We had a terrific choir party at our new home last night. It was one of the best things we’ve ever done! There’s just something about having people in your home. It opens up your life to folks like nothing else does.
I remember once when I was starting a church, the city suddenly shut down the building we were renting for services. So that summer we crammed everyone into our modest-sized house. It was a lot of work on Dawn, having 70+ people crowding into your home every weekend. But it was one of the most beautiful times of ministry I’ve ever experienced. We truly felt like a family with these folks we’d only just met 5 months before when the church had started.
Maybe that was part of the ”secret sauce” that made the early church grow so quickly. When we open up our lives to each other, God blesses that vulnerability with a special anointing of His Spirit’s power.
Being transparent and vulnerable in church can be scary though. Frankly, many ministers have warned me against it. I remember one pastor telling me to be wary of church members who offered to help you move in when you came to a new church. He said, “They’re only volunteering so they can go through your drawers and cabinets when you’re not looking!” And he wasn’t lying, necessarily.
There are indeed people who see church ministers as some kind of minor league celebrity, as silly as that sounds. They wonder what we’re really like behind closed doors, and whether we really live up to the standards we represent.
I can answer that one easily: no, of course we don’t live up to those standards. We are human, and no human ever lived up to the ideals of the Christian life, except for One. When it comes to representing Jesus, we’re all hypocrites, believing in something (or really “Someone”) we can’t possibly live up to.
When church members see the dents in minister’s armor and realize we are human too, they sometimes think that’s something that disqualifies us from being pastors. True, there are things like sexual immorality that I believe truly do disqualify a person from serving as a pastor. But being human – having imperfect motives, occasionally saying the wrong thing, not always doing the best in any given situation – those are not disqualifying sins. They are indications the minister is an imperfect human…just like his congregation. The congregation’s job is to forgive him these imperfections, just as he is continually forgiving them for theirs.
But one problem with that sinful human nature is we often hold others to standards we would never dream of living up to ourselves. So church folks often hold unreasonable expectations for pastors. And this unreasonableness has caused many ministers to circle the wagons and live a lifestyle lacking transparency.
Those ministers learn never to admit flaws, hoping somehow their congregation doesn’t see them. They never talk about personal struggles, especially not about their families. If their kids are rebelling, they never ask anyone in the church for prayer. Whereas church members share prayer requests in Sunday School classes, most pastors have no one. They dare not make themselves accountable to another brother, allowing them to speak into their spiritual lives.
So in a church connected by networks of brothers and sisters in Christ praying and lifting each other up, they basically are alone, except for their wives. Sure, they have a group of sweet older ladies who pray for them in general ways, and thank God for them. But no one knows when their hearts are heavy, and no one knows when they are about to go under.
I too have felt the temptation to live this kind of circle-the-wagons pastor’s life. When you realize some people don’t see you as a human being with feelings and will say most anything about you, it makes you have doubts about ever being yourself in church again. We close our doors and play the part of a figurehead, hoping no one notices the cracks in our veneer. And when ministers shut down, the effect is that our congregation shuts down as well. They learn to play the same perfect little part we are playing.
They come to church with all their problems tucked neatly away, never letting the healing balm of the Spirit touch them. So we all remain hidden, impervious to attack, and permanently unhealed. That’s because there are some healings that only happen when we are vulnerable enough to let the whole Body of Christ be involved.
I’ve discovered that God has specifically designed many of our trials to go unhealed UNLESS we are vulnerable enough to reach out to other brothers and sisters in Christ. He is purposely putting us in situations where we MUST lean on each other! Those trials will never be fixed until friends are willing to tear open the ceiling and lower us down to Jesus so he can touch us. This is how God forces us to really be THE CHURCH and care for each other spiritually. But it ONLY happens when we are vulnerable and transparent, because without those there is too much of our own pride to make room for God to work.
That’s why I am DETERMINED to live my life “out loud”. Sure, you don’t announce ever problem to everyone – no one should make church just about their struggles. But everyone should have people in a church loving them, praying for them, and supporting them. I believe too strongly in the “koinonia” of the Family of God to live a fake and impervious Christianity. It’s simply not worth the trouble, and I’d honestly rather work in a convenience store than in that environment.
So I think we’ll have to keep inviting people into our home on a regular basis. They can look through the medicine cabinets all they want. It’s just one way of getting past being “Sunday morning only” people, and becoming the real Family of God for the rest of the week.
