For myself, I
would be delighted to see my parish speckled with little lay-organised church
cells that I could pastor and plug into the historic ministry and tradition of
a sacramental Church, but I see precious few of the laypeople I interact with
(no – this is historian’s caution – I see none) who really want or are able
to do anything of the kind. Even the most active and committed of them have
extra-Church lives to lead which take up quite a lot of time. ‘Many of the 10,000
[planned] churches would start small’, says the article, ‘and some would remain
as 20 or 30 people meeting in a home’. They’re not going to be led by the poor,
then, who are unlikely to have homes that 20 or 30 people could meet in.
There is so
very, very much one could object to in this ‘vision’ but I will rest content
with pointing out the fantasy at the heart of it. It’s another project,
destined, I fear, to join the abject failure of every other such vision: Archbishop
George Carey’s ‘Decade for Evangelism’; ‘Mission-Shaped Church’ ten years later;
even Reinhard Bonnke’s mid-1990s mission which the German evangelist was insistent was
going to result in a million converts (‘we know God is calling us to do
this’) and which our rector in Chatham tried to get us interested in.
Perhaps we might eventually face the idea that God might actually not want
these vainglorious initiatives which are more about us and our ideas of success and self-validation than about him. Studies of
small-scale successes in local churches, which are perfectly real, miss out the
bigger picture that only becomes clear when you draw back. We know that, in the
late-capitalist West, the great bulk of church growth is not driven by
conversion, but by people moving between congregations. Zoom out even further
than that, and you can see how Christian growth across the world is largely determined
by non-religious factors: church membership is, mainly, an index of something else
which the individuals concerned actually care about more. In the USA church allegiance
is a cultural and political statement, and no church is growing faster than the
number of Americans who claim no religious affiliation at all. In China to be a
Christian is to have an internal life which is not under the day-to-day control
of the Communist Party, but not in open opposition to it, and therefore safe. In
Africa to be a Christian is not to be a Muslim, the religious division mapped
onto cultural, economic and national or tribal ones. In Eastern Europe, to be
Orthodox is to subscribe to nostalgic nationalism, rebuilding a sense of social identity
after the collapse of Communist hegemony. In Western Europe, though – I say,
ironically but sincerely, ‘thank God’ – religion is mainly decoupled from
anything like this. It exists on its own, in the chilly waters of secular societies,
swimming without political water-wings to hold it up. Though I have my gripes
against him, to his great credit Archbishop Stephen Cottrell does seem to hint
at understanding this: ‘it would be foolish to ignore the huge shift in the
tectonic plates of European and world culture that have shaped the world in
which we serve and witness’, he is quoted as saying.
We can find our
clerical amour-propre outraged and our Anglo-Catholic convictions about
sacraments and tradition provoked by all this stuff. But the real blood-chilling
statement in this report comes at the end of Canon McGinley’s statement to the
Church Times: ‘in church planting’, he says, ‘there are no passengers’. You,
worshipper, will not be allowed simply to turn up. You will be expected to get
on board with the project. There is no sense here that a layperson could be
pursuing their vocation in some other way than in church: that they could
be a carer, or a young mum, or a harassed worker, or a weary elderly person who
has striven all their life and needs a rest, who needs to bathe in the presence
of God just in order to get through the rest of their week, to put one foot spiritually
in front of another. I am taken spinning back a couple of years to our bishop,
denouncing a diocesan finance system that ‘punishes success and rewards failure’.
When I see clergy described as ‘leaders’ (I have never seen myself as a ‘leader’,
just as someone called sometimes to exercise leadership. People who see themselves
as leaders shouldn't be allowed to lead anything), I know that this comes from somewhere other than the
Gospel of Jesus of Nazareth, who came not to be served but to serve.
Good evangelical
that I am, I sat as ever with my Bible this morning and – simply following through
sequentially as I always do – I read 1Thessalonians 2 and 3. I had never
properly registered Paul commiserating with the Thessalonians in their ‘persecutions’;
‘you suffered from your own compatriots the same thing those churches [in
Judaea] suffered from the Jews’, he sympathises. We live in a time when God’s Church
is penetrated by the understandings of the flesh – I suppose it ever is! – by the
standards and the expectations of the world, and yet does not know it. Those of
us who disagree suffer nothing worse than marginalisation and insults, not fire
and rack. But, remember, the Apostle writes ‘so that no one will be unsettled by
these persecutions’, and unsettlement should be alien to the faithful. We keep
going, not in our own strength but in the Lord’s.
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