It is time to take the “me” out of Methodism and replace it with “we”.  Somewhere we lost touch with the fact that this is God’s church and that each of us is fortunate and blessed to be allowed to be a part of it.  The church does not exist to serve our individual needs.  It doesn’t exist to make us happy.  It doesn’t exist to make us feel good about ourselves.  It exists to do God’s work and will in the world, and we are invited to be active participants in the glorious creative miracle of God’s unfolding vision.  We have got to get over ourselves.  At the very limited extreme, church may be about “us” as a whole, but never about us merely as individuals.  The whole “me and my buddy Jesus” mentality that pervades our culture has virtually nothing to do with church, Christianity, or the Bible.  Our boiling everything down to a personal and private religion has a historical name — heresy.  It isn’t all about me — and our denomination is suffering an acute case of “me”-thodism.

Yes, it all begins with accepting invitation into a personal relationship with God.  Yes, the individual must consent.  Yes, the individual benefits.  But those are the fringe benefits.  This is similar to the baby who must be born and then gets held, fed, and changed.  While this is a good beginning, few would argue that this is the goal and purpose of birth or that this describes a mature engagement with the world.  Yet, it is where many Christians choose to stop.  Immature and dependent Christianity is the default for a growing, toxic, self-absorbed population within organized religion (not just United Methodism), and it is time to name it and change it.  A church based on personal preference, need, and expectation is no church at all.  Consider this quote from an email I received three weeks ago from someone who found out our Social Principles supported the poor and disenfranchised through the egalitarian process of collective bargaining:

I will support no church that disagrees with my personal belief in what is right. 

Wow.  Is this person going to be lonely?  Personal belief defines what is right and wrong.  This isn’t a matter of personal principles — this is a case of expecting the whole universe to flex to one’s individual will.  Can you say “narcissism?”  The Holy Spirit works through the body of Christ — through the fellowship, through the community, through the cloud of witnesses.  When we make religion the manifestation of the personal preferences of the individual we are in deep trouble.  And were this an isolated problem, we could ignore it, but it isn’t.  We have individuals who want to call the shots.  Any disagreement leads to dissolution.  Here is another quote that illustrates the modern problem:

A church has one chance – one chance – to prove to me that it is worth being part of.  The first time it disagrees with me, I am gone.  If the church doesn’t believe what I believe, it isn’t worth my time.

 My time.  Disagrees with me.  What I believe.  Hmmm.  Where in the world did we ever come to a place that we think this is appropriate,valid, or mature?  And you know what?  Pastors act exactly the same way!  Jesus wept.  There are as many egotistical narcissists on the clergy side as the laity.  Don’t believe me?  Here’s a quote from a pastor from a few year’s back:

I am telling my congregation not to pay apportionments — the liberals are wasting the money on things I believe are evil and stupid.  I am encouraging them to save for the future.  If I can talk them into it, we will break from the Methodist Church and become independent.  I will lead this church until I retire.

Yikes!  Me, my church, I, I, I, me, me, me.  Does anyone actually believe this is what God had in mind for the church?  When the church is about us, it simply isn’t the church.  It is a pathetic parody of what the church should be.  When individuals — clergy or laity — define the church in terms of what they want, what they believe, what they expect, it is a horrendous bastardization of something good and holy.  It is, in the classic Hebrew sense, “evil.”  Those who hate and call it love, those who judge and call it righteousness, those who create conflict and call it faithfulness are destroying what Christ came to create.  Together, we as the true Christian community, work out OUR salvation with fear and trembling.  We look to the grace of God to define us, not the narrow-minded selfishness of a few Puritanical malcontents.  We live into the shared vision of the whole body, not the stylized reductionism of a disenfranchised minority.  “We” are not “either/or.”  “We” are not conservative or liberal.  “We” are not progressive or cautious.  “We” are not inclusive or exclusive.  “We” are not confessing or reconciling.  “We” are God’s children, entrusted with the sacred task of finding out how to live together in love, grace, harmony, and compassion.  What you or I want is of insignificant account when compared with what God is calling us to.

Again, I say, we need to get over ourselves.  Let us commit to allow God back into our churches.  Let us act as if we believe that God is love and that we are the body of Christ together.  Let’s stop looking for ways to alienate and disenfranchise one another, and instead, let us witness to the healing grace of God to a broken and contentious world.  Please?

25 responses to “Wethodism”

  1. Tom bolton Avatar
    Tom bolton

    Thanks for posting this blog. Although I often get frustrated with the types of behavior you describe, I know that I too have wandered down that path a time or too. Thanks for your reminder to stay the path and to allow God into our churches each day.

    1. Barbara Avatar
      Barbara

      Allow God into our churches? That is an odd point of view. If we have to “allow” God to do something, then we have missed the understanding of our relationship with God.

      1. Tom bolton Avatar
        Tom bolton

        I had similar thoughts when I posted that and actually thought about putting “allow” in quotes or italics. I think perhaps we are agreeing.

      2. Rex Nelson Avatar
        Rex Nelson

        One of the most precious gifts from God is free will. Being a member of a church doesn’t mean you have, or are even able, to totally subjugate your will to God. The body corporate is similarly challenged. Never underestimate our ability for self-deception.

  2. Rex Nelson Avatar
    Rex Nelson

    Ask not what God can do for you – ask what you can do for God.

  3. Dick Turner Avatar
    Dick Turner

    Very well said! And while we’re at it, let’s get rid of “isms”. The Christian life and community are not “isms”. Institutions are “isms”. Methodism, Presbyterianism, Protestantism and Catholicism are institutional designations. We are all children of God and brothers and sisters in Christ. Jesus didn’t die on a cross to save an “ism”. He died to save each one of us, which greatly warmed John Wesley’s heart when he realized it.

  4. Todd Anderson {a/k/a Todd the rabble rouser] Avatar
    Todd Anderson {a/k/a Todd the rabble rouser]

    I agree with all that’s been posted — initially, and, in comments.

    REMEMBER — it was a Methodical approach that pegged us as Methodists — and — again — as I consistently say over and over and over and over again — it is our wholesale abandonment of our Wesleyan Understanding, Principles, Basics, Doctrines, Canons, and Precepts that have contributed in no small part to the dis-connect we currently are experiencing.

    B A C K TO BASICS FOLKS !!! Maybe we need to offer WESLEYANISM 101 as a launch to get us back on the path we never, never, never should have strayed from — ala HANSEL AND GRETEL !!!

    Blessings On Our Journey Through The GREAT 50 DAYS

  5. Taylor Burton-Edwards Avatar

    I can assure your reader, Dan, that at GBOD we DO know about it– and are constantly offering resources, guidance, advice, and teaching that affirms strongly Wesley’s conviction that our church is indeed called to be more WE than ME.

    Peace in Christ,

    Taylor Burton-Edwards
    Director of Worship Resources
    GBOD

  6. Zuhleika Avatar
    Zuhleika

    The center of sin is “i”. I think of the acronym for JOY – Jesus, Others,then yourself.

    1. Tom bolton Avatar
      Tom bolton

      Very cool tool. I like that.

  7. Disenchanted LIfelong Methodist Avatar
    Disenchanted LIfelong Methodist

    Thank you for this. This names what I have been so hurt and distressed about. The church is seen as a product that people come and buy and consume, and there is no sense of oneness or care for the whole group. There is no “us” in many of the churches I know, just “us vs. them.” Thanks for clearly naming what is a major problem. Our bishops certainly aren’t doing it, and none of our agencies seem to even know about it.

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