According to a 2010 Gallup poll in 2010, 32 percent of people in the
state of Connecticut attend church weekly or nearly every week. The
numbers look similar for the rest of New England. In our small
Connecticut town, about 60 people show up to church on a typical Sunday,
representing close to 2 % of our population. Our other local churches
aren’t filling their pews either.
It would be easy for us to join our neighbors and spend those precious
Sunday morning hours differently. We could stay in our pajamas and read
the paper while the kids watched cartoons. We could take a family hike.
We could (and sometimes do) say yes to the birthday parties and soccer
games. We could go out for brunch. And we could avoid the ordinary but
difficult task of keeping our three wrigglers still and attentive for
their thirty-minute stint in the sanctuary.
Most Sunday mornings involve a low level of irritation. Penny, age 8,
opens the hymnal and starts reading the words to herself during prayers.
William, age 6, lies down on the pew’s red cushion to color, feet
behind him in the air. Marilee, age 3, slides off my lap and starts
pulling things out of my pocketbook. I try to keep my whispering
admonitions calm. I try to pay attention to the Scripture reading, the
prayer of confession, the expressions of praise and thanksgiving from
the choir. I am often relieved when our kids scamper out of the service
to Sunday school, and I am often relieved when we head out the sanctuary
doors to a more restful afternoon as a family.
And on those afternoons, I sometimes think it would be easy to abandon
church not only for the sake of convenience, but even to abandon church
for the sake of spirituality. We take a walk in the woods, and Marilee
points out the color of a leaf and asks me if I remember when the angels
were singing outside her window. William points to the lichen on a rock
and says, “Mom, I think that’s part of the decomposer group. Like a
mushroom.” Penny holds my hand and says, “Tell me a story.” The
irritation has disappeared. We connect to one another, to the world
around us, and it feels easy and peaceful and nice.
And yet we return to our somewhat harrowing Sunday mornings, week after
week after week. We go to church because we believe in Jesus, and one
way we express that belief is through worship and confession. But we
could worship and confess on our own without asking our children to
behave themselves. We also go to church because we believe that God is
known through the diversity of the people around us—old and young,
able-bodied and walking with a cane, rich and poor and in the economic
middle, brown skin and white skin and every other color too. We know God
better through that diversity of divine expression. And because God is a
God of love, of giving and receiving, we know God more fully when we do
not only receive, but when we also are asked to give of ourselves.
Church asks more of us than our hike in the woods. In time, I believe it
gives more to us also.
I know that many people have experienced rejection from the church, and
many others feel as though the last thing they can bring to a sanctuary
on a Sunday morning is neediness and vulnerability. But because we are
one of the only young families in our church, every time we go, we
depend upon the grace of the other people around us. They don’t just
tolerate our wrigglers, they routinely give thanks, publicly, for these
children of ours who could easily be seen as disruptive agents of chaos
in an otherwise orderly service. These men and women model God’s grace
to us.
I can only hope my children remember our neediness, and the warm
welcome we receive when they are older. I cannot predict what my
children will believe as they grow up. I know that sitting in the pews
cannot guarantee their faithfulness or even their intellectual assent to
the creeds of Christianity. But one thing I can predict is that my
children will encounter hardship. Their hearts will be broken. Someone
they love will die. They will suffer taunts and disappointments and
illness. They will experience failure and rejection. My hope and prayer
is that at those times, they will remember a place where they were
always welcome, a place where the net of God’s faithfulness will catch
them as they fall.
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