It is unfortunately common these days to find churches that have gone disastrously wrong. Often, they only have one or two things going for them. This usually means that they will only attract one or two kinds of people, whose cosmology most favors those things. Once that starts to happen, the cycle is begun, and it is nearly impossible to break.
That is why balkanization is the Enemy’s favorite weapon these days. Individual Christian Cosmologies do not do well on their own. No single one makes up a good, healthy spiritual community. That is why I always stick with the large denominations, and even more so why I always gravitate towards Methodists. Granted, the leadership of these groups seem to have lost their minds in many areas of the country, but the communities are still largely unbalkanized. That is an advantage that is hard to overlook in comparison to non-denominationals and charismatic sects.
What I have gone the long way about saying with this article is that if you look around yourself next time you are in church, and only see one or two distinct types of people, then you are in trouble. If you are very much like either of those groups, give serious consideration to the possibility that it might be your solemn duty to leave the congregation, and replace yourself with someone entirely different (that poor soul).
Now, let us turn an eye to each of our groups, and their particular aspect that they bring to a church community, whether it is needed or not.
If you had to attend a church that was fundamentally flawed in every way, except one, what would the one right thing be?
Liberal Mainline: “It would be accepting to everyone.” This is a major requirement of our liberal friends. It is also the reason why liberal mainlines must be the seasoning gently used to flavor the congregation, rather than its main ingredient. Here are the problems with this stance. First, is that the statement is almost always accompanied by the unspoken phrase “(Except those who don’t accept everyone.)” Barring the obvious logical negation that this addendum brings, there are a number of real-world problems that happen in churches that are liberally unbalanced.
First, if you are “accepting to everyone,” you are really only accepting to a very small group. You bring in misfits, and “projects” to present to the community. These are people that for a myriad of reasons have no other spiritual home. These are people truly in need of a strong spiritual community to call their own. Where the problems begin is when the other cosmologically inclined members start to leave in order to escape the influx of these misfits. Conservative Mainlines are particularly easy to drive off in this manner. Projects are people that have some number of spiritual, emotional, or physical needs that the congregation must support. It seems to be the case that each need counts as its own project. I once saw a very robust church absolutely shattered by only one new member, who just happened to have a tremendous number of needs of all kinds. The original community was small, and as such just couldn’t handle the number of demands placed on them by a single, very disturbed person.
Conservative Mainline: “It would have a strong community.” This is a minor to moderate requirement from conservative cosmologies. It seems that given the options at face value, they will not pick this option all the time. They will, however, over time gravitate towards strong communities over any other aspect of a church. Being conservative in nature, they usually require an immense impetus to change churches though, so they rarely willingly migrate away from largely conservative communities. This too, causes them to balkanize, simply at a much slower rate than the other groups. They almost always balkanize by leaving to join another community, and very rarely by bringing in new membership as their liberal cousins do.
Once a conservative community has fully balkanized, it tends to settle down and isolate itself. Over time, this leads to a myriad of heresies and just strange stuff. It is incredibly spiritually dangerous, but the change is so slow, it is often unrecognized until it is too late. The few mainlines that still move preachers around every several years have a built in buffer to this problem. Sadly, many groups like the Methodists are throwing away this buffer in favor of long standing pastorates. Time will truly tell if this is a wise move. My money says that it will be disastrous.
Megachurch: “The pastor is a man of God, and a role model to the congregation.” This is a major requirement of megachurchers. For a couple of fairly specific reasons, they gravitate towards these larger-than-life leaders. Often, their churches are rife with spiritual defects, but that all goes by the wayside, because the congregation is focused on the pastor to the point where even if he started out as what the congregation thinks that he is, the pastor too soon focuses on himself. Then, his inevitable vice comes to the surface, and the following scandal leaves a mass of spiritual casualties in its wake.
Megachurchers are actually a healthy part of a good community. They are the drive that brings new people in. Their focus on the pastor, if properly balanced by other competing cosmologies, is healthy. They do tend to fly away from a healthy community in favor of a strong, charismatic leader though. Healthy communities put some of the focus of the megachurcher back on himself, which for whatever reason, he finds very difficult to bear.
What I am really getting at is that megachurchers tend to be flawed in some way that means they cannot submit themselves to self examination. The reasons for this, run a wide range. Sometimes they are just vapid. Sometimes they have fundamental flaws that are just hard to deal with. Whatever the reason, in the proper community, these issues are eventually dealt with, and the megachurcher becomes something else. In the improper community, they are destined to be the casualty of one man’s fall from grace.
Calvinist: “It is doctrinally correct.” This is a major requirement for Calvinists. Given a nontrivial amount of thought, they will pick this option every time. Again, there are many Calvinists among the various other cosmologies. The type that we are discussing here are a very fervent breed. He has forsaken everything else in favor of the five points of Calvinism. He ends up being almost a parody of the more traditional of his kind around him. Limited Atonement combined with Predestination mean that there is no onus on him to be particularly connected to anyone but his close knit community. Even they can be dropped given a moderate impetus. If he has to be in a church that has nothing right about it, save one thing, that one thing may as well be doctrinal correctness. That way he can go on learning and doing his thing while everyone else goes to Hell around him.
A strict interpretation of the doctrine of Predestination makes Calvinists very cliquish. Their communities tend to be average size for the population they are in, but within those communities are dozens of cliques identifiable only by their mutual dislike for each other. The Calvinist is told from birth that he is part of a special, small group. As he grows, that group becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy that is usually only as large as he can tolerate. Growing up with the certainty that so many of those around you are Hell bound, you pick up a sense of superiority, and a knack for writing people off.
Charismatic: “Its got a cool secret!” Now you’re not likely to get this answer from anybody, but this is one of the two flames that tend to draw in the charismatic moths. The other, is simply growth. If there is fervor and expansion, you will find more than a handful of charismatics taking it all in. The problem with fervor though, is that no one can sustain it indefinitely.
I have a fond memory of being in a fast food place one night during a particularly bad storm. A group of Pentecostals came in and would shout “Hallelujah” every time the lights came back on, and give a loud “aww” every time they went back out. It was happening so quickly at one point that not everyone could keep up. To the rest of us observing, it was a mixture of comical and disturbing. They did eventually give up, but it was impressive that they stuck with it so long after already having been at a similarly exciting worship service.
What will always keep you going though, is a secret. Even if it’s in plain sight, there is a certain air of superiority that charismatics have. They like knowing something that you don’t know, or believing something that you don’t believe. Unfortunately, there is very little place for this behavior in a well balanced community. That is why these charismatic communities coalesce so easily, and also why they tend to isolate themselves so completely.
Ascetic: “It harms as few people as possible.” This is really a minor requirement for the ascetic. Honestly, to them, the question is almost a nonsense question. Still, ascetics tend to minimize their contact with others. This can be for either selfish or selfless reasons. The selfish ascetic just wants some peace and quiet so that he can study and think. The selfless ascetic may have a slight phobia of his effect on other people. Either way, the result is the same.
Every community should have a small handful of ascetics in its midst. St. Anthony set up the proper relationship so many centuries ago. The ascetic gets to spend his days in deep thought in exchange for giving advice and teaching to anyone who requests is from him. The trick is, for the ascetic not to start walking around giving advice where it isn’t requested of him. That is the trap that I see most modern ascetics fall into.
There you have it. An answer from each of our groups that betrays the necessity of the other groups. This question is a more strict example of how these various factions play against each other. Later examples will show them more as complementary to each other rather than abject necessities.
Liberal Mainline
Megachurch
Calvinist
Ascetic