Thursday, February 15, 2007

I am the door/gate

Wow. The following post from ginkworld really hit me between the eyes this morning. Disturbed me. Not because our church doesn't have door handles, but because so many of us on the "inside" don't even realize what we're doing. And maybe the handles are more a metaphor with many churches. Here's the post:

come on in?

recently, tina and i had an opportunity to visit a very interesting church. it is one of those "mega-churches." now, i am not going to share the name of the church because the name does not matter. my desire is not to embarrass the church, nor is it to make this about them - it is about us, it is about something very interesting. take a look at the picture on the right and tell me what is missing? take a good look and think about what is not shown. go on, take a good look.

give up?

the answer is, there are no handles on the doors.

that's right, the church has no handles on the doors leading into any part of the church. the only way into the church is to have a key, or be let in by someone who is in the building. no one is able to just "walk in," and you can never just "visit" without being allowed in. [in fact, to "visit" the church requires that you stop by the security office, sign in and get a visitors pass] when we pointed this out to some of the people who attend the church they had some very interesting responses -

one women said, "well we do have a great deal of homeless people in the area and they are always coming by for help. so we had the doors replaced so they could not just walk in." well, God forbid a homeless person should ever approach a church for help; i mean what are they thinking? do they actually think we care? do they actually think we are to welcome "those" people into our clean, well kept, over priced church? after all, they did not have anything to do with the building of the church.

one women said, "oh, how funny, i never noticed that before." then just walked away laughing with here friends at how funny it was that the church had no door handles. yea, it is so funny that a place that calls itself "God's House" should put locks on the doors so people could not get in. i wonder, what would happen if she got to the gates of heaven and found that the handles had been removed? do you think she would be laughing at that point?
as we started to ask more about the reasoning, what we found was very interesting. there were two sides,and both seemed very close. many of those inside the church, members, never gave the doors a second thought. to them, it was the norm; that is the way the church was and they liked it. they saw it as a way of protecting themselves, and keeping the church as they liked it.
the most surprising thing came from people outside the church. you see, they felt the exact same way. they saw the doors as a norm for what that church was all about. they felt the church was more of an exclusive club more then it was a church. they did not feel offended by the church not having handles. as one person put it, "why would we want to go into a place that wants nothing to do with us."
to me, a church without door handles is a church that reflects the church of our day. there was a time when the church was a place people could go and walk in anytime - today, one needs an appointment to speak with a pastor and a invite to get in the door. the part that concerns me the most is that the american church just does not see how closed it can be - even when you see a church door with no handles.

I remember when I first came to my present church, they put chains across the parking lot - only taking them down on Sunday morning - so people couldn't even get on the property, much less in the door. Now my mind is aclutter with how many ways we try to keep people out in more subtle ways... and it's not just homeless people. A sad note to start the day on.

Lord, free us from the prison of our own minds. Release in us the mind of Christ; teach us to love, to be loving, to not be a church of jerks.

5 comments:

MR said...

Every so often you rattle something in my head and I flash back to CCD class (Sunday school, only I had it on Wednesday - [shrug]) and I seem to remember our teacher justifying this to us: how organized religion is such a big target, and stories of churches being trashed, tabernacles broken into and the communion wafers desecrated in any way you can't think of. Spray paint, etc. Of course, out in the country I can't see this being a big problem, but you just got back from the big city, wasn't every third person a nut? :) Okay, not quite that bad. It seems like now-days they just burn down the church. Anyway, I think it would be nice to have all-access to church, but I can certainly understand that supervision is required, and I don't blame the church for that. Stained glass is expensive.

Lily said...

That really struck me, too. Great post.

JAH said...

As Jesus looked down on Jerusalem, He felt saddened as they were to Him like sheep without a shepherd. So He told the disciples - let's get outta here before they see us and heaven forbid - follow us. (Okay I'm paraphrasing a bit.) I guess to me, if someone gets in and trashes out a church the only thing we can do is clean it up and pray for them. And, I would figure we need to do this as many times as it takes. Somehow we have to get beyond our "stuff" and realize that Jesus was concerned about people's lives and where they were headed when they left this earth. I don't think He will say "well done, good and faithful servant, you kept the carpets very clean and that is what it is all about". I think he said was "what you do to the least of these you did to me". So, I guess some people have locked Jesus out. I have now gotten down off the soapbox. Thank you for listening...

dan said...

Certainly vandalism is an issue that you don't want to be stupid about. Our building was broken into a few years ago, and it's not any fun. Which I think just adds to the argument that maybe we don't need all the fancy stuff in the first place. In fact, a church-without-walls, made up only of the people, wherever they may gather, sounds more like church to me. But... I am a bit of an idealist, for sure.

Unknown said...

How about open until 9, then a hotline at the door that rings the Pastor. Anyone there after 9 will want to talk to him anyway. Also, a slot that says "drop sins here. 50 cent fine for not repenting"