I skipped church today.
Yes, I am on vacation and had no official responsibilities, and
therefore my truancy is justifiable. But still it feels strange. I know that
millions of people stay home from worship every Sunday and do not feel the
least bit uncomfortable with it. For them attending worship would feel strange.
Even many Christians regularly miss worship on little more than a whim and don’t
give it a second thought.
But not me. Even during the year that I was out of ministry,
I never missed a Sunday. I was a faithful pew-warmer even when I wasn’t in the
pulpit. I have even made it a point to find a place to worship
while on the road traveling long distances. I have had very interesting
experiences visiting churches right off highway exits. But not this Sunday.
This Sunday I was on vacation in Maine, and I chose the beach over the pew.
I was amazed at how many people were not going to church with
me. I should not have been surprised. I have read the statistics on church
attendance, especially in New England. But it still took me aback to see all
these Sabbath-breakers in the flesh. And I am one of them.
Are these the ones who say, “I can worship God just as well
in nature as in church?” Are these the people that the megachurches cater to? The
“seekers” who are diligently searching for God? I don’t think so. I think my fellow
church-skippers were not giving a single thought to the Creator. They were busy
building sand castles, deepening their tans, and cooling off in the surf.
As for me, I skipped church because I was tired. I needed to
get away from church, if only for one Sunday. It didn’t stop me from thinking
about God. Even while spending Sunday morning under a beach umbrella, I was
reading a book on Christian apologetics and sharing theological insights with my
wife. But every once in a while - every twenty or thirty years or so - skipping
church just feels like the right thing to do.
No comments:
Post a Comment