John 17:20-26
Jesus Shaped Community
James Sledge June
2, 2019
As
a pastor, I’m fascinated by how congregations work, what makes them tick.
Fortunately for me, there are all sorts of research and books about this. One
particular area of research focuses on how congregations have predictable
behavior patterns based on their size, patterns that cut across denominational
and theological lines
This
research identifies four types of congregations labeled, from small to large, family,
pastoral, program, and corporate,. Corporate church are very large and staff
driven in the extreme. Nearly every program area is directed by paid staff with
the pastor as CEO.
Program
churches have similarities with the corporate, with a number of thriving program
areas. But being smaller, lay leaders provide some of the program leadership,
and pastors can’t be CEOs because they are often leading volunteers. In both
program and corporate churches, people tend to join because of one of more of the
many program offerings.
The
pastoral church may have some strong programs, but its identity is focused very
much on the pastor. Most have only one pastor, but if there is an associate,
and that person visits a member in the hospital, the person may not think they
been visited by the church. And people tend
to join or leave such churches because they like of dislike the pastor.
The
final category is the family church. A lot of churches use the term “family” to
describe themselves, but this category applies to only the smallest
congregations. These churches literally function like families, often with a
matriarch or patriarch who is the real power regardless of governing structure.
The pastor, if there is one, is a kind of paid chaplain.
A
lot of people assume that a small, family church would be the warmest and
friendliest. In truth, they are the hardest to enter. Like real families, becoming
part of one requires being born into it, marrying into it, or somehow getting
adopted. You can get your name on the roll in the same way as in any church,
but ten years later you will likely still be “the new guy” and not quite part
of the family.
Now if you’re not fascinated with how
congregations work, your eyes may be starting to glaze over. But want us all to
think for a bit about what it is that creates a faith community, what it is
that binds you to this congregation or to some other. What drew you to the
church and what holds you there? What is it that makes you feel a part of it?
How strong are the bonds that connect you? Would it be easy to leave if you
were unhappy or would wild horses be unable to drag you away?
In
the hours before his betrayal and arrest, Jesus prays for the community of
faith. He prays for us. Our reading this morning is a small part of what is
sometimes called Jesus’ high priestly prayer. Jesus prays for his disoriented
and confused disciples, but he also prays for us. "I ask not only on behalf of
these, but also on behalf of those who will believe in me through their word,
that they may all be one.”
Jesus
prays that we may all be bound together in community so that all are one, and
goodness knows, churches try to build community. One of the things we heard
from our home Renew groups was a desire for community. That’s why the very
first Renew decision was to have an Escape Weekend this fall, and the overwhelming
response confirms that many of us long for community. But what is it that
creates community, that binds us together?
Very
often, churches are not so different from others sorts of groups. We tend to
seek unity by gathering with others who are like us. And so churches tend to be
fairly homogenous, mostly white, mostly black, mostly Asian, mostly Hispanic.
They also tend to reflect the divisions of our culture: liberal or conservative,
rich or poor, working class or middle class, and so on. It even extends to
cultural tastes. Some churches are all about white, Western, classical style
music. Others prefer music rooted more in pop culture.
I
suppose it’s only human that we would choose churches where the others there
are like us. But what about the oneness, the unity Jesus prays for us? “As
you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the
world may believe that you have sent me. The glory that you have given me I
have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one, I in them and you in
me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you
have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.”
I
get that humans find comfort in being with others who are like them in some
way, and so I suppose it inevitable that church congregations will often have a
preferred music style, similar education levels, and similar cultural tastes.
But if those things are the foundation of our unity, our sense of community,
where is the unity Jesus prays for us?
I
think the Apostle Paul experienced what Jesus prays for, and in his letter to
the church in Galatia, he writes these famous lines. As many of you as were baptized
into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is no longer Jew or
Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female;
for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.
Paul
says that the big cultural divisions of his day don’t count anymore; they are
wiped away. Now if Paul were writing in our time, the terms would likely be
different. “There is no longer American or immigrant, there is no longer
Republican or Democrat, there is no longer black and white, there is no longer classical
and pop. All those things that divide us have been washed away, and you are one
in Christ Jesus”
Perhaps
it is inevitable that we humans will tend to cluster with others who are like
us, but Jesus prays that the thing that most makes us alike is his indwelling
presence, an intimate relationship with Jesus that mirrors the one Jesus has
with the Father, something Jesus insists is possible through the Holy Spirit.
When
people look at Falls Church Presbyterian, what do they see that defines us,
that identifies us, that makes us a distinct community? Is it our music or some
other program? Is it our building? Is it me or Diane? Is it our stance on
certain issues?
Or
is it Jesus, God’s love made flesh present here in us? That is what Jesus prays
for. He prays that people will see God’s love, God’s presence here. And if Jesus
prays for it, surely it could happen.
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