What do you
do when you find that church is boring? It’s time for a change! Now the
question is, change what?
Many folks
think the answer is to change the church. I just read an article about a new
church created for men only, men who find church boring. Discarding more traditional
environments, they meet in a gymnasium one Saturday evening a month. A rock
band provides entertainment. The preacher speaks in front of the scoreboard,
with the clock running. He guarantees to have them out in one hour! This sort
of innovation is not unusual. Many religious leaders hail it as a positive
development, a way to reach out to those who otherwise would have no interest
in church.
Some might
not go that far, yet they still insist on change. Contemporary music, drama,
and short sermons that are little more than pep talks are the order of the day.
Clapping and cheering have replaced old fashioned amens. Celebration and
praise are the buzzwords, with the world’s calendar dictating the
subject celebrated.
Malachi
lived at a time when people found “church” boring. Speaking of Israel’s
worship, God said through the Prophet, “You also say, ‘My, how tiresome it is!’
And you disdainfully sniff at it” (Mal. 1: 13).
God
proposed two changes to these who turned up their noses at His worship. One was
to just stay home. “Oh that there were one among you who would shut the gates,
that you might not uselessly kindle fire on My altar! I am not pleased with
you” (v. 10). The better solution, the change He preferred, was to repent. “‘If
you do not listen, and if you do not take it to heart to give honor to My
name,’ says the Lord of hosts, ‘then I will send the curse upon you’” (2:2).
Notice what God did not approve: changing the structure or activities of
worship to accommodate individual tastes.
The preacher
can work to make his sermons more interesting, the song leader can try to
select more meaningful hymns, and the one who leads in prayer can give more
thought to what he says. However, when worship as God directed is boring, the
main change that is needed is in the heart of the worshiper.
- by Frank
Himmel
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