It has happened to me before, but not by so many – and at both services!
I believe that every church elder in the first service, and several congregants and/or visitors in the second service, walked out at the midpoint of my message.
More than that, the elders called me into a meeting between services to tell me why they were so upset and to suggest changes to my next message. I learned later that one elder wanted to stop me from speaking again altogether.
What did I say that was so upsetting?
No, I was not deconstructing the Trinity or denying Jesus’ incarnation. Those might have been messages worth boycotting.
My message title was “Seeking God’s Kingdom First and Foremost.” The Bible passage was basically the Sermon on the Mount, focusing especially on Matthew 6:33, “But seek God’s kingdom and God’s righteousness first, and all these others things (i.e. food and clothing) will be added to you.”
After surveying the specific kingdom righteousness insisted upon by Jesus (reread the Sermon on the Mount) – that is, mercy, peace-making, non-retaliation, non-violence, forgiveness, servanthood, etc. – I then turned to the question of practical application.
Specifically, how might the American church behave differently if everyone claiming to follow Jesus truly lived out Jesus’ command in Matthew 6:33?
What might it look like for our kingdom citizenship to trump (no pun intended, but what’s a writer to do?) our American citizenship?
How should Jesus’ kingdom righteousness over-rule popular views of American righteousness?
Then I got specific. I said, Let’s focus on the priority of being non-violent, merciful peacemakers living in American, the greatest purveyor of death, violence and destruction in the world today. What should that do to us? What should we be doing ourselves?
So, I offered a few examples, illustrated with readily available information that every American can look up for themselves.
- The United States is the largest arms dealer in the world, selling almost half of the military weapons purchased by other developing countries.
- The United States is arming and enabling Saudi Arabia’s assault on the people of Yemen, contributing to what is now the largest humanitarian crisis in the world.
- Many hundreds of thousands of people have been killed directly or indirectly during our unending wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan, many of whom have been innocent civilians blandly labeled “collateral damage.”
I then suggested that Christians ought to be appalled by America’s participation in such horrors. We can never endorse, much less support, such ruthless destruction.
In fact, as kingdom citizens who are also citizens of a supposed democracy, we should take advantage of the political means at our disposal to speak out, object and strive to change our nation’s addiction to bloodshed and warfare.
THAT is a part of what it means for disciples to be “salt and light in this world” (Matthew 5:11-16).
I then suggested a few practical, local avenues available to those who want to do something in a hands-on way.
Well, the exodus began well before I was even half-way through the statistics on American war-making. The elders explained that they walked out because I had stopped talking about Jesus and instead “turned to politics.” The Jesus part was great. Then the politics ruined everything.
I was told that a church service ought to be a “safe place” for everyone.
Oh my. Where to being?
My experience provides a text-book example of SO many of the things that have gone wrong with the American church.
- Since when is worshiping the Holy One and hearing divine revelation supposed to make me always feel safe? Try telling that to Moses as he trembled before the burning bush (Exodus 3:1-6).
- When honestly proclaimed, the gospel of Jesus Christ comforts the afflicted while afflicting the comfortable. And the American church is filled with an abundance of oh-so-comfortable people. After all, that is the primary reason many attend church in the first place, to be comfortably confirmed in their comfort zones.
- This nationalistic, play-it-safe attitude was exactly the mindset of the German Christian church in the 1930s and ‘40s, filled with Nazi sympathizers supporting Adolf Hitler. (See the discussion of this phenomenon in my new book, I Pledge Allegiance: A Believer’s Guide to Kingdom Citizenship in 21st-Century America). I suspect that these folks would have happily listened to politics had it been their brand of Christian nationalist politics. (Actually, I am still mystified as to why raw facts and figures are heard as bad politics…).
- Recall that Jesus’ says, “Woe to you when everyone has only good things to say about you!” ( Luke 6:26). In other words, the church is in big trouble if our mission is only to help people feel safe and secure.
- This sad attitude is perhaps the most damning indication of the American captivity of the church, happily enslaved to US consumerism and the self-help gospel of wealth and success.
- I strongly suspect that most of these folks are afflicted with consciences horribly numbed by Fox News idolatry. This network has been a scourge in our country and has almost single-handedly transformed historic conservatism (a respectable tradition) into an ungodly, mean-spirited, narrow-minded mob fueled by idolatrous, nationalistic propaganda. Honestly, any “Christian” who depends on Fox as his/her sole/primary source of news and political information ought to repent and be ashamed, be very ashamed.
- The gospel has always been inherently political. This can only be avoided by truncating the truth. Politics concerns itself with a people’s governance, the management of public interaction/conversation and the exercise of state power. Once you acknowledge the universal sovereignty of the Lord Jesus, become a citizen of the global kingdom of God and submit yourself to Jesus’ instruction in kingdom ethics, it becomes impossible to avoid open confrontation with the public powers-that-be. Especially when they demand an allegiance contrary to Christ’s rule.
- Fortunately, the African-American church in this country has always understood this. Predominantly white churches need to listen and learn from our black brothers and sisters in Christ. We have much to learn. And they have a wealth of experience to share.
- The fact that these obvious conflicts of interests (and power) go unrecognized by so many (white) folks calling themselves Christians, and then cause such discomfort and bizarre behavior when discussed from the pulpit, illustrates the widespread, colossal failure of American church leaders to engage the gospel fully and to discuss the broad spectrum of its practical application in their teaching.
- We need to change.
Alas, I could go on, but I will stop here…for now.
P.S. I must add that after both services, I received much more positive feedback from people who understood the issues involved and were eager to follow Jesus obediently in this dimension of their lives, too. All in all, it was an encouraging day that demonstrated the Holy Spirit’s work in a way that, I trust, is representative of the church at large.