Claiming Resurrection in the Dying Church: Freedom Beyond Survival
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How do you minister faithfully to a congregation that is in decline? While many congregations struggle with trying to find the key to regrowth, pastor Anna Olson suggests that the answer may actually be to accept and embrace this moment for what it is. In this beautifully written work, Olson helps pastors recognize that, while the congregation might be going away, the community of which it is a part is still very much alive. Using her own experiences in a dying congregation, Olson encourages pastors to use this opportunity to explore new ways to minister, freely and selflessly, and provides a powerful model of what faithfulness to the gospel looks like. This hopeful book about letting go of false hope gives pastors the guidance they need for ministering effectively during the final stages of a church's life.
Anna B. Olson
Anna B. Olson is Rector of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Los Angeles, California.
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Claiming Resurrection in the Dying Church - Anna B. Olson
write.
Introduction
This is a love letter to the dying church: an invitation to take stock of where we are and turn toward the center of the Christian story.
If you have opened a book with dying church
in the title, it is probably because you already have some doubts about survival prospects for your church, or the church as a whole. Your congregation may be facing imminent closure. It may have an endowment that could keep it going years after the aging congregation has gone to its rest. It may be OK for now but attracting few new people. It may have an immediate sense of itself as dying or no sense at all. But you see the signs that the whole institutional project of the twentieth-century American church is on its way out; you see that your congregation, sooner or later, will be swept along with that wave of dying.
Maybe you are a lifelong member of your local church, and you have seen the pews gradually empty, your children and the children of your peers drift off. Maybe you are a newly ordained pastor, discovering that the place to which you brought your hopes and high expectations is at the end of its life. Maybe you are part of your congregation’s leadership team and under tremendous pressure to come up with the right mission statement and the right strategic plan before the savings run out, and it’s last one out turn off the lights.
Maybe you are an experienced pastor who can’t figure out why the things that used to work don’t anymore, and you are starting to suspect that all the church growth formulas and products you have been sold are so much snake oil. Maybe you are a denominational leader, and you realize that many of the congregations in your purview are dying. It is getting late for turnaround strategies in many places.
The new millennium has been a wild ride for the U.S. church. The death of the church has been predicted, proclaimed, and pronounced. And now we are living it. Dying church is not as glamorous as it sounds in a manifesto nor as apocalyptic as it appears from crashing statistics. Here is what it looks like from where I stand: death comes one person, one beloved tradition, and one chunk of the roof at a time, a genteel crumbling that is more sad than dramatic. Dying congregations have tried just about everything, grasping after growth and renewal strategies with the panic-driven strength of drowning swimmers. We have looked on with not a little envy as newly planted churches shed the burdens and complications of the past. We look out on changed and changing neighborhoods and hang on to increasingly motley mixes of faithful people.
The fears of the historic church are not just monsters under the bed. We fear that we are at the end of an era, and we are. We fear that we have not yet seen the worst that the crumbling of the twentieth-century church has to offer, and we have not. We fear that things are falling apart faster and faster. They are. There is much loss still ahead. The last generation that upheld the historic churches is still to be lost. Most of our congregations have run out of time for renewal, if that was ever a realistic possibility; we are well past the possibility of gentle transition by which new generations gracefully fill our churches without cataclysmic change. The certainty that we will have neighbors looking to be churched
—eager to commit to regular Sunday worship if only we can find ways to engage them—is a mirage.
We know all these things, but every fiber of our beings, every element of our institutional structures and every value of our culture push us away from the point of reckoning. I caught a glimpse the other day of one of the endless parade of preschool TV shows. A character was frustrated, and his friends were looking on. Finally, he flopped down in defeat. A deathly silence fell over the watching crowd. Someone asked, "You’re not … giving up? A collective gasp went up. The animated friends began to chant.
Don’t give up, don’t give up." Giving up has become the unforgivable sin—worse than hitting, spitting, or using bad words and less developmentally defensible than refusing to share. Whatever you do, don’t give up.
What if we give up? What if we concede that we don’t know what to do with the current moment, or most of the last twenty years, and certainly not the next twenty? What if we admit that our congregations in their familiar forms will be gone in twenty years, or ten? What if we acknowledge that what we’ve been able to hang on to is slipping from our grasp?
When Jesus had received the wine, he said, It is finished.
Then he bowed his head and gave up his spirit. (John 19:30)
What if we give up? Stop trying to pull ourselves out of the grave by our own bootstraps? What if we give up the idea that our hard work will be rewarded by a shining church and put our faith in the promise that the path to resurrection is through death? What if we let go of the idolatrous idea that God wants all human religious endeavors to thrive and trust that God is making all things new
? The collective gasp may well become a sigh of relief. Becoming a congregation that tells the truth may be a great liberation. Some people will be angry, defiant, blame the quitters. But others will stand up taller, freed from the burden of carrying the lie.
Giving up does not have to mean locking the doors and going home. If God is not finished, we are not either. There is more for us: more life, more hope. But we are freed from knowing the shape it will take. We are freed from the daunting task of birthing the new with only our own waning strength. We begin to face the future with freedom and faith rather than fear and the weight of failure.
Giving up on success frees us. We are free to measure the fruits of our ministry not by the marks of longevity, affluence, and popularity but rather by the mark set by Jesus: love of God and neighbor. If our churches cease striving to be full and flush, we can strive to be places where we and our neighbors practice welcoming and being welcomed, forgiving and being forgiven, loving and being loved. We can live fully in whatever time we have left, claiming our place in the sacred story of death and resurrection. Relinquishing our claim on survival, we can walk toward death in faith and hope, offering all that we have left to a God fully capable of doing a new thing in our neighborhoods and our communities. In short, we can be who we were always meant to be.
This book is for and about historic churches. By historic, I don’t mean listed on a register somewhere or necessarily made of stone with a tall steeple and architectural significance.
Historic churches have some history in their neighborhoods and communities. They have served at least one full generation and are now living beyond the generation that they were planted to serve. While in most cases they were founded to meet the needs of a culturally particular and relatively homogeneous group, they now find themselves physically rooted in places that have changed beyond what that first generation could readily imagine.
This definition of historic may sound awfully Californian to my sisters and brothers elsewhere. In my defense, I will say only that the world is changing with increasingly California-like speed these days, even in places where it usually takes more than a generation to become historic. Being a historic church is different from being a church in its first generation. Generational shifts are messy, and church gets messier and messier as it attempts to serve in the midst of change. The generational and cultural range of the congregation grows over time, sometimes even as the congregation shrinks. Competing claims on the church’s attention and focus intensify. Commuters and neighbors live in increasingly different worlds. Whether the church has served fifty or three hundred years, it is no longer the church it was when it started. The speed with which historic churches are called to reinvent themselves is often inversely proportional to the speed with which they are able to move.
This is not one more church growth book. It contains no promises. I do not know what will happen to my dying church, much less yours. I don’t have the formula that will save you from death, the right prescription that will sustain you for ten years, twenty years, thirty years. I don’t believe that all of our churches will survive, not even all the good ones
who are trying hard to be faithful. Growth programs that promise results, measure faith by size, bind resurrection in institutions, and blame the faithful for the changing world have little good news for our churches. They lure us with promises of success when our faith calls for a willingness to die. Jesus’ ministry was a failure by all the measures of church growth. He went from drawing crowds of thousands to struggling to hang on to his own inner circle of disciples. He went from raging popularity to ignominy.
Tolstoy famously began the novel Anna Karenina, All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.
The same could be said for dying churches. Each one has its own trajectory, its own manifestation of the broad pattern of church decline. It is easy to become so isolated in the dying process that each of us imagines our story to be utterly unique. We imagine that we may be the only ones who have failed in quite this way. This book invites you to have some perspective and to find some company. We are in this together, and we are part of something large and sweeping—a reorganization of our society and our faith that affects all churches and goes well beyond the church.
The stories in this book come from my ministry, mostly from my recent years in the heart of Los Angeles at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church. St. Mary’s is a historic Japanese American church founded in 1907 when the neighborhood was called Uptown and was home to many Japanese immigrants. A century later it finds itself again in the midst of an immigrant neighborhood, now called Koreatown: majority Latino with a substantial and growing Korean population. When I arrived in 2011, St. Mary’s was already deep into the painful process of realizing that its hoped-for future as a church for successive generations of Japanese American families with ancestral roots in Uptown was probably not going to happen. While few St. Mary’s members would be happy to describe the church as dying, the congregation’s grief and disappointment are palpable. We lose one member after another who carries the story and history of what the church has meant to a community that has suffered and cared for one another. The descendants of St. Mary’s founders have scattered to suburbs that are geographically and culturally far from the old neighborhood; fewer and fewer members of the younger generations of St. Mary’s historic families pick up church where their elders left off.
St. Mary’s has had to dig deep into its past, discovering an identity that goes beyond the sacred story of a particular ethnic community: it is an entry point for new immigrants, a place that loves children, and a place of refuge for those who have been left out and pushed out by the surrounding culture. I am privileged to serve in a brave place, one that is letting go of its hard-fought hopes for its future, more or less embracing the neighbors who have ventured in the doors and trying to muster a spirit of adventure for an unknown future.
I have been a parish priest for fourteen years in and around Los Angeles, all in churches that have seen generations come and go, both in the congregation and in their neighborhoods. The churches I have served are canaries in the mineshaft of church decline: smaller, urban congregations in tough, fast-changing, impoverished, diverse neighborhoods. With no glee, I imagine that our fate foretells that of more prosperous congregations in easier settings. Our churches feel the impact of the shifts in culture and generation more immediately, more harshly. As is the case for the people in the communities we serve, there is not much to cushion our fall—not much commonality with and among neighbors, not much money, not many resources designed for our contexts. We live from crisis to crisis, and in the midst of this madness, we are told that our problems would be solved if only