Summer is upon us. And with summer comes that season known as "Construction”. Only this year, it is worse that before. This year it isn’t only lasting for the warmer weather months, it is lasting forever - or at least that is what it feels like! Multiple roads are completely shut for months if not years while bridges are out or roads and intersections are dug up to have new pipes laid underneath. All this is necessary… and YES, it will be nice when it is finished but there are some days I despair of that ever happening. Some days when I wonder just how I will get out of this small community to where I need to go.
But on reflection it hasn’t been all bad. I have been forced, as a fairly recent newcomer to the area, to learn the back streets and the alternate routes to get places. I have become more familiar with the neighbourhoods in the community instead of relying on the main roads to get me where I need to go. In short it has been a ‘learning experience’.
My husband had a stroke in early 2015. He is fortunate in that the lasting effects have been mild. Nevertheless he has been faced with a new regime of eating and life style changes. These changes have led to weight loss, to improved stamina and mobility, and to an appreciation of the results of setting goals for regular and intentional exercise.
But what if in these examples we had chosen instead to complain about the construction in my case, or to just accept the minor disability brought on by the stroke, in my husband's, and do nothing about it? On the outside, our lives would look very much like they do today. But we would be different people because we hadn't chosen to change.
Challenges are one of the greatest motivators for change. And how we respond to them determines who we are and who we will become.
Can the the institutional church respond, and respond quickly enough, to the challenges facing it in this time of declining enrolment? We see study after study being published about the declining numbers of church attendees in current polls. So far all I have seen happening is some tweaking of the type of music perhaps or some minimal changes to the language being use to bring it more in line with the language of 50 year ago. Wholesale change involves going in a whole new direction which might involve changing the message to fit into the knowledge of the 21st century, bringing scholarship and discussion into the pews, while maintaining a sense of mystery and awe.
Challenges whether explicit or implicit are what have caused me to grow. What are some of the challenges that have changed you?
Comments
Post a Comment