by Karen Melang
The church is odd and very difficult to
describe. You know this if you’ve ever
belonged to one. No matter what you say
about it, you are likely to be only
partially right.
Is the church a congregation or a
denomination? Is the church a building? Is
it a worship service? Do all those who are
confirmed, contribute, and commune at least
once a year make up the church? Is the
church all the baptized or all the bishops?
Yes. The church is all these and more.
Up Close and Personal
The church is where God’s people gather
to hear God’s word. Most of us come to know
and love the church through our
congregations. We sing praises to God,
baptize babies (and grown-ups, too!), eat
the meal of Christ’s presence, and pray for
the world and all its needs. We might even
hang around after worship and drink coffee
with fellow churchgoers. Congregations are
places where we are welcomed, cared for, and
loved.
Our congregations delighted in our
performances at Christmas pageants when we
were very young. They appreciated our first
attempts at playing musical instruments and
noticed that we were getting taller. They
supported our servant trips and sent us
cookies and cards when we went away to
college.
Perhaps we were married in our
congregations or our children were baptized
there. Now, we attend meetings at church and
teach Sunday school, cook Lenten soup
suppers, and pray in small groups. We are
challenged and empowered in our
congregations to reach out to those in every
sort of need, both physical and spiritual.
When we cannot come to church, our
congregation comes to us in the hospital or
the care center. And perhaps when we die,
our loved ones will commend us to God in the
church that was home to us.
For most of us, our congregations are the
places where church is lived out, where we
see it up close and personal. Unfortunately,
the congregation is also the face of the
church where people are most likely to be
wounded, disappointed, irritated, irked, and
generally disgruntled by the church. When
people leave the church, it’s very often
because of something that happened in the
congregation.
Variety of Meanings
But the congregation is only one meaning
of church. Worship is another. When we think
of inviting someone to church, we usually
intend to ask them to a worship service.
We also use the word church to refer to a
building. In our part of the world, church
often means a facility with a gathering
space for worship, a fellowship area, a
kitchen, a few meeting rooms, and perhaps
some offices. Of course, church buildings
can run the gamut from tiny storefronts to
huge auditoriums to stately cathedrals.
The smallest church I ever visited was in
eastern Cameroon. It was a structure with no
walls, just a thatched roof supported by
several poles. Still, you’d have recognized
it as a church because of what happened
there. Two elderly women were baptized the
day I visited. We celebrated communion while
chickens and goats strolled by. It was a
church all right, even without a welcome
center or signage offering directions to the
offices and the restrooms.
Through my work for Habitat for Humanity,
an ecumenical Christian ministry, I visit
churches of various denominations. I go to
tell the Habitat story, but I almost always
leave with a new perspective and some
questions, having had a guest’s peek at how
other people in other places do church. How
is their worship different or the same as
the one I’m familiar with? What are they
singing? Who and what are they praying for?
What events are they publicizing? Are they
studying together? How does it feel to be
with them?
Congregation, worship, building,
denomination — they can all correctly be
called church. But as significant as all of
these are, we know that in its fullest
sense, the church is bigger than any of
them.
So what is the church? Who is the church?
Here is a simple definition: The church is
the assembly of all those who call Jesus
Lord. "No one can say ‘Jesus is Lord,’ " St.
Paul says, "except by the Holy Spirit" (1
Corinthians 12:3).
In the Apostles’ Creed, we confess that
we believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy
catholic church, and the communion of
saints. Creating and nurturing the church is
the work of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit
starts by calling individuals to faith in
Christ.
Perhaps you were called to faith when you
were an infant, carried to the baptismal
waters by someone who loved you. Maybe your
conversion was like St. Paul’s, who was
knocked over as he rode swiftly down the
road away from God. Or perhaps like most of
the first disciples, you were just doing
your job, minding your own business, when
you heard the Spirit calling you to Christ,
and then your whole life was different.
The Church Universal
However it happened, God called us as
well as millions of others. Century after
century, from that upper room in Jerusalem
to the ends of the earth, God calls us to
faith in Christ. Now we call Jesus Lord.
But an individual person can never be the
church. The church is always a community of
believers. God did not plan for us to be
stand-alone Christians. Instead God forms,
shapes, and nurtures the communion of
saints, as the creeds call it. God gives us
to one another by creating one holy catholic
and apostolic church, as the Nicene Creed
says, out of isolated believers.
God knows we are not very good at
communities and relationships. When sin
entered the world, people distanced
themselves from each other and from God. Our
relationships are a big part of us that
needs saving and transform transforming. In
the church universal, God is at work
restoring genuine, holy human community.
Our church community is holy because God
promises to come to us through fellow
members who share space and time with us.
From Scripture, we know God can show up as
the starving one, the stranger, or the
prisoner (Matthew 25:35). But God is just as
likely to sit next to us in the pew or the
choir loft. When we look into very familiar
faces, God is there, too.
The church is also made up of believers
from other places and other times. We share
this holy community with believers who lived
long ago and with those who will come after
us. We are the church with people around the
world, people who live and pray in cultures
and societies very different from our own.
Perhaps you have worshipped in a setting
where everyone else was speaking a different
language. Maybe you joined in praying the
Lord’s Prayer and confessing the creed in
your own language and experienced a
miniature Pentecost.
My husband and I once attended a worship
service in Rome. During the passing of the
peace, many people greeted us. Even though
we spoke differ versal language of the one
holy catholic and apostolic church. It was
delightful to know that we belonged to this
community despite being far from home.
All of us in the communion of saints
claim Jesus as Lord. It’s the only glue that
holds us together. Sometimes we forget that
this community of the church is not like
other communities or networks, where we
share interests or concerns, history or
biases. We may start to think that the
church is an organization for people who are
a lot like us, who should share our
political views and social agendas.
This is just what the communion of saints
is not. The universal church is full of many
people who are not at all like me. Some of
them are almost certain to rub me the wrong
way. But this church is God’s, not yours or
mine, and it should be as embracing and
welcoming as God is. The communion of saints
is a place where the walls that separate
people are coming down.
In the church’s earliest crisis, Jewish
Christians were faced with Gentiles,
non-Jews, who wanted to be part of the
church, too. The letter to the Ephesians
addressed this new gospel fact: The wall
between Jews and Greeks was coming down.
"For [Christ Jesus] is our peace; in his
flesh he has made both groups into one and
has broken down the dividing wall, that is,
the hostility between us" (Ephesians 2:14).
We are the Church
The church is God’s grand experiment.
One-hundred percent of its population is
made up of sinners, even though holy
transformation is silently in process. And
there are some real characters in the
church, people with a full complement
of weaknesses, quirks, and
shortcomings.
In this community, God’s merciful
loving-kindness is both necessary and ever
available. God’s faithful forgiveness is
exactly what makes possible and creates a
holy community out of individuals as
contentious and feeble as we are.
God’s experiment is still more
staggering. The church is only the beginning
of what God is up to. In fact, through the
church, God is working to make the world and
all its people holy and whole. The church is
the spongy little yeast, the pinch of salt,
the tiny light that God is using to spread
grace and mercy, light and love to all God’s
beloved creation.
I am going to church council tonight. Our
agenda includes hiring a church
administrator, building the endowment fund,
and forming a member-care committee. Pretty
standard stuff. We will probably discuss our
benevolence dollars, our tutoring program,
and the guys who are accompanying some
college students on a Katrina relief trip.
I bet we’ll laugh some and tease each
other a little. We might disagree about some
budget issues or think silently that someone
suggested a pretty hare-brained solution to
some problem.
At the end of the meeting, we will pray
for our congregation. We will pray for the
sick, the hurting, and the dying. We will
give thanks for babies and healings, for new
jobs and new opportunities.
We will be held together by the glue of
God’s grace. We will depend mightily on the
forgiveness of sins. Perhaps we will look at
each other with clear vision and see how
richly God has blessed us with each other.
In the basement of our building that needs
an expensive new roof, we are the church.
Karen Melang is the executive director
of Fremont Area Habitat for Humanity,
Fremont, Neb. She is a member of the
Lutheran Deaconess Conference, class of
1971.
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