Archive for the 'Church of Christ' Category

The Future of Churches of Christ

I’ve been thinking about writing a series called “The Future of Churches of Christ.” Whether I’ll get around to that or not — who knows? Maybe I can get Doug Foster to let me do a blog interview. His guess is probably much better than mine.

I remember two articles we had in Wineskins in the ’90s. One was by Joe Beam — one of the most requested articles we ever had. Joe talked about the growing, yet-unnamed divide in the denomination (he may not have used that language) between the “progressives” and the “conservatives.” Let’s pause here to all say we hate labels. Of course we do. But you still need some way to describe what you’re talking about. But, he said, there is also a declining middle group that doesn’t yet know which way it is leaning.

Another article — actually a series, as I recall — was by Randy Harris. He was asking if the future for Churches of Christ is hopeful. His answers, in true Randy style, were “no,” “yes,” and “maybe.”

Today the picture is fuzzier. There is still an uneasiness between many churches over issues like, “Are we the only ones faithful to God?” For some, the answer is “yes.” Others of us can’t even fathom asking the question.

But there are other ways in which diversity is manifesting itself, too. Such as these:

Are the leaders reading scripture as fundamentalists or not? (I personally think this will, fifty years from now, wind up having been the most significant question.)

How does the church understand the kingdom of God?

What does it see as its purpose?

How important are the traditions of the church in a rapidly changing world? (Do traditions hold back or do they anchor?)

We’ll look quite different in twenty years. I’m pretty sure of that. Already — and this is such a small example — people who print the official C of C directory are having to figure out how they indicate that a church considers itself a part of Churches of Christ but uses instrumental music (Richland Hills, Farmer’s Branch, . . . ).

And I purposefully didn’t include style of music as one of the central defining questions!

Should be interesting times ahead.

A Cappella Music

A few observations from most discussions about a cappella singing:

First: Most people I know who want to preserve it aren’t trying to make their case in terms of “it’s God’s way.” Some do. One of our Christian college presidents — not the one where I teach! — once told me that he thought the use of instrumental music would send someone to hell. (Just when you thought no one really, really, really believed that . . . . “Yes, I know you served the poor, you lived an exemplary life of compassion, justice, and worship — but you used a piano in worship . . . .”) Most are talking about the strengths of the tradition — a tradition that is preserved by several tribes. See, for example, this conference being held next summer at Pepperdine.

Second: Why did we have to have a central focus of identity (a cappella music) that is so difficult to spell? Not a capella . . . or a cappela . . . but a cappella.

Third: Most people I know who express an interest in having instrumental music are not wanting to lose the a cappella tradition. It’s not an either/or. I seriously doubt that the Richland Hills Church will give up their a cappella heritage completely.

Fourth: As I said in the comments yesterday, just because something is a matter of opinion doesn’t mean it isn’t important how a church discusses and processes the issue. That’s what Paul is doing in 1 Corinthians 8-10. The topic is food sacrificed to idols: eat it or don’t eat it? Well, it’s a matter of indifference. Sure, go ahead and eat it. But that’s not all Paul has to say about it. For the way they approach the seemingly insignificant topic (at least insignificant from our historical distance) says a lot about how they are living out the gospel in community.

Fifth: The next generation has Christian music on their ipods. They go to Christian concerts. Rarely do they listen to a cappella radio stations. And they won’t buy the old arguments (from the few who are still making them). In many cases, it isn’t that they haven’t HEARD the arguments; it’s that they see how vacuous those arguments are.

Sixth: Those who yesterday pointed out that we should not obsess on this are right. We must discuss it in Christian ways — but we must not let such discussions detour us from joining God in his work in this world. (That’s what I love about RH. This is a church that is reaching out all over Tarrant County and the world. When our church discussed the ministry of women, some on the outside thought that had become our main topic. Hardly. It was almost a sidebar as we were making serious transitions to participate with God in what he was already doing in our neighborhood.)

Seventh: Just got to say it. The a cappella tradition is nothing to be ashamed of. The only thing to be ashamed of is the exclusivism and judgmentalism with which many defended it. I still find great joy in adding my voice to a chorus of voices of brothers and sisters in Christ. I love instrumental worship, but so often I find my head aching from the guitars and drums that are deafening and I realize I can’t hear anyone singing — except the faint sound of everyone singing unison. Nearly every time we have Christian speakers from other tribes come to the Zoe conference, they stop to mention how the four-part harmony they hear is such a powerful symbol of the unity-within-diversity of the gospel. (Admittedly, not all singing services sound like the Zoe conferences. But you get the point.) When I sing I remember that God is the audience, not me; and I remember that my job is to add my part — to participate with a grateful heart. Not saying that doesn’t happen in other settings; I just love that as a strength of my own heritage.

Eighth: Autonomous. Remember that word? Godly leaders making prayerful decisions. No brotherhood pope (unless we’ve elected Randy Harris to the post).

Ninth: The body of Christ is so wonderfully diverse. So much larger than any little groups. Celebrate the diversity of those who follow Christ!

Leroy, Richland Hills, and Instrumental Music

Leroy Garrett has written this wonderful essay about the decision at the Richland Hills Church of Christ to add an instrumental service. I’m using it with Leroy’s gracious permission.

INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCHES OF CHRIST

It is significant that the Richland Hills Church of Christ in Fort Worth recently announced that it would soon have a service with instrumental music in addition to its usual services where the traditional practice of acappella singing will be preserved. It is significant not only because Richland Hills is one of our largest congregations, if not the largest, but also because it is one of our most influential churches, if not the most influential.

Unlike some of our avant garde churches, Richland Hills has been cautious and moderate in the changes it has made through the years. A number of churches have “progressed” beyond the point of any identity as Churches of Christ, and have more or less disclaimed any connection. They have not only gone “instrumental” completely, but they have taken some generic name in place of Church of Christ. They say that name is an impediment to their mission. And yet their leadership and membership are largely from Churches of Christ, and they are likely to practice communion and baptism as before. They are particularly “grace-oriented.”

When I discussed this with Rick Atchley, senior minister at Richland Hills, he said being “Church of Christ” was no problem to them. He appeared to agree with what I have long said: We should be busy being what we believe a true Church of Christ should be – unsectarian, unity-minded, Christ-centered, and faithful to our heritage both in Scripture and to our Restoration tradition. That is what reformation/restoration is about – not leaving and becoming rootless, but staying and effecting renewal from within.

This is what makes Richland Hill’s decision to go instrumental for even one service historic. It is something of an exemplary congregation, one that has kept its balance amidst decades of change, and it has remained loyal to its heritage in Churches of Christ. It has in fact through the years conducted workshops for our leaders on “how to do church.” Are they now showing their penchant for leading the way by going (partly) instrumental?

While there are several Churches of Christ that still wear that name that are now instrumental in one service, it is not yet a trend – perhaps no more than six or eight congregations. The Jenks Church of Christ in Tulsa has the unique arrangement of simultaneous services, one acappella and one instrumental, one upstairs and one downstairs. They supposed that the instrumental service would be for the youth, but to their surprise a number of oldsters attend as well.

The Farmers Branch Church of Christ in the Dallas area also has simultaneous services Sunday a.m., a “contemporary” service in the Family Center that uses instruments, and a traditional acappella service in the sanctuary. There is a second acappella service on Sunday morning.. There is also a contemporary service on Saturday p.m., with instruments. These contemporary services use keyboard, guitars, drums. The four weekend assemblies total upward of 1500 in attendance. Considering its background as a non-Sunday school congregation (It still has no Sunday school!), Farmers Branch is a phenomenon among Churches of Christ, with dynamic leadership.

As might be expected, this innovation of having even one instrumental service is viewed with concern, if not dismay, by many in Churches of Christ. It is probable that for the foreseeable future most of our churches will remain uncompromisingly acappella. But there will almost certainly be a continuation of some congregations –the larger and the more progressive – going instrumental for one or more services. Now that Richland Hills is among that number the pace could accelerate.

Churches of Christ have such a rich tradition of acappella singing that it is unlikely that it will ever be completely abandoned. Even our most progressive congregations will almost certainly continue to do some singing without instruments. And for good reasons, one being that we often do it well. It is common for visitors to our services to comment that we don’t need instruments. We can also believe that acappella music is more in keeping with the simplicity and beauty of New Testament worship.

Nor are Churches of Christ uniquely acappella, except in some American communities. Throughout the history of the church there has been a substantial presence of acappella singing, sometimes acappella only, as in the great Orthodox churches, the most ancient of denominations. All churches sometimes sing acappella, and some of the great choirs of the world use only the human voice. The Presbyterian Church of Scotland not only objects to instruments but to man-made hymnals as well. They use the hymnal that is in the Bible, the Psalms. The only scriptural hymnal! I don’t know how we missed that one!

This is why I questioned the thesis of a publication by a professor at Abilene Christian University some years back on The Case for Acappella Music. I pointed out that no case has to be made for acappella singing, for reasons noted above. Beside, insofar as Churches of Christ are concerned that is not the issue. The professor’s book should have been on The Case for Making Acappella Music a Test of Fellowship.

No one faults us for singing acappella. That has not been our sin. We erred when we made the use of instruments a test of fellowship and allowed it to be a divisive issue. We went wrong when we moved acappella music from being an opinion or preference to being an essential. We took it from our small t traditions, where it properly belongs, and made it part of our capital T tradition, the core gospel which we share with all believers.

And that, thank God, is what is changing – not in a trickle, but massively. Instrumental music is a dead issue in most mainline Churches of Christ. Many churches – that will adamantly remain non-instrumental — have gone on record of no longer making it a condition of fellowship. Even those who view it as a sin should they sing with an instrument no longer apply that judgment upon others.

It does not matter all that much whether Churches of Christ remain acappella or whether they become partly or completely instrumental. The church catholic has long labeled such questions as adiaphorous (matters of indifference). In our own Restoration heritage we have it in the motto: “In essentials, unity; in opinions, liberty; in all things, love.” We got off track and betrayed our own heritage when we turned opinions and methods into essentials.

What is important, whether we are acappella or instrumental or something of both, is that we love and accept all other believers as equals in Christ. How they sing in their assemblies, or how they otherwise “do church” is adiaphorous, so long as they are devoted to Christ and hold to the essentials of the faith.

History could do an irony on us, a benevolent one. Churches of Christ could end up with both instrumental and non-instrumental churches, while we remain united. That would put us where our Stone/Campbell heritage was 150 years ago. For an entire generation we had “organic” and “inorganic” congregations without a rupture in fellowship. This was the case until editor-bishops appeared who insisted that “It can be only one way,” and divided us.

This transition we are going through – and remember the “law of change” is the “law of God – isn’t really about instrumental music. It goes much deeper and is much more complicated. It is the old issue of “form and substance” that goes back to the ancient Greek philosophers. Is reality and truth in the form (anything material or outward) or is it in the substance (the ideal, or what’s in the heart)? Or s it somehow both? Plato, for instance, held that material things are but a shadow of reality, which is mind or idea.

We are all exposed to this problem in one way or another. We know that unless baptism is a “circumcision of the heart” (Col. 2:11-12) one only gets wet. And we agree with Shakespeare in reference to prayer that “words without thoughts never to heaven go.” And unless it is an act of heart and conscience the Lord’s Supper is in vain. Form must have substance, and substance must have priority. Errors of the heart are far more serious than flaws in the form.

Our people are becoming more spiritually discerning, and this includes being more aware of what matters most, the heart. If the heart is right (substance) the form might be adiaphorous – or at least matters on which we can differ. Not that form is unimportant, for it is sometimes ordained of God, but our sincere responses to form might differ in detail. Foremost, God looks upon the heart, not outward appearance.

So, just how we do music — hymnals are only the Psalms, shaped notes or round notes, choirs or solos or congregational singing, acappella or instrumental – may not be that big a deal with God so long as the music is from the heart and glorifies Christ. And so we are to unloose and renounce the old fallacy that “It can be only one way.”

The Classics on Youtube . . . My next book

There’s a book I’ve been wanting to write for a decade. But I haven’t been ready.

Now I’m ready. I’m going to try to start working on it during “spare time” (ha!), and then the elders have given me some time this June to finish it.

It’s very important to me, and I’d appreciate your prayers. I’ll tell you more about it later.

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You asked for it. You got it. (The antecedent of “you” is a few readers with a warped sense of humor.) “Mike Cope Sings the Classics” from the ‘05 Zoe Conference.

Thanks to Matt Maxwell, my tech guru, for getting this on youtube. He and I filmed the whole thing in about an hour, and then Grant Boone added the impromptu voice-over later.

Lipscomb University

I just finished speaking in chapel at Lipscomb University in Nashville. This is such an impressive place. I’ve written before about Randy and Rhonda Lowry and what great leaders they are. (Randy is now the president of DLU.)

Last night, I got to eat with several of their students. A great bunch–close, fun-loving, passionate about the mission of Christ.

I’m reminded again of what a great Bible department they have here: Mark Black, Terry Briley, Lee Camp, John Mark Hicks, Gary Holloway, Earl Lavendar, John York, etc.

As I’ve said before, I look for great days ahead for this school.

Mike Cope Reporting Live

A few things I’ve seen and heard:

1. I saw tomorrow morning’s keynote speaker sitting next to his father. His dad was worshiping with his arm around his son. I don’t mean one of those “guy hugs” where you could just claim you’re stretching. I mean this dad has his arm around his son as if he were ten. I found that to be very touching. His son is huge (maybe 6′5″) and is in his early thirties. But his father isn’t afraid to show that kind of affection.

2. I got to worship behind Tom Olbricht. I’m not an ACU person by heritage. I came here late. But my life — and nearly everyone else’s in Churches of Christ — owes so much to this man, to his rich theology, and to his gentle spirit.

3. I heard a testimony given in a church on missionality and church planting by a woman describing the dramatic change in her daughter’s life that gave me hope and reminded me that the gospel is true. (Thanks, Gailyn, for putting this session together.)

4. I tried to get in to hear Dan McVey but it was packed. He’s a rock star from Ghana. (I’ve asked him to give the special Saturday afternoon address at Zoe. Bono was unavailable.)

5. I’m hangin’ with my parents. Pretty cool.

6. John York spoke right to my soul today as he preached from John 15. He drew us into the image of vineyard and land throughout scripture, leading to that striking statement of Jesus: “I am the vine.” John said he prefers the older translation “abide in me” over the newer “remain in me,” because “remain” sounds external and distant (”please remain on the line and someone will be with you shortly”) while “abide” sounds internal and close. I’ve be abiding in that comment!

Mike Cope reporting live from the ACU lectureship . . . .

UPDATED AT 9:00 PM Tues PM - Don McLaughlin rocked the house tonight with a call for Christian unity that was bold, wide, gospel-formed, biblical.

The Gospel Of Thomas, Johnny Cash, and the Blues

Just got my lectureship brochure for the ACU Lectureship, which this year will be in the fall. September 17-20, 2006. Wow! Mark Love and Co. have done a great job. These lectureships really are incredible. I know Abilene has a hard time competing with some other places for “where-I’d-like-to-spend-a-couple-days-away” competition, but the fellowship will be lively and the world’s best bar-b-que places will be open!

I’m especially looking forward to having my friend Don McLaughlin come. He’s giving the theme speech on Tuesday night from John 17. But he’s also coming a bit early to preach at Highland (where two of his sons attend — which makes it a wee bit easier to convince him to come!) on Sunday the 17th. He’s also teaching a class called “Training for Warriors in the Peaceable Kingdom: Multicultural Churches As Salt and light.”

There is a Michael Card concert that Sunday at 2:00, prior to the first evening lecture. What a way to begin!

How about this:

Jeff Childers talking about “Deciphering the Da Vinci Code and the Gospel of Judas.”

Richard Beck discussing “Disgust, Death, Sex and the Gospel of Judas.”

A group of panelists talking about the challenges of faith and nation in a culture that leans toward national idolatry.

Darryl Tippens, Jackie Halstead, Bill Rankin, and Scott Hamm exploring the themes of Darryl’s new book, A Pilgrim Heart.

Another panel exploring “Churches of Christ and the Missional Church Movement.”

Evening vespers.

Evening coffee houses (like “The Man in Black: Music and message of Johnny Cash” or “The Gospel and the Blues”).

Need a lectureship brochure? You can go to this site to request one.

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Here’s just a reminder not to forget to read Larry James’s blog. Larry reflects in yesterday’s post about how different the health care experience is for his parents than it is for his friends in the part of the city where he lives and works.

Early last Thursday morning, I picked up my parents from their home and took them to the new Baylor Regional Hospital in Plano.

My dad was scheduled for an angiogram to determine exactly where blockage was located in the artery supplying blood and life to his left leg. Going into the procedure, the doctor hoped to be able to open the artery by means of angioplasty and/or a permanent stint.

My mom, who suffers from a non-cancerous blood disorder, needed a blood transfusion.

As it turned out, the hospital staff–an incredibly warm, accomplished and helpful team–arranged for the two of them to be in treatment rooms right across the hall from one another. That made my job much easier!

Both procedures went like clockwork.

My mother was all done by about 1:00 p.m. and feeling better. My father, complete with new stainless steel stint implanted successfully with blood flowing freely into his previously troubled leg, got into a room for an overnight stay around mid-afternoon.

All of this had been easily arranged in the week to ten days prior to their coming to the hospital. No long waiting period. Very little time for anxiety or worry or feeling poorly unnecessarily.

My dad had seen his heart surgeon who referred him over to the doctor who performed the flawless procedure. My mom had made her plans two days before following a routine visit to her blood specialist, a smart young doctor who is becoming her friend.

There had been no delays, no roadblocks, no question whatsoever about scheduling, cost, or whether or not their needs would be met in a most timely manner.

Both of my parents, now in their mid-80s, carry Medicare health insurance cards. Medicare is the national health plan provided by our government to persons past the age of retirement. An extremely efficient operation, Medicare works flawlessly for my folks. [Blogger's confession: Every time I hear someone bashing President Lyndon Johnson and his "War on Poverty," I can't help but think of Medicare--a program he delivered to America.]

As I waited for them in the really inviting environment of the new hospital, I couldn’t help but think of my friends who don’t enjoy such health benefits.

I thought of the long delays in arranging specialty treatment for the poor right here in Dallas. I thought of our overcrowded public hospital, a hospital doing amazing work, but stretched well beyond its limits.

I thought of the ease with which my parents have been able to find just the physicians they need when they need them, while my friends at the bottom of the economic pyramid struggle to find doctors because so many don’t work with Medicaid patients.

I also thought of the recent cutbacks in funding for the Medicaid insurance program designed for low-income persons.

Just thoughts while waiting for my parents.

Thoughts set alongside thoughts and memories of my friends in the city.

Should health care continue to be treated as a commodity to be consumed? Or, should a higher, nobler view of life inform our perspectives on what we provide and demand. . .for everyone?

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Many of our seniors recently made a trip to New Orleans to work in the recovery ministry there. It made us even more thankful for the amazing work of the Tammany Oaks Church of Christ. Steve Hare told me about how this church cut a hole in their brand, spankin’ new auditorium to make it easier to serve food to people who are there to work in this relief effort. That’s church at its finest, isn’t it?

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Take a couple minutes and listen to “Preaching to the Pocketbooks” from yesterday’s “All Things Considered” program.

Signs of Hope

The landscape of Churches of Christ looks very different today than it did back in 1992 when Wineskins magazine was launched. Here are five signs of hope:

1. Churches all over are struggling with their identity, trying to break from being defined by what we’re not. (Not Catholic, not Baptist, not Presbyterian, etc.) And for many, the language being used has to do with being missional: living out the Way of Christ in a world that God deeply loves and seeks to repair. There is more focus on kingdom language, echoing the dominant theme of Jesus’ preaching. I hear less discussion, e. g., of how our understanding of baptism is better than everyone else’s and more interest in what the implications are of baptism. Also, many more are talking about salvation as an on-going way of living — the continual process of God peeling away layers of selfishness that would demand our own way.

2. There is a revival happening in many of our Christian colleges and campus ministries. Just ask anyone who’s been to the Gulf Coast Get-a-Way in recent years. For a weekend in February, nearly 2000 university students crash in Panana City to be challenged and to challenge one another to live for Christ on their campuses. At Lipscomb, the wise, courageous leadership of Randy Lowry is showing quickly. Look for them to become a leading school in the next decade. At Pepperdine, Rochester College, and ACU (under the leadership of Andy Benton, Mike Westerfield [and before him Ken Johnson], and Royce Money), these schools have opened dialogue beyond our own small world and have built strong Bible faculties to help form students theologically and missionally. The books that have been coming from “The Heart of the Restoration” series from ACU have been insightful. (Check them out: The Crux of the Matter: Crisis, Tradition, and the Future of Churches of Christ, God’s Holy Fire: The Nature and Function of the Scripture, Unveiling Glory: Visions of Christ’s Transforming Presence, and Seeking a Lasting City: The Church’s Journey in the Story of God. ) I’m also encouraged by the recent news that Dr. Harold Shank, longtime minister at the Highland Street Church in Memphis, is joining the Bible faculty at OC. What a great addition for them. While I continue to be sad about the insular world the current administration of Harding has woven (Again I ask: How can Jeff Walling, as one of many examples, be banned from speaking on campus? He’s been impacting teens and university students all over the country for decades.), the school continues to send out young men and women to plant churches across the states and around the world. Harding students who come to ACU’s graduate school have been challenged (by Cox, Cochran, Fortner, etc.) to live radical lives of discipleship on behalf of the world.

3. The Christian Chronicle continues to bless Churches of Christ. Fifteen years ago the editorial tone of the journal was often harsh. “Young reformers” were encouraged to leave. But no longer. The Chronicle has a very responsible way of reporting and encouraging. Right now I find them to be a great rallying point of unity.

4. The response of Churches of Christ after the tsunami and after Katrina has reminded us again that there is a hurting world that isn’t interested in our internecine discussions. Churches large and small have cooperated to pray, to give, and to send workers to help.

5. The focus of “worship renewal” has changed for the better, INMO. The language I’m hearing at Zoe conferences, Stream in the Desert, the Tulsa Workshop, Pepperdine, ACU, etc. — would indicate that we’re thinking more holistically about worship. While some time needs to be spent praying and planning for the corporate times of gathering, even more important is that those times of gathering allow us to stir one another on toward love and good deeds (Heb. 10:24f). We come together to remember who we are as Christ-followers, and we send one another out, freshly commissioned to live worshipful lives of service throughout the week. Praise, thanksgiving, confession, and lament permit us to remember that God, despite outward appearances at times, is in control and that he is blessing us to be a blessing.

There are many other signs I could have included in this brief list, such as the shared discussions this year with Christian Churches and the growing sense that the family of God is much larger than our streams of the “Restoration Movement.”

I have no crystal ball. I have no idea if there will be a major split in Churches of Christ in the future . . . or just a growing, informal split . . . or maybe a renewal of unity around the old idea of being Christians only but not the only Christians.

Inorganic Music

Once again, there were classes at Pepperdine (as there have been at ACU and Tulsa earlier this year) on the need for greater fellowship between Christian Churches and Churches of Christ — again taught by Bob Russell and Rick Atchley. Of course, this is just a beginning. A small beginning. But, it is an important beginning. (At least it’s a beginning in some places. Many of you are in places where you already realize that anyone who is a Christ-follower is WITH you not AGAINST you!)

So here’s my take on instrumental music: God doesn’t much care. Most of the old arguments were lame, built on shoddy hermeneutics.

Nevertheless, those in the a cappella tradition don’t need to be ashamed of it. There is a rich tradition in the church that runs through the centuries of singing without instruments. Even today, when people enter our churches, they are dumbfounded to hear people singing — full voice, four-part harmony.

That doesn’t mean it’s the only way, or that it’s God’s way. Sure, I could be blessed by being in a church with Chris Tomlin leading worship.

But I’m not. I’m in a congregation with a heritage of being a cappella. That doesn’t mark us as being the REAL people of God or as being RIGHT. But it is a rich heritage that can be, if continued in love and humility, a gift to Christian community, reminding us that worship is a place of full participation where we all offer ourselves again to God, seeking to be reshaped by him to live for the sake of the world.

So God bless the drums/guitars/saxophones that are played for the glory of God. And God bless the pitch pipes and the tuning forks that find a pitch so that others can sing without instruments.

Preserving this a cappella heritage isn’t nearly as important to me as it is to others. It’s nothing I’m going to fight a younger generation on. If they decide to set it aside for the sake of the mission, I’ll be with them. (Sad, perhaps, but still with them.)

But in the meantime, I want to participate at the top of my lungs; I want to remind others that such singing is a blessing; and I want to share with others a growing appreciation for the many different looks of the universal church that lives for Christ.

On Lightening Up a Wee Bit

I’ve mentioned before the three views one can have of parents: a child’s view (my parents are perfect and have no faults); an adolescent’s view (my parents are embarrassing embeciles); and a mature adult’s view (my parents have strengths and faults).

Those are the same views one can have of a religious heritage.

I continue to bump up against the childish view: our heritage was wonderful and should never be critiqued or laughed at. If you critique it or laugh at it, then you hate it and think it’s stupid.

Last year for the Zoe conference I made a silly little video called “Mike Cope Sings the Classics.” (Soon it will be on www.zoegroup.org. Thanks, Keith!) Most people have enjoyed it.

After I showed it at Pepperdine in my class with Zoe, a woman came up and chewed me out so long people gave up trying to visit with me. She said I despised people like her and the songs they like. I tried to remain calm and explain kindly why people liked it — not because they HATE the heritage but because they LOVE it.

We suffer from humorlessness.

In healthy families, you’re able to spot weaknesses and tell humorous stories about the family. Not because you despise it, but because you love it and see the humor and joy of it. Dysfunctional families — those that remain in childish states — can’t allow humor. It’s just too fragile to joke about.

Some of the stuff in our heritage needs to be critiqued, like the exclusivism. (There’s a reason people thought we believed we were the only ones going to heaven.) However, if we attack our heritage like adolescents — as if it was totally devoid of spiritual impulses and spiritual people — that needs to be challenged.

But when we find humor — in skipping the third verse of every song, in the love of singing 728B, in the “scare you down to the front” invitation songs, etc. — that’s not because we despise the past. We are part of that past. It helped shape us and form us. And while we’re aware of flaws and quirks, we’re also deeply aware of the amazing strengths.

Will people in the future find humor as they remember my quirks? Oh, I hope so! And if they do, I trust that it will be with appreciation for the past.

Please, lighten up.