Archive for April, 2009

Mass Appeal

April 8, 2009

I have written in the past about how fewer people are attending mass at all and/or on a regular basis. I kept wondering what people are looking for from their church and why is it they are not apparently finding it. Either their needs have changed or the churches aren’t meeting them.

I think people come to church services for a number of reasons. One important reason though is they want a sense of community and a reassurance that there are others who believe and who are trying be better people. To take this a step further, they are looking to be in relationship with others who have a similar view of the world.

I might even go to say that they are looking for intimate relationships. Intimate in that there is an implied sharing where those who attend reveal themselves as believers and as humans on a collective journey. So do churches foster this opportunity in what they do? Do they create an atmosphere of trust, safety, welcoming and honesty? Do people feel comfortable being who they are and expressing themselves? Is there a purposeful effort to create an atmosphere of emotion and reflection?

The other possibility is that people should want this and maybe unconsciously know they need this, but don’t want to invest themselves. They are unwilling to take the risk to open themselves to others and their faith and so when they go to services, it’s like watching bad TV for them. There are no stunts, the action is very predicable and the actors are not of star quality.

I have suggested that churches should be more intentional about building social relationships. My suggestions have been countered with the idea that people have enough to do in their lives already and don’t need the church to provide them with more things to do. The make their friends on the soccer sidelines, ice arenas and neighborhoods and won’t be interested in coming to low social risk events to meet people who attend the same church.

So where does all this amateur analysis leave us? People aren’t coming to church because they have no personal connection, when they do come there isn’t enough done to emotionally engage them and they have their social needs met with other institutions and won’t participate in social activities at church so as to create personal connections.

I guess I think something needs to change or things will stay on their current downward trend. I am thinking there either needs to be more attempts to turn strangers (who sit next to one another) into friends during the service – maybe take a minute or two before the service and have everybody say hi to one another. I also think the leader must make his or her own emotional investment in the service. They must create an intimacy by fully revealing themselves.

Greatest Hits Vol.1

April 1, 2009

I was combing through my music collection this morning to figure out what I wanted to listen to while I was working. I sorted the music by album name (I just down loaded a free Celtic album from Amazon that I wanted to listen to first). I got to the greatest hits section and started reading through some of the groups that have greatest hits albums which included: The Move, The Go-Betweens, The Outlaws, The J.B’s – not exactly groups that come to mind when you think of ‘greatest hits.’ So I started thinking about at what point does a group qualify to issue a ‘greatest hits’ album. It’s a two part question a) what is a great hit and b) how many great hits do you have to have to issue an album full? There is a related question as to when do you issue a, ‘greatest hits vol. II’ album as well.

Naturally, I started putting this question in terms of my own life and who am I to be questioning, ‘The Outlaws’ greatest hits album when a poor rendition of ‘Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star,” is about all I would have to offer as my own. But that’s probably not an apt comparison since, ‘The Outlaws’ are professional musicians and I am not. So the appropriate question is what would be my greatest hits and what is my life genre?

As a business administrator – I guess it would have to be addressing the budget crisis of 1991-92 at Roncalli High School, assembling the employee handbook in 1996, and coddling a boss at an undisclosed location who was ready to wield a large metaphorical chainsaw with irreparable legal and financial consequences certain to result. Actually, I made these up mostly because I had to. I don’t know that I have accomplished anything professionally that is worthy of a greatest hits business management album.

How about my hits in my non-professional life? What would my greatest hits album include in this area? Other than the obvious wife/children/faith sorts of things, I am not sure what I would put on the greatest hits of my life album. It is a very interesting question- I will give myself a top 100 billboard hit this week for coming up with the concept of applying a greatest hits album to ones life events. So I got that going for me.

Let’s see what else have I accomplished that I would put on my greatest life hits album? I’ve only had two driving tickets and they were both from very marginal offenses in income generating ‘trap’ situations. A related hit – I’ve never been in a car accident that was due to my fault/driving skills. I get/got good grades. I very seldom miss work. I can name/recognize NBA players from the late 70’s (quite a feather in my cap). I know my states and capitals.

How about you? What would you say your greatest hits are?