A lot of living rooms
Last night was our second opportunity to meet with a few others, break bread around a delicious stack of homemade burritos, spend time in prayer, in the Word, and in praise. At the end of the evening, one of our friends said, “So is this something I can invite someone else to?†I responded with the affirmative. “Good. I know a couple people who have been looking for this for years now.â€
I didn’t pursue the conversation, but internally I desperately wanted to know what he meant specifically. What was “this� When we began our church, we wanted it to focus not on the time when we got together, but our common life throughout the week. Our gathering together on Tuesday nights was simply a manifestation of our desire to be with each other, and our worship to God during those times was an overflow of our times of worship throughout the week. What was “this� Was it the event we had just unknowingly created? Or was it the communal life, anchored in our time together on Tuesdays that several of his friends are searching for?
I read last night that by the year 2010, 100 million Christians will not be affiliated with a traditional “congregationâ€. (Barna research). What will they find when they leave their churches? Will they still be Christian? Most people think so; they’re just disillusioned about church. I pray that they do not fall through the cracks, but are desperate enough for community life that they try new things – things like the simple church we are experiencing with such joy. 100 million Christians…that’s a lot of living rooms.