Wow. The responses  to my last email/blog have been quite amazing. Since I send this out on email,  few people get to enjoy the feedback of everyone like they would if they were  posted feedback on the blog. I’m going to send some to you all so that you can  feel what I felt…affirmed, accompanied, and fueled.
I recently wrote a  letter of apology to my former shepherds. With the help of one of them, I  figured out that in my attempt to be open and honest, vulnerable and  transparent, and in my desire to be useful to and approved of by them…that I  oftentimes come across self-righteous and judgmental at worse, and  unrealistically idealistic at best. Both of which understandably made it quite  impossible for them to let their guard down to see if there was anything  worthwhile for them in what I was compelled to say.  
In light of that, a  quick word to my brothers and sisters who might wholesale “disagree with me” or  feel attacked and judged. I want you all to know that I am not attempting to be  “on the warpath”, although I know it can feel like it…sometimes stemming from my  own disgust with my past self, sometimes from my woundedness and defensiveness,  and never really about you. I’m not looking for you to change your mind on  things to adjust to me. I’m not even sure I’m right. Might you listen to the  following collection of variously aged, quite  different-from-each-other-and-different-from-me people and see if maybe there is  something worthwhile to take away from what is going on inside of us? Can you  look carefully and lovingly for a common thread among us that might be somewhat  valid and in need of addressing? While we don’t need you to agree and change, we  are afraid of your rebuke and dismissal. What we want is your friendship,  brotherhood, and partnership in our becoming. We want to humbly be “church” with  you, and you with us. We don’t want you to leave, and we don’t want to leave. We  don’t even want there to BE a “you” and “us”, but a  “we”.
Maybe you could lay  down your defenses, at least while reading these with no one present. Just for  these few minutes pretend that you have nothing at all to defend yourself of  (which you don’t) and no one to defend yourself against, and look for things to  validate in us rather than where we are dead wrong.  
Do the first one first, then we’ll promise to hear the second one next.
"This  sounded like a personal autobiography, written in the second and third  persons." - 45ish divorced life-long member of the 
"You were right, I couldn't stop  reading the email.  I didn't have time then or now to do any of this, but I  couldn't stop reading and I can't seem to stop typing.  I have felt such a  stirring in my spirit - it's been getting louder and more vocal by the  day.  These last few months have been unbearable.  I feel like  such a hypocrite in my own church.  We talk about things we don't do.   We all have this altruistic idea of Christianity and yet when we leave the  church it doesn't follow us.  I grew up swearing I would never be like the  'Sunday' Christians who taught me.  I swore my church would be a living,  breathing church.  The trappings of this world would not entice us and we  would not be bound to it.  Yet that is where Satan has lured me without my  notice and I have begun a battle against it.  There are a few who share our  fight, but not many that we know of.  We have actually considered VERY  seriously moving churches.  We want to be with people who feel our passion  for the lost. But maybe we are being called to stay right where we are  and help awaken the believers we worship with. Maybe I should be focused on  helping those around me climb. I'm going to have to pray a lot, but I think God  needed me to see something.  I can't thank you enough for sending your  email.  It's not very often you get something in your email box you can't  stop reading.  Sorry for such a long response.  May God continue to  change your life so you can help us change ours." - 35ish mother and life-long  member of the 

1 comment:
Brian, your article said so many of the things I have been struggling with over the past few months/years. I, too, like some of the others have considered changing churches to find one that more closely resembles my heart's desire. But I also sense God telling me to stay and work for change...if we all left, would it be better? I'm not sure.
But, anyway, thanks.
a late 20's girl...life-long member of the Church of Christ...seeking Him more than ever before
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