a lot first hand, but I'll leave it at that.

Missionaries should NOT be unable to get back to the field due to lack of funds. Ministries should not be closing their doors. Christian young people called to the ministry should not have to quit Bible College or Seminary due to lack of funds. Christian families should not be put out on the street while others turn away and yawn. The fact is, if we want real revival, John DeBrine is right. We've got to
become believable.

2 comments:

jon TK said...

And it's not just the folks outside the church who don't contribute. It's INSIDE too, when there are those giving out of nothing, and others giving nothing out of their excess.

Yeah, when there's money to put into a megachurch getting a fifth giant screen, but the church one town over can't pay its pastor, that's WRONG. It starts me wondering if evangelical churches need to get just a little more communal (dare I say socialist?) like the first Century church was. It maybe can't be done on too grand a scale, and the Catholic Church demonstrates it doesn't always work and churches are closed due to secular business thinking. But if true religion is helping the poor and orphans, some of us are practicing dead faith.

I'll come right out and say it: I was told to my face to be grateful for the money the district was funneling into housing my father after he the church closed. If there was money out there to do that, it could have and should have been put into keeping the church opened. In time, the investment would have been returned.

"The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together, against the LORD and against his anointed [...]. He who sits in the heavens shall laugh; the Lord shall hold them in derision."
-Psalm 2:2,4

Glenn said...

I agree with Jon TK.

The church operates today on a business "success" model.

And the "Christian" evangelicals want to tear apart the government safety nets as well.

The "Tea Party" in congress wants to leave "charity," welfare and seniors to the church to care for.

Christians or not, we all need each other.