A Cure for Apathy
Wednesday May 9, 2007
"Canadians are not angry at the church," writes Gary
Nelson, General Secretary of Canadian Baptist Ministries. "They simply don't
care about it."
I think he's right.
I first met Gary when he was a pastor in Edmonton, co-writing a book
with Don Posterski of World Vision. He struck me as someone confident in his
faith, capable of expressing it without jargon or pomposity.
He's still doing it, but in a larger context.
In a recent issue of the Canadian Baptist magazine Mosaic,
Gary mused about the latest Canadian census statistics: "16% of all
Canadians ticked the little box next to 'no religion.' Even more sobering is
that 40% of those people were under the age of 24."
But he noted an apparent contradiction – 80% of Canadians still say
they believe in God.
"We are a country of genuine spiritual inquiry and religious
rejection all wrapped into one," he concluded. "Canadians [feel] that their
search will not be respected, or even understood, by loyal well-meaning
church goers."
"On Sunday morning," he continues, "the average Canadian does not
wake up and wonder which church they should attend. They have more
intriguing and urgent things to do with their time."
Other interests
On Sunday mornings, the soccer fields I
pass on my way to church are crowded with young people and their families.
A couple, friends for decades, prefer going for Sunday brunch with
neighbours to going to church.
Kids up the street sell chocolates door to door, to fund the school
band's trip to a music festival. Held on a weekend, naturally.
In a letter to the Mosaic's editor, Joe Foster, a member of
Bromley Road Baptist Church in Toronto, asks, "I wonder if we… have hunkered
down in our churches, praying for someone else to take action… My generation
has stood by and wrung our hands while poverty, genocide, and the ravaging
of God's creation have run rampant."
Inconveniencing ourselves
Gary Nelson proposes what he calls "a
ministry of inconvenience." Instead of keeping ourselves comfortable, we
need to risk being inconvenienced – to serve the needs of the community and
the world.
In the same issue of Mosaic, Mark Buchanan told of going to a
small lakeside community as a guest preacher.
"I arrived half an hour before the service," he wrote. "The building
was still locked."
But on Main Street, thousands of people had gathered for a charity
marathon. "A local band was playing on a flatbed. Coffee kiosks were doing a
booming business. Runners were limbering up. It was a festival."
When the church finally opened, a local deacon complained that
someone in an RV coming for the marathon had damaged their freshly paved
parking lot.
Their solution – sling a chain across the entrance to restrict
entrance and protect their property.
Churches are dying wherever they concentrate on keeping their
coffins comfortably well-upholstered.
Thriving churches are willing to take risks, Gary Nelson
argues, driven by a conviction that they can make a difference, to their
communities and to the world. |

Jim Taylor
Jim Taylor has more than 40 years experience writing and editing, in
broadcasting, magazines, newspapers, and books. He was for 13 years the managing
editor of a 330,000 circulation magazine; he co-founded a publishing house; he
has written 13 books and has lost count of the number of magazine articles.
Although theoretically retired, he continues to edit two or three books a year,
dispenses advice liberally, and teaches his Eight-Step Editing workshops across
Canada. |