Breaking bread
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Last week I spent an evocative two-hour lunch talking shop with the
pastors of four local mainstream churches.
All this came about because I had called Dennis Short -- pastor of
the Harbor Christian Church and chairman of Costa Mesa’s now defunct
Human Relations Committee -- to ask a favor. I wanted to talk to him
about what I perceived as the redefining of Christianity by the
fast-growing fundamentalist Christian churches and the passivity
among the mainstream churches in allowing that to happen. He not only
agreed to speak to this premise but induced three of his associates
to join us.
And so, besides Short, I sat down with Peter Haynes, rector of
Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church; Karl Stuckenberg,
pastor of Newport Center United Methodist Church; and Chip Fisher,
senior pastor of United Church of Christ in Corona del Mar.
I hadn’t expected a press conference when I put this idea before
Dennis Short. But I found the prospect stimulating, even though I was
badly outnumbered -- not counting God, whom I strongly suspected was
on their side. But they were gracious enough to pass him (or her?)
around throughout our session.
I told them I was testing a theory that with the rapid and often
spectacular growth of fundamentalist churches, there seemed to be a
growing gap in the tenets of Christian belief. And that -- rather
like moderate Republicans in Orange County -- the message of the
mainstream Christian churches was not being heard as well as it
might. And the term “Christian” was being defined much more narrowly
as a result.
They bought into enough of this to warrant discussion. While they
all noted modest growth in their own congregations, they acknowledged
much greater growth in the fundamentalist churches. Among the reasons
they cited were the money and space to offer all kinds of social
activities within the church, the possibility of anonymity in a large
congregation and the “entry-level Christianity that offers people
clarity and security in a threatening and confusing world.”
There was a kind of wistful acknowledgment that the work of the
mainstream churches would be much easier if they could -- as Fisher
said in his sermon last Sunday -- “reduce complex realities into tidy
formulas or truths.”
They did not offer this as criticism of the fundamentalist
churches. “Our challenge isn’t the fundamentalists,” Short said.
“They have the same God I believe in. Our challenge is all those
people who have no God.”
Having staked out this position, my lunch companions were
agreeable to pointing out some basic differences, starting with the
fundamentalist view that only people who believe as they do will earn
an afterlife with God. Said Short: “To believe that the mercy of God
is limited to my understanding doesn’t give God much credit.”
Then there is the matter of the literal interpretation of the
Bible. Said Haynes: “What I would say to those who take the Bible
literally is ‘Think. Think. Do you really believe that woman was
created from a man’s rib?’”
Then there was the differing approach to evangelism. My table
companions stressed that evangelism is as much a part of their agenda
as it is in the fundamentalist churches. The difference, they say, is
the motivation behind evangelism and how it is packaged. The
fundamentalists evangelize aggressively by offering protection
against fear of the unknown, and the mainstream churches -- much more
low key -- hope to attract newcomers through example and enthusiasm
for their faith.
There was talk about different approaches to the divinity of Jesus
(said Peter Haynes: “Jesus knew who he was. Some of us still aren’t
sure”) and the different emphasis on the afterlife (“Our concern is
how we live this life”).
And then, of course, there was the matter of how to deal with gay
people, whom most fundamentalist churches welcome only if they are
celibate and would not elevate to the pulpit while the mainstream
churches tend to go along with Haynes, who said: “Gays are welcomed
in our church on the same basis as heterosexuals.”
Haynes also added: “We’ll never get 100% agreement in our
memberships on social issues, and especially homosexuality.
Conservatives and liberals are as present in churches as they are in
politics.”
And that, perhaps, is where all this comes down. While there are
clear differences in Christian belief, there are a lot of gray areas
in between and crossover members of every congregation. That’s why
the pastors around my table kept returning to their bottom line.
Stuckenberg, quoting Abraham Lincoln, put it this way: “The question
we have to keep asking is not whether God is on our side, but rather
are we on God’s side.”
That would be a high note on which to end, but not quite yet.
The upside, of course, is that local Christians looking for
religious sustenance have choices. There are very specific
differences in the liturgy being offered up by our Christian churches
that can be explored.
But the downside is that if people don’t know about those
differences, it limits their choices. And most of the noise these
days seems to be coming from the conservative churches.
So chalk this up as a little public relations for the mainstream
churches. And a gentle nudge to get their light out from under the
bushel.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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