How would you respond to that statement? That the Church/Christianity is f***ed up?

That’s what one of my co-workers said to me this evening. Some of you know that I started working at Starbucks a few months ago to get some extra money and maintain my connections to the Other outside the sanitary walls of Seminary. She had asked if I was “going to school to be a pastor or something” (cause I guess that’s the word on the street!) and I said, “sort of.”

And that’s when she dropped the f-bomb.

It didn’t really bother me all that much because 1) I drop a good ‘bomb’ myself every once in a while and 2) I agree with her!

Now don’t get me wrong: I love the Church and believe whole heartedly that she through Jesus is the hope for the world. But the type of Christianity that I grew up with and the type I encountered on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C. was…let’s just say it left something to be desired!

So we spent the rest of our shift talking about the Church and Christianity. While she and I had a wonderful chat about my own spiritual journey through fundamentalism in Grand Rapids and Washington D.C. and spiritual ‘shift’ 3 years ago, the amazing part was listening to her spiritual journey. I could tell there was a lot of pain and frustration with the Christianity with which she was familiar. Her 18-year journey through West Michigan churchianity left her jaded and cynical about the Church, but still searching after God. West Michigan Christianity will do that to you, ya know.

After our shift I started processing our conversation and realized more than ever how crucial it is that we get the Story right and that we point people simply to Jesus. As I said before: who is the Jesus we are showing and what is the Story we are telling? I’m all too familiar with the Jesus and Story West Michigan Christianity is showing and telling. But how about you?

Who is the Jesus you are showing each day?

What is the Story you are telling to people about God and His Reality?

Because, as I witnessed up close this evening, the Who and the What to those questions are incredibly, incredibly important for the spiritual journeys of other people, let alone ourselves.

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