In Search of Spiritual Community
The search for connection.
"Where human frailty once served as a reason for me to withdraw from the church, with its unruly and divergent congregants, this is now what compels me back to spiritual community. I had overlooked one essential factorthat I am as finite and flawed as everyone else." Carmen Renee Berry wants to help those who, like her, once dismissed the church in cynicism, but are now reconsidering it in their search for spiritual community. In The Unauthorized Guide to Choosing a Church (Brazos, 2003), she offers an easy-to-use, sometimes irreverent, hitchhiker's guide to the mottled landscape of American Christianity. She examines some 30 denominations, describing in simple terms each tradition's heritage and habits so that the curious can "sort through the liturgy, lingo, and lunacy" of choosing a church.
When you were distanced from the church, what prompted your return?
Over several months I purposely developed relationships with people of faith. A phrase in my mind changed me: "You've been living in doubt and visiting your faith; it's time to live in your faith and visit your doubts."
You wrote that you felt compelled back to "spiritual community." What's the difference between that and "church"?
I was active in a church of 2,000, but only because I found spiritual community in a smaller subgroup. I was on a team that ministered during our Sunday night contemporary service. We arrived early, set up, prayed with the band members, and afterwards prayed with attenders. By working on a common goal, we built transparent, accountable, and encouraging bonds.
How can a pastor encourage the growth of these spiritual communities?
One pastor I knew made an off-hand joke that put down his elder board. It was a mistake. But during the following week, he made amends with the board. The next Sunday, he made a public apology and announced his error and his reconciliation with the elders. He modeled for the church how to deal with mistakesnot by glossing them over, nor through rejection, but by reconciliation and growth.
What's the main thing community-seekers are looking for?
Acceptance. I don't want to be excluded because I'm not at the same place in my life's journey as you are. Willingness to get to know me, because I have needs and hurts that have brought me here. A place where I can work with a circle of friends toward growing and serving. But the sequence is important. They're looking for a church that will care about (in this order) "where I am, what I need, and how I can contribute." Copyright © 2003 by the author or Christianity Today International/Leadership Journal. |


