I sat with a table of clergy and laity leaders talking about reaching “young people.”  In frustration, I asked them to define for me who these “young people” are and what they are like.  It became apparent that the “young people” we want to reach are a generic, bland hash of upper-middle-class, calm, well-behaved “newer” versions of ourselves.  The expectation is that “young people” will either share, or quickly adopt, our values, that they will enjoy what we enjoy, think what we think, and not question or challenge the way things are.  Oh, and they will all nicely and cleanly fit simple categories — easy to label and control.  This conversation is a glimpse into a huge problem we face — trying to reach and relate to people we don’t know or understand at all.

A recent experience illustrates my point.  I stop most mornings at a local coffee shop — a gathering place for locals of every stripe and form.  Each day a core group of town regulars collect and others stop by to visit and chat for a few minutes, then move on.  One morning, a cute, perky, deeply dimpled blond woman — maybe 21 or 22 — dressed in shorts, a tank top, and carrying a pink Hello Kitty backpack bounced in and joined the group.  See chatted for a while and departed, and awhile later the whole group broke up and left.  When I prepared to leave, I noticed that the young woman had left her backpack.  I took it to the cashier and asked if he knew the woman, he said he did not, so I looked in the backpack for identification so we could contact her.  Here is a list of the contents of the backpack:

  • an iPhone
  • a wallet, with an “Icthus” fish emblem
  • a set of headphones
  • two tampons
  • a strip of seven condoms (five opened and empty, two fully intact)
  • a well-used Bible — heavily annotated and underlined, with about two dozen bookmarks with yarn tassels marking favorite places.  The Bible was held in a protective cover, and the cover had the following four stickers on it:
    1. “Abortion is murder”
    2. “We stand with Scott Walker”
    3. “All means all — Support Lesbian and Gay Rights”
    4. “Capital Punishment is a Hate Crime”
  • a pint of Raspberry vodka, two-thirds empty
  • a .22 caliber handgun

Okay, quick now — liberal or conservative?  Republican or Democrat?  Would this young woman be comfortable in your church?  Would she be welcome?  Does she “fit”?  Is she the kind of young adult we have in mind when we say we want more young people?  Is she “normal” in today’s world?  Trying to categorize or label this young woman is a fool’s errand — a total waste of time.  And if we think she is someone who needs fixing or we want to judge her based on one or two items from her backpack, we just need to understand we will never see her in any of our churches.  One woman responded to this story by saying, “Just what we need in the church, drunken sluts with guns!”  Jesus wept.

I have shared this story with four or five groups and those forty and older are flabbergasted (flabbergasted being a word used by forty and older people) while those under forty just smile and nod.  The older group struggles to “figure her out,” while the younger group merely shrugs and says she isn’t unusual.  I wonder how well many in our mainline churches understand what a “young person” really is?

It brings to mind an incident that happened years ago in one of my churches.  Two young guys were hanging out in the church parking lot.  Both were wearing baggy, dirty, ragged clothes, but one had dyed-black hair pulled into long spikes, tattoos on both arms and the back of one leg, and multiple piercings through ears, nose, lips, and eyebrow.  He had a belligerent demeanor.  Both had skateboards, and someone obviously thought they were up to no good, because the police showed up and began hassling them.  I came out to see if I could intervene (meddle) and I was surprised to find that the police officer was speaking disrespectfully and aggressively and the young men were both being very polite and humble.  I told the policeman that the boys weren’t doing anything wrong, and he left.  The young men thanked me, then said they had to run.  I asked where they were going and they told me they were going to work at the soup kitchen at the Episcopal church.  Turns out that they worked at the soup kitchen three days a week and that they each tutored a special needs child every Friday.  I asked if they attended the church where they worked and the pierced and tatted boy said, Nah, they don’t want us there on Sunday.  It makes too many people nervous.”

I think about that kid all the time, and while it was almost twenty years ago, I don’t think the church has become any more accepting in the intervening years.  I’ve shared the story of working with the street kids in the Bronx where for the first and only time in my life I heard the word “m****rf****r” used in a prayer.  I don’t know of more than one United Methodist Church where that kid would be welcome…  And yet, these are real people all seeking relationship with God and attempting to live their faith, so why wouldn’t the church be a place ready and able to receive them?  The purpose of the church is not to provide comfort, safety, and coddling to those who know God, but to equip the comfortable, safe and coddled to go out into a broken world to share God’s love with those who need it most.

44 responses to “Beyond Label or Category”

  1. David_Kent Avatar
    David_Kent

    The root problem here is that the church is trying to conform people- especially young people- to an external image that harkens back to some mythical “good ol’ days” instead of letting the Gospel transform people from the inside out. The statistics are out, and they are sobering.

  2. RoseleeM.Sullivan Avatar
    RoseleeM.Sullivan

    I sure hope someone followed up on this young sister’s cry for help .( that is if this isn’t just an imagined situation ) Anyone in posession of the aforementioned items would only leave that backpack behind in an attempt to say HELP!!!!!

    1. Dan R. Dick Avatar
      Dan R. Dick

      Roselee, I want to be careful here. It is these kinds of assumptions that are part of the problem. Most of the twenty and thirty year olds I am talking with think the contents of this girl’s backpack are normal and not at all out of the ordinary. To them, she sounds just like dozens of people they know. It is when we decide something is wrong with her or that she needs help that the church slams the door on any potential relationship with such people. Our judgment that she needs help is our issue, not hers.

  3. heatherpedia Avatar
    heatherpedia

    You’ve captured how I feel about returning to the church…and I’m 32 and ready to start a family. Because in those intervening years, it hasn’t been a straight path, and I’ve struggled with questions of faith, and I haven’t found a church community that welcomed that (except the UU church I attended in college). Add in that I’m in a same-sex marriage, and it’s hard to find a Christian church (the UUs aren’t Christian, although they’re not NOT Christian) where I feel welcome. I’m not sure if I’m seeking a church community or not. These days I spend my “faith” time at a faith based organization serving people with a food pantry and homelessness outreach program, where most of my fellow volunteers are people living in poverty and people of color. We find communion in doing God’s work and bringing God’s healing to them and to ourselves. It’s easier when you all know you are some degree of broken.

  4. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    Excellent piece. No matter youth, young adult, middle or older adult, we are all a combination of (possibly conflicting) views and seeking to better our relationship with God. We are so/too quick to judge based on outside appearance (looks, pins, bumper stickers and labels) that we fail to get to actually know another person that has stepped through our doors. And personally, this is something that has always highly annoyed me, because we NEVER make those same judgments about people when we go on a mission trip – so why do we do it at home, especially when THEY have come to US???

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  6. The Crimson Rambler Avatar

    I take the note on “ghettoization” and frankly, it’s been running a long time — forty years ago in our corner of things the efforts were to put children — the children OF the congregation, mark you — into Sunday School and KEEP THEM THERE; the complaints were against young-ish parents who preferred to keep their children with them in church…and it seemed to me then, as now, that an awful lot of people really don’t like their own children, let alone other people’s. More recently, I tried to replace a piece of vocabulary (doomed effort) by suggesting that whenever churchfolks found themselves saying “the YOUTH” they should say, instaid, “our sons and daughters”. NOPE, it was “the YOUTH” — strange, extraterrestrial group to whom we had no linkages at all…

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