SHARE = GROWTH

Who Needs Church?

Average User Rating:

By Steve Case
10/5/2007

There we were, in the middle of a round-robin Q-and-A discussion session fueled by a couple dozen scribbled talk-starters on slips of paper. Teenagers lined the walls of my office/youth room, the Mountain Dew was flowing, and four flavors of Ben & Jerry's were pit-stopping their way around the circle. Each young person took a slip, read it aloud, answered the question, then the whole group chimed in.

The questions ranged from basic ("If you could have one superpower, what would it be?") to tough ("What trait do you admire in someone else that you don't have?").

Then one of the kids opened a slip and read: "Do you need to go to church to be a Christian?"

I was surprised when the student, without hesitation, said, "No." The rest automatically agreed and were ready to move on

Teenagers lined the walls of my office/youth room, the Mountain Dew was flowing, and four flavors of Ben & Jerry's were pit-stopping their way around the circle. Each young person took a slip, read it aloud, answered the question, then the whole group chimed in.
I was not. I was hoping for spirited discussion, but the group was adamant that church wasn't a Christian must-do.

Now, I know The Peter Principle author Laurence J. Peter said, "Going to church doesn't make you a Christian anymore than going to a garage makes you a car." And I know comic Lenny Bruce said, "Everyday people are staying away from church and going back to God." And I know USA Today recently reported a shrinking number of people going to church but an increasing number of people who consider themselves to be "religious" or "spiritual."

But does all that mean my kids are right?

Well, you don't have to be in a church to connect with God. But there are vital reasons why churchgoing is a must, not an option. Here are my 10 best arguments...

1. It's about the giving, not the receiving.
All of us, at least once, have said to ourselves: "Worship is boring and long and irrelevant -- what am I really getting out of it?" So it's no surprise our kids are asking the same question. But it's the wrong question. A better one is: "What am I really adding to the service -- am I helping others get something out of this?"

We can reflect, meditate, pray, and even study the Bible alone. But we can't function as Christ's body alone. Simply, church is not about meeting personal needs, it's about what we're offering God as a community of Christians. It's not just someone's good idea; it's God's good idea.

2. It's all about relationship-building.
Jesus promised that whenever two or three of us gather, he'd be in our midst. Of course, we can experience God's presence when we're alone -- Jesus often went off by himself. But he made a special point to encourage us to gather in his name -- it's always foolish to ignore something Jesus told us to do. It's the difference between eating a TV dinner while standing over your sink and hanging out at the Taco Palace with your friends and staying long after the burritos have vaporized. You talk. Bonds build. Friendships cement. Do a Bible study on Acts 2:41-46, and then talk about the crucial role of "gathering" in the Christian life.

3. We must learn to live with others' differences and unify around our common commitments.
The subtle and overlooked message of the "Wherever two or three of you are gathered..." passage is the directive to simply love one another through our differences by gathering. In this disconnected culture, teenagers have few opportunities to live and love with people who are radically different in age, interest, and perspective than them. Church offers them a chance to connect with others around a common set of desires and commitments. Many churches have a "collect" printed in the bulletin on Sunday mornings. The idea comes from a traditional prayer that collect-ed the celebrations and concerns of the congregation. The barriers between us would grow if we "give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing..." (Hebrews 10:25).

4. God is the audience, not us.
We call it a worship service, but a more accurate description for what most of us do today is something like a "spiritual show." I think many teenagers equate churchgoing with going to the movies. It's a performance, and their role is to give it a thumbs-up or thumbs-down. We treat our worship service like our favorite TV program. As long as the show is entertaining and the characters and story capture us, we'll stay tuned. But if it loses its edge, we'll flip to another channel, another show.

At a recent Lost and Found concert, musician Michael Bridges took aim at "showy" worship services: "At our church we have something really cool. We have hard-bound books in every pew, and all of the words to all of the songs are printed right there for you."

Before they reach adulthood, our teenagers must learn that God is the audience, not them. The choir, the minister, the ushers, and the people sitting in the pews are all part of the worship service, for which God is the point. The best way to turn the show into a worship experience is to get our teenagers deeply involved in the service. They can read the Scriptures, create responsive readings, do the corporate prayer, create PowerPoint slides for the sermon, plan and perform short dramas, and more. If they own it, they'll participate. Once they see God as the audience, the purpose for gathering changes.

5. Worship creates opportunities for connections with God.
Our teenagers crave a relationship with God -- every poll and survey, secular and Christian-- says so. But you can't connect with someone if the two of you are sitting in a dark room with paper bags over your heads. We need opportunities for clear, open lines of communication so we can open up to God. And a good worship service creates those opportunities through its formal or informal "liturgy."3

6. We need others who can share our load.
Central to the Christian life is "bearing one another's burdens" (Galatians 6:2). If our teenagers are to grow into the image of God, they must move toward others whether they're broken or blessed, through tears and through laughter. No joke is worth telling when you're alone. And we need others to help us lift our concerns to God. The last half of Hebrews 10:25 advises, "Let us encourage one another -- and all the more as you see the Day approaching."

7. The church offers powerful mentors.
You're a role model for the teenagers in your group, and so is every other adult in your congregation. Your students are always watching and studying you -- they're literally looking for others to model what it means to follow Christ into adulthood. Your church is full of mentors. Use them. Train them. Your teenagers will show up when they're getting the kind of affirmation and advice adult mentors can give them.

8. People at church have gifts you need.
Everybody has a gift -- that's a biblical reality (Romans 12:4-8). We meet together as a church so we can combine our gifts and use them for God. If your kids say "I'm a Christian," they're also saying they're an inseparable and necessary part of a working body. That body needs feet when it's time to stand and fingers when it's time to eat the Ben & Jerry's. We find answers to our prayers in the people of our church community, and we are the answer to another's prayers.

9. Our impact is multiplied when we're part of a church community.
Christians who are looking to coast through life will avoid church; Christians who want to swim upstream toward the "upward call of God in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 3:14) will gravitate to the church. Generally, there are two kinds of people: those who are influencing the world for Christ, and those who are following the crowd down the "broad way that leads to destruction" (Matthew 7:13).
It's impossible to run toward the gospel, counter to the world's current, in isolation. That kind of bravery happens only in Christian community. As we grow closer to God, so does the church. As we seek advice and mentor those who follow us, so does the church. As we become a part of the body of Christ in the church, so the church becomes a part of the worldwide Christian body.

10. Our commitments define us.
Tony Campolo says we're defined by our commitments. If we believe nothing and support nothing, we're a part of...nothing. If we commit ourselves to the church, we define ourselves as part of the body of Christ. There, we can feel loved, supported, and part of something much bigger than ourselves.

churchgoing kids make better decisions

According to a report by researchers working for the National Study of Youth and Religion, religious 12th-graders are much better at making smart choices with their lives.

  • Substance Abuse -- Churchgoing seniors are less likely than their nonreligious peers to smoke cigarettes and marijuana, drink, and abuse hard drugs.
  • Risky Behaviors -- Your churched kids get fewer traffic tickets and are more likely to wear a seatbelt than their unchurched peers. They're also less likely to enjoy dangerous or risky activities.
  • Trouble With the Law -- Religious teenagers are less likely than their nonreligious schoolmates to get in trouble with the police, get into a fight at school or hit a teacher, shoplift, vandalize, trespass, steal a car, commit arson, or participate in an armed robbery.
  • Positive Community Involvement -- Your youth group kids are more likely than their peers to volunteer in the community or serve in the student government at school. They also play sports and exercise more than their unchurched classmates.

The report concludes: "Regular religious service attendance, high subjective importance of faith, and many years spent participating in religious youth groups are clearly associated with safer, healthier, more constructive lifestyles for U.S. teenagers."

Steve Case is a veteran youth minister, a contributing editor to group, and author of the recently released book The Book of Uncommon Prayer (Zondervan/Youth Specialties).

Conversation

add to the conversation

This is awesome!! I couldn't agree more that the church service is an important part of the member of the church body. So many youth and adults alike feel they can be a christian and they don't need a church service but you have done a great job at showing how important it is.

John 2:12:28pm on 12/03/2008

Offensive
2 + 5 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

YouthMinistry.com is brought to you by the fine folks at:

Group Magazine Simply Youth Ministry