The
Apostle Paul wrote 14 or 15 epistles to various churches (the precise depends
upon the author of Hebrews, believed to be Paul but never explicitly stated as
in the other letters). Some were in Asia Minor, some in Greece, and one was in
Rome itself. And while the letters are consistent in themes and ideas, they are
also different.
Each
of the churches was in a distinct community. While koine Greek might have been
the primary lingua franca of the empire, and Paul used a similar governance
model wherever he established churches, the fact is that the churches existed
in specific communities. Some had issues with the prevailing paganism and
centers of idol worship. The community at Corinth had to deal with a culture of
extremely lax sexual mores, and how those mores were coming into the church.
And
beyond Paul, the book of Revelation begins with short addresses to seven
churches, each of which had a specific defining characteristic.
Yes,
similarities existed. But each church was itself a specific community, being equipped
to reach out to the specific community it lived within.
“After
Jesus’ death and resurrection,” write Christopher Smith, John Pattison, and
Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove in Slow Church: Cultivating Community in the Patient
Way of Jesus,
“his disciples dispersed throughout the world and planted churches that were
manifestations of Christ’s body in their particular places.” How could they not
be? Some of the cities were old, older than the Roman Empire. Some had been
planted by the empire as cities for their retired soldiers. And one was the
heart of the empire, with all of its wealth, power, sophistication and
brutality.
The
churches had the same purpose; but the purpose had to be implemented in
different communities.
Do
we believe that church model that works for one community in suburban Chicago
and one in Los Angeles will work just as effectively in Little Rock or St.
Louis or New York?
Have
we become so mesmerized with technology that we think that “sites” (a central
church radiating out its worship services by video and webcast to smaller
church groups in a metropolitan area) will work as well in New Orleans as it
does in Nashville and Cleveland?
Have
we been misled into believing that America is such a homogenized culture that
everything works the same everywhere?
The
authors of Slow Church refer to this
as McDonaldization, the church model franchised everywhere regardless of
whether it fits the community or not. They give credit for the idea and concept
of McDonaldization to John Drane, author of The
McDonaldization of the Church, who says that “while Christians should
try to learn from the success and failures of other churches, we shouldn’t copy
them.”
The
church is in the local community for a reason. Paul didn’t start with an
empire-wide concept of what the church should be.
Which
may be a major reason why Christianity was so successful in the Roman Empire.
Photograph by Lynn Greyling via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
1 comment:
This also causes me to think a bit further, going into each person being the temple for the living God. And how each of us is a different being and in such way another kind of connection to whomever we meet, in the places that we go, however we go. so believers are little mobile temples that gather together in some physical, home-base for spiritual praise, and physical support.
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