Monday, November 2, 2009

eChurch...I wonder if Jesus "tweets"

This morning I was reading one of those free Chicago newspapers on my train ride into work, and I stumbled across a feature article on the newest internet sensation- eChurch. “eChurch,” you may be thinking to yourself, “what’s e Church? That sounds so cool.”

The idea is that you can basically go to church from the comfort of your own home without ever having to change out of your pj’s. You can watch an internet pastor give you a sermon from his internet studio right to you in your own living room or home office. They even have a separate guy who, before the actual sermon, leads you in a slew of worship songs like some sort of Sunday morning sing-along. I guess you follow the bouncing cross or something…I don’t know. (I picture some guy sitting around in his boxers eating a bowl of cereal, corn flakes dripping from his chin, while he’s singing “How Great is our God” with a mouthful of food desperately trying to not fly out of his tone-deaf mouth) They even have people take communion by themselves from home with their own bread and grape juice. (What???! The word is “communion”, which is basically a fancy word for a “spiritual union”, like when people come together to remember something important.) Technology is making us more and more isolated. We as Christians, but also as the human race, have become more selfish than we have ever been any other time in human history. This goes beyond the church or specific culture or society, but the fact that the church is among the groups of people buying into this innovative brand of “all about me” is something to be genuinely concerned about.

My point is- this disturbingly and overwhelmingly technological age has now become a centerpiece for the modern church as a whole. No longer is the church a body of believers who gather together to share in the joy of love and faith. No longer does it seem that we gather as members of a congregation, or as human beings in general anymore, to be social beings who were created and designed to need one another, to help one another, to love one another, and to help and encourage one another. It seems to be all about ourselves, and all about making our own self-actualization as easy and as effortless as possible. We're closing ourselves off from the world God called us to cultivate, to change.

We’re like those fat slobs in the movie “Wall-E” who ride around on hovercrafts and eat and watch TV without ever having to lift a leg to do anything meaningful with our lives. Now we don’t even have to make an effort for God, or other people for that matter.

Whether it’s sitting in a movie theatre seat in a mega-church watching some guy we don’t know preach to us from some church building we’ve never been in while we sit next to someone we’ve never introduced ourself to or been introduced to likewise, or whether we’re crammed in alongside hundreds of other people huddled together is some sort of religious mosh pit while a “worship” band entertains us with “Christian” songs and cool light shows, we’re quite frankly, simply, and genuinely….missing it.

It amazes me that they didn’t even have church buildings in the early days of Christianity. They had rooms in people’s houses where people in a town or village would gather together for community, for fellowship. They came together to worship and experience God together. It was as selfless and genuine as it could have ever been. Now we’re back to no buildings, but it's like we’ve lost the community too. It’s just us, alone, in front of our computers "You Tube’ing for Jesus."

There was a day when back when the earth was first formed when God said to Himself- “it is not good that man should be alone”. Yet here we are, alone in our rooms being fed "church" by someone we’ve never met offering us what is basically a pornography-like and cheaply whorish version of the church body that I feel God originally intended.

If we keep technologiphying every opportunity to replace genuine human interaction and fellowship, and most importantly the raw power of experiencing a living and breathing God, we’ll have to add Jesus on Facebook just to network our way out of self-reliance and the self-made reality of being completely and utterly alone. Is it any wonder the world looks at Christians like used car salesman and head for the woods? It's all about keeping up with the times to "sell Jesus". But Jesus could not be bought or sold, and in fact ransomed Himself for all of us. I don't claim to be the model person for doing this all right, but if love and community are not central to what we as Christians in a pluralistic society do on a daily basis, we will close ourselves off from a world that needs genuine faith now more than ever.

So with every monitor bowed and every web browser closed, let’s try this again.

2 comments:

  1. This could also be a case of reaching you where you are at. For people who don't have a great church near them, can't leave their house or hospital bed it is probably a blessing.
    If you are using it to replace church then you will only get out of it what you are willing to put in.

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  2. This is a great point, Joshua. For those who are incapable of walking out the front door or are shut-in or hospitalized, physically being a part of a church can be much more difficult. I would submit, however, that rather than propping them up in front of a monitor to watch a video, we the church should be knocking on their front door or sitting beside their hospital bed. We have to be the church much more than we need to reinvent the church. If ain't broke, don't fix it. The church ain't necessarily broke. It just needs to be found again.

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