Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Commentary

My Annual Visit to a Mainline Protestant Church
April 6, 2009 | By: John Piper

I made my annual visit to a Sunday morning service in a “mainline Protestant church” a couple weeks ago. It is an eerie experience. Heart-wrenchingly eerie.

A magnificent building.
A magnificent choir singing, “Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of he world, have mercy on us” (in Latin).
A closing hymn, “Lord, I want to be a Christian.”
Three women pastors on the platform and two men.
Pews filled with well-to-do looking folks.
The reason I say it was eerie is that much of this religious language means something totally different in their minds from what I mean by it. There is a keeping of the language and a demythologizing of the original meaning.

On one of our earlier visits Noël recalls the pastor saying that when he was a child he used to read stories like the one about Jesus walking on the water as if they were literally true.

What made my visit heart-wrenching was that the children’s choir sang these words—trust me, I am copying them from the bulletin—“Birds and trees, people and plants, dolphin and whale all lives are equal. . . . Sister Rain, Brother Stone bring us back to our true home.”

So when I stand at my study window that looks out over the downtown cityscape of Minneapolis, I pray: “O God, have mercy on us. Send a shocking revival to the churches—and a great awakening to this city. In Jesus’ mighty name. Amen.”

2 comments:

Diana Kukk said...

This is a sad commentary by John Piper. I just don't know how something this dead can possibly be revived! It will take a miracle from Heaven to revive these people!

A Seed Sower said...

Yes sister it could only be a miracle from Heaven if these people were ever revived!
Some have already been turned over to believe a lie and be damned, because they have not recieved the love of the truth, but rather have taken pleasure in unrighteousness...The lost are in a better position to be awakened!