Tuesday, October 28, 2014

263. Protestant Churches: Could Scripture Reading Be Reducing Our Attraction?

 This is going to sound like advice from one old Episcopalian coot to another but it's really advice to all Christian church leaders worried about their declining attraction to young people.  Even if you're not Christian you can imagine that worry: young person shows up, you do the sixteen different things recommended by psychologists, sociologists, salesmen, or your own diocesan expert, and he doesn't come back.  And each week you see more and more symptoms of a dying organization: multiplying analyses, lengthening meetings, emptying seats, whitening hair.

My advice is not original.  It is essentially that of the Episcopal Diocese of New York to its parish greeters or ushers: "Place yourself in the shoes of the visitor."  What I want to add is some urging to do that more realistically, and to act more radically after we've done it.

So here comes today's visiting young person.  What do you see?  If you live in a college town, as I did, chances are you are going to see young people much better educated than the young people in your day. If you live in a different town chances are you've got a lot of young people who went to colleges like the one in my town. 

That means that you could be looking at the heart of your declining-attendance problem.  A recent Pew survey firmly shows a progressive decline of church attendance with years of schooling.  If we take seriously the possibility that it's the schooling that's killing us we've got to look more closely at that schooling.  So we can be sure we're really getting into the shoes of the visitor.

To get in there fully, of course, we'd have to have sat in the classrooms he (or she, understood from now on) sat in, and been impressed by the teachers he was impressed by, and read the books they respect and assign.  We can't do that, but we know enough about the academic tradition to know that this is going to include tests for reliable belief (science courses, mainly) and lessons in the dangers of credulousness (history and political science courses, mainly).  And we know that from the beginning he is going to have been urged, in his composition and logic courses, to think critically — that is, skeptically.

And we'd have to have lived with him in his rooming quarters, and eaten and drunk and smoked where he eats and drinks and smokes, and absorbed the culture, finding out what's cool and what's not.  We can't do that but we know enough to make this important distinction: between those students who take their education seriously and those who don't.

All right, Episcopalian recruiter, here he comes.  You smile, you greet him, you lead him (and whoever has escorted him, hopefully an Episcopalian who can help with the liturgy, more hopefully an Episcopalian who can convey the attractions — the dignity, the elevation, the beauty, the power) to his seat.  You put yourself in his place.  You have joined the pre-service meditators.  The lovely Bach introit slides down from the loft behind you.  Rustles from the narthex, then the stirring processional, robes flowing past, voices at your ear, parts strengthening and fading, the glitter of precious metal, the forward-bending cross, the bobbing heads of the stair-climbers, then, elevated, the formation of officiants.  A pause, prolonging your expectation.  Then the solemn call to worship, the declaration of its purpose, the reminder of our need, the sense of shared resolve in breasts around you.  On with the grand project of human betterment.  A silver-haired, well-tailored gentleman in a business suit rises to the most elevated position and, in a cultured accent, gives us the first instruction: "When God saw what the people of Nineveh did, how they turned from their evil ways, God changed his mind about the calamity that he said he would bring upon them...."

I won't continue the reading but believe me, this First Lesson will come across as such a farrago of nonsense that the visitor, who wants to follow, won't be able to believe that he's hearing right.  Jonah doesn't want the city to be saved, he gets angry, he argues with God, he asks for death rather than to have God change his mind in this merciful way.  He sits down outside the city, pouting apparently.  God "appoints a bush" to give him shade, making Jonah happy, then he "appoints a worm" to kill the bush, then he prepares a dry wind and a sun so hot it makes Jonah angry enough to say, "It is better for me to die than to live."

The visitor waits for the moral, hoping for clarification.  Here is what he gets: "Then the Lord said, 'You are concerned about the bush, for which you did not labor and which you did not grow; it came into being in a night and perished in the night.  And should I not be concerned about Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand persons who do not know their right hand from their left, and also many animals?'"

That's all.  The obviously well-educated gentleman, wise in years, waits the recommended three seconds (to allow the First Lesson to sink in), then says, "The Word of the Lord."

All right, you there, trying to get into the visitor's shoes.  You'll know you are succeeding when you find yourself actually listening to these words.  They are not just sounds, part of the ceremonial rumble toward the sermon. They are saying something, and you want to know what it is.

The visitor is listening the way he listens in the building he comes to you from, the one with the classrooms, and he is looking at this person up front the way he looks at the persons up front in the classroom.  He has acquired habits of listening and expectations of language that are hard for him to break.

Yes, there are things that he knows that will make trouble for us later but now it is important to remember what he does not know, or does not know yet.  He does not know that there are theories that explain all this nonsense, or put it in context, and make it more palatable.  He has never heard of the theory that the Lord shapes his words according to the understanding of his people, even if the words that accomplish his purpose with people at one time in history will appear as nonsense to people of another time (the Theory of Accommodation), he knows nothing about Christian Apologetics, he has been in on no discussions of "the truth of myth," or "necessary fictions," or "parabolic renderings," he has never attended a meeting of The Inquirers, the church's adult discussion group. He does not know the history of the Bible, he does not know the succession of covenants, he does not even know the difference between the Old Testament and the New Testament.  And there is no foundation in him whatsoever for the love of the old words that repetition has built up in us, the aging ones.  He doesn't draw on any reserve of forgiveness.  He just listens to what he hears and judges the sense of it.

And I don't think he forgets, or puts what he has learned in separate compartments.  In university classrooms that's hard to get away with.  No, this that he has taken in, been forced to take in by its emphatic positioning (right there, wham, at the beginning of the service) and framing ("The Word of the Lord!"), will sit like a lump in his brain the rest of the service.  There'd better be a lively sermon, because his mind will return to it in every idle moment.

 One way to solve this problem is to make a good Anglican compromise.  Remove from the Lectionary (the collection of passages from which readings are chosen) the greatest shocks to educated visitors, substitute harmless or, hopefully, attractive passages, keep the ones the white heads will leave the church over, and move the whole thing to a less prominent position in the service.  And, oh yes, keep the Adult Inquiry class ready for the visitors who come back and need incentive to stay; they are your best future escorts of first-time visitors.

But the problem may be too deep for that solution.  The problem may be — can we Protestants possibly admit this? —with Scripture itself.  It just can't bear the weight we, to keep our tradition going, put on it.  Even with a delivered Accommodation Theory we're in trouble.  The visitor can still ask, "Why should I have to sit and listen to what's composed for primitives and children?  I am not a primitive and I am not a child."  And our more sophisticated reply, that for our kind of wisdom you have to become a child, will not, at this point, be understood.

 It's painful to admit that — in salesman's terms — our basic product is the problem.  It's so painful that we just can't give up trying to locate it elsewhere.  Surely if we display our social outreach, choose more singable hymns, make the service easier to follow, refresh the newcomers' packet, and professionalize the web site we'll pull out of this. 

Of course many passages from Scripture are painless, and some, both palatable and digestible, are pure pleasure.  Turkeys like 15 Pentecost (the Jonah passage) come along only once in a while.  The thing is, you don't know when your best prospects are going to show up, or how far their pain will be reported.  Furthermore, even on a good Sunday the Old Testament is likely to pain him.

We try to think about that pain.  We see that it is, as the education of our young broadens and deepens, going to get worse.  We realize, with a pang, that the problem that's killing us is a problem that Catholics, when the Jonah story was in Latin, didn't have.  Freely charm your visitor with music and ceremony.  Looks attractive, doesn't it?  Oh, oh.  Where is this leading?  Gott hilfe uns.

 Well, can't we make the pain go away by picturing a different visitor, one who doesn't take his education seriously?  "This nut's too hard to crack.  Forget him and go for.....?"  What, just the C and D students?  We become a refuge for "fellows whom it hurts to think."  That's a knock on Christians already.  A lowered aim puts us in an impossible position.

OK, this pain is going to get worse.  If it gets bad enough, and we see no other out, maybe we'll be ready to forget the Anglican compromise and go radical.  Forget the Lectionary, forget the three set readings, forget representation of all the voices that have told us what we are, forget "the Word of the Lord," and start over.  With the Bible, treated as a treasure of options.  Set before the local priest.  He, knowing his congregation and community and what kind of prospects will be coming through the door, chooses among them and proceeds accordingly.  Maybe he'll stick with the Lectionary, maybe he'll make a few substitutions, maybe he'll knock everything out except for the one passage he thinks he can get such mileage out of that he doesn't need anything else.  But one thing for sure: his every choice will be made in the light of what he wants to accomplish that Sunday with that audience, especially with his sermon.  He'll make sure that no off-putting passage goes out into the air without an explanatory, ameliorating sermon behind it.

Because we've lived by Scripture doesn't mean we can't die by it.  I know it's hard to believe that a few readings from the Bible are killing us, but why take a chance?  At least we can remove the passages that, if my sense of an educated visitor's response is right, inflict the deepest wounds.















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