Thursday, April 23, 2020

Pandemic Pedagogy


Things I have learned during the Season of Weirdness:

1 - We can change. The idea that the church is incapable of change is a myth. Suffice it to say that myth is thoroughly busted.

2 - It is all us. People are the church, not the building or the pastors or the staff or the membership roll or the budget or the policies, processes, and procedures. The church is us and there’s no them. Every congregation is now and forevermore a “multisite” congregation.

3 - Belonging is more important than believing. Non-essential beliefs, like non-essential activities, have faded into near obscurity. For the past six weeks, the church has been all and only about “God is with you no matter where you are” and “God is love” and “Love your neighbor as yourself” and other such foundational truths. Isn’t it interesting that in a time during which the term “essential” has become so prominent, the “essential” doctrines of the church have also?

4 - We need each other. The categorizing labels of the church are all but meaningless any more. The lines separating “Evangelical” and “Social Justice” and “Liturgical” and even “Conservative” and “Progressive” have become permeable. Individual people and congregations will still lean into a particular perspective, but those who lean into another are no longer demonized. We have seen just how interconnected we are, and it will change how we interact.

5 - Who we are is more important than what we do. It has been tricky to “do what we do” as the church, and working to figure all that out has given us pause to consider why we do all the stuff we do in the first place. Asking the “why” question leads us inevitably to finding out who we are. It peels away the layers of irrelevance and reminds us of what truly matters at the core of our identity.

I cannot help but think that the church will emerge from this “Season of Weirdness” in a better place. “Stay at home” orders that limit gathering sizes, define essential activities, and establish personal spacing minimums have compelled the church to do some deep self examination. I am hopeful that we will have learned a few things in the process.

4 comments:

Lori B. said...

Amen to all of that! I hope we can all hold onto these truths as we move back into the "busy-ness" of everyday life, and even try to play "catch-up" for time "lost." Maybe it wasn't lost time at all, but a really productive time in unexpected ways.

Chatty Cathy said...

I like to follow you here, there, and everywhere! At 77, I have followed many interesting people and some for over 50 years. I like to read, meditate, write, and discuss life and music speaks to me in rich languages. I am thankful you are the pastor I follow during this season of weirdness. Please accept my gratitude, Nancy Jones

Bruce Pate said...

Thanks Andy. As usual you are spot on in your insight. Bruce Pate

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