
I was born into seriousness and have swum around it it all my life. It is the whole trouble with everything. People take things so seriously. Paul Watzlawick wrote a book entitled, "The Situation Is Hopeless But Not Serious," which captures things quite nicely. Comedians are bad about taking things too seriously. Walking around in drug-induced comas, or killing themselves, or living out their lives sitting looking at a wall. What??? Why don't we just lighten up? That is the prime ingredient in enlightenment. Just lightening up! Itta Bena, Mississippi was/is a very serious place. Everywhere I have lived was very serious, until I got to Greensboro, North Carolina and the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant. It was fabulous. It had out-lived its seriousness, was running out of money, had its back to the wall and was willing to try anything because nothing they had tried worked. A dear woman came to the rescue with a $4,000 dollar gift and a "See what you can do with this," so we did four things with it. We sat down with six or eight people who were fun to be with and agreed to ask our unchurched friends, "What would it take to get you to church once or twice a month?" The results were astounding and beautiful: No liturgy. No offering. No creed. No organ. No prayers of confession. No Bible reading. No prayers. No hymns. No sermons... Things like that, which, when you put it all together came down to NO CHURCH, at least no church the way the church has always been the church. The second thing we did was to create an early service, that worked out to be "The 9:20 Service." Why, 9:20? It was late enough to not rush people to an early service, and it was early enough to allow time for the traditional service at 11:00 O'clock. The third thing we did was to run a series of ads in the local paper along the lines of "No Bible. No sermon. No hymns. No prayers. No kidding." The fourth thing was to invite local singer/songwriters and musicians to provide 20 minutes of their kind of music for $100. (No "religious music" allowed), in two 10 minute sets to start and end the service, and we had 10 minutes of silence at the start. That's thirty minutes. We spent another thirty minutes or so with time for people to say what they had to say and for me to talk to them about things I write about here. And ended in time to move out and for the 11 O'clock people to move in. It was a wonderful encounter with freedom for all of us, and lasted seven years up to my retirement, when people who "didn't get it" came in to do things like they ought to be done, which is killing the church worldwide. And it was a seven year demonstration to me of the importance of lightening up and not taking things too seriously-- of being serious about not being serious. And of the difficulty in doing that in a world where things are deadly serious all of the time.
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And we still think your seven years were the way to go. We love you for your courage and sense of play.
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Very good. Do you attend church these days? I don’t. Just wondering.
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“Church” is not an enlightened/enlightening place to be. It’s the same old same old all over again every week. Enough is enough. More than enough. I’ve had enough of not seeing, not hearing, not knowing, not understanding.
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