I am part of a national denomination that is broken down
into smaller geographic regions called synods. The word synod is interesting
because it came sometimes be rendered “together with”. The idea is that the
congregations in our area are “together with” each other in a common ministry.
Often it feels to me that we are together in name and heritage but not in
reality. I think one of the reasons for this is shown in a recent newsletter
article that our synod published.
In this article one of the pastors wrote an unintelligent
attack on one of the fundamental doctrines or teachings of the Church. He
attacked the notion that Jesus died to save us from the consequences
(punishment) of our sin. He attacked one particular thinker (Anselm of
Canterbury) and claimed the idea to be unbiblical. At first it would seem that
this post should seek to defend his attack but it is so clear he is wrong that
a defense is unnecessary. One simply has to read Hebrews 9 and 10, Romans
3:23-26 to know how mistaken he is. Those are only two passages among dozens
that show his error.
Some of my follow on conversation with our staff were
similarly disheartening. Our youth director told me that when she goes to youth
director meetings in our synod the youth directors are clear whose pastor hates
whose pastor. I asked her if the word hate is accurate and she said that there
is deep enmity between the various pastors and it feels like hate. I have to
wonder what the heck is going on.
I did a little calculation to figure out how much time a
pastor might spend in prayer and bible study in order to prepare for a sermon
and or a bible study. I figure that ten hours a week is a good estimate. I know
some spend more and others less but ten seems reasonable. I was taught to spend
one hour of prayer and study for every minute I preach so ten seems to be a
good conservative figure. I also estimate that a solo pastor will preach about
40 sermons a year. That gives us 400 hours a year in bible study and prayer.
After a decade of ministry a pastor will likely have spent 4000 hours in prayer
and study and after 25 years in ministry that would be 10,000 hours of study.
The result of thousands of hours of study by our synod’s
pastors is that they are known for who they dislike (hate) and who they are
against. Sometimes I wonder why we wonder at the decline in the vitality of our
synod’s congregations. If after so much study and prayer our leaders don’t seem
to be more loving it could make one wonder what the point or value is to
reading the bible. Clearly something is wrong with this picture. The result of
that kind of time spent in the bible study and prayer should be the fruit of
the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness,
gentleness, and self-control (Galatians 5:22). We need to repent and seriously
rethink who we are and where we are going. If enmity is the fruit we are
bearing maybe it would be better to pack up, sleep in on Sunday or go somewhere
where the gospel is being lived and changing lives.
It seems clear somewhere along the line we missed something
and unless we can rediscover what it means to be saved, live by the Spirit, and
experience resurrection power we have nothing left to offer the world anymore.
My hope is that we will no longer be known by hate but be known by love as
Christians once were.