Luke 15:1-10
Street Parties & Country Club Problems
James Sledge September
11, 2016
I
don’t know how common it is now, but at one time, big steeple churches often included
a country club membership as one of the perks
for their senior pastor. I suppose they reasoned that because many of them were
country club sorts, they wanted their pastor to be able to join with them.
I’m
not a golfer, and so I’ve not spent that much time around country clubs other
than the occasional wedding reception. The closest I’ve ever come to a country
club membership was joining local pools back when our girls were younger. And I
don’t remember much about that process because my wife handled all that.
The
pools we belonged to weren’t anything exclusive, but you still had to be a
member. There was some sort of application process and once you joined you had
to pay the annual dues to maintain your membership.
My
guess is that joining a country club involves a similar, if a bit more
selective, sort of process. There is an expectation that members will meet
certain standards, and so you may have to be sponsored by an existing member,
provide references, talk with a selection committee, and so on. How much you
get vetted depends on how exclusive the club is.
Church
congregations sometimes get compared to country clubs, for obvious reasons. You
can become members, and once you do there is some expectation that you give
financially, pay annual dues as it were. Some congregations feel exclusive,
even if there is no formal vetting process for prospective members. And like
real country clubs, many congregations once had rules against minorities
joining or women serving in leadership roles.
Typically,
church congregations use informal, often unintentional standards to maintain
whatever level of exclusivity they expect. And so congregations can usually be
labeled by income levels, race, education, and more. Such things may not have
been conscious choices initially, but over time, they become standards that are
enforced to some degree.