Read Jeremiah, Hosea, Micah, Isaiah, anything Jesus said, and you can't possibly think that God thinks that this a a fantastic way of following Him. It's a compromise to culture, to wealth, to comfort and ease, to not quite letting go of the work of our hands...not all the way. Anonymity, pretty clothes, loud music, simulcast television screens, coded numbers on the children...everyone crying out "Lord, Lord" with the most honest of intentions...and then driving luxury vehicles home to giant houses to complain about taxes or (less often, and more familiarly) driving second-hand cars home to small houses to complain about the cost of trendy kids' clothing.
We already live in a culture that demands compromise to greed, wealth, comfort, status, success. I already struggle with intellectual elitism, fear of rejection (and the consequent masking of imperfections behind makeup, diminutive people-pleasing smiles, the best clothes I can afford, the ironic smirk that implies that I don't care that I can't afford better ones), desire to fit in (in suburbia, oh suburbia land that I loathe...but I blend in so beautifully, understand it so well). The last thing I need is a church that, by it's very structure, institutionalizes this compromise (especially one so well-placed in the midst of one of the wealthiest communities in the area).
The thing is, I'm also operating in a state of new-found humility. I'm in a position where everything else in my spiritual life has come to nothing. The result of a couple of years of profound (mostly good) fellowship, a temporary and tenuous house church (that, when it was good, was really good), and a feeling of being drawn to something risky and profoundly different (not yet, but on the horizon) was, in its entirety, for me, some good friendships and a lesson. The lesson was this: idolatry is bad.
Oh, I know it's a major Commandment and all that, but I hadn't exactly realized what idolatry could mean, and how dangerous the immediate consequences could be. In Life Together, Bonhoeffer offers two visions of community, one human, one spiritual. The spiritual ideal of community, he says, is based upon truth. Relationships in this community are in every moment mediated by Christ. In a spiritual community we never encounter our brothers (and sisters) directly. We see them through the mediation of Jesus, and we respond to them in kind. In a human community, however, we encounter our brothers and sisters directly; we encounter them with all our desires, needs, desperation. And we encounter them without Christ.
In [the spiritual community] naive, unpsychological, unmethodical, helping love is extended toward one's brother; in [human community] psychological analysis and construction; in the one the service of one's brother is simple and humble; in the other service consists of a searching, calculating analysis of a stranger.
Human love seeks direct contact with the other person; it loves him not as a free person but as one whom it binds to itself. It wants to gain, to capture by every means; it uses force.And I am guilty of bringing as much human as spiritual vision and expectation to my little community. I am prone to setting up a human image (a grasping, needy, life-ending image) of what (and who) God wants for me and then doing anything in my power (always subtly, quietly, stubbornly) to hold onto this image, to nurse it, to hold others captive inside of it (directly/unmediated), to bring out of them only the things I want to/expect to see, to protectively throw myself between these images and anything that seeks (mercifully, painfully) to destroy them. And then when things change, vanish, fade abruptly (abrupt fading, because it is impossible, is always the worst kind), to give into despair. How can I live without this thing (half gift/half self-constructed edifice)? Why has God abandoned me? Woe is me, etc. Very dramatic.
Anyway, I have been shown just what I'm capable of, and I have been convicted that perhaps I am (and thus the things that I do are) of more consequence than I'd like to admit. I can destroy good things. I can love pretty much everything else better than God and do it in God's name...a million golden calves and no real sacrifice. I can get it wrong over and over again. But I can also learn. I can learn humility. I can learn to put Christ as a mediator into my every encounter with my brothers and sisters. I can learn that I don't have to (can't) be perfect...and neither does the Church, I guess.
And so I'll sit through worship songs chock-full of mixed metaphors and try not to grimace...or at least try not to make snide remarks (grimaces are involuntary). I'll let some wealthy stranger teach my kids about how Jesus came for the poor. I'll let Jesus enter into my passing encounters with the well-dressed crowds in the massive hallways. I'll exchange my lofty and romantic ideal of faith, for the paltry, small, real faith I actually have. Besides, my previously atheist daughter said that she "loves Sunday School 3000%" (3000%, because it is impossible, is always the best percentage) and is telling me about how Jesus came, and calls us to go, to the poor, the prisoner, the sick. And the same worship group singing mixed-metaphors did a beautiful Litany of Humility which was challenging and eerily significant, all things considered.
For now, anyway, attending the massive anonymous entity that I'm hesitant to designate as "church" will be for our family a Sunday morning ritual. I will humble myself enough to allow that God might be willing to work through an imperfect monstrosity as much as he might be willing to work through me (another imperfect monstrosity). "Christian brotherhood," says Bonhoeffer, "is not an ideal which we must realize; it is rather a reality created by God in Christ in which we may participate." Far be it from me to opt out of that reality, wherever it is to be found.