How the mood of America is impacting the Church   November 2nd, 2009

With the recent third quarter spurt of growth many are proclaiming that the recession is over. While that might be true from a “technical” point, emotionally the mood across America is little changed. The recession continues to depress growth in nearly every quarter of our economy including churches.

A friend asked me the other day what I thought of the mood of the country was with regards to the recession. My answer was one word, fear. While few might admit it in that strong of a word it none the less is the overall mood from Wall Street to Main Street. That fear is finding its way into the board rooms of countless churches across America. If left unchecked it will set the church back for years. In what is our greatest opportunity in years to share hope we in the church are missing the moment.

Peggy Noonan in a column this past weekend in the Wall Street Journal summed it up well. She said, “The biggest threat to America right now is not government spending, huge deficits, foreign ownership of our debt, world terrorism, two wars, potential epidemics or nuts with nukes. The biggest long term threat is that people are becoming and have become disheartened…” She then went on to explain that this mood exists because first, people do not think they can make it better and secondly because the problems seem too big.

Never one to be shy about my opinions let me weigh in on the failures that have put us in this position.

Our political leaders in both parties have failed us. Politics has always been divisive in American life. However if there is one unifying thing, a result of the current political crisis, it is that Americans are becoming one in their distrust of anything from Washington D.C. None of the above is fast becoming the party of choice. A president that was elected with such high hopes now sees his ratings at an all time low, near fifty percent.

Frankly the Democrats who now control all three branches of government can not even agree amongst themselves on how to govern. They can blame the past administration all they want but the truth is they have controlled Congress for nearly four years and the White House for nearly a year. They have showed nothing new to the American public and that public is growing restless. Republicans have fared none better and are simply seen as the party against whatever the Democrats are suggesting. You have to be for something not just against something.

Most Americans, including myself, feel that our politicians are too removed from real life issues. How many of them have actually run a small business? How many of them have had to worry from pay check to pay check about whether they can make ends meet? They seem to have lost any sense of reality of what Americans truly experience in day to day living. We desperately need leadership and it is not coming from Washington D.C.

Our greed was and continues to be our down fall. Let’s stop pointing fingers at the very few on Wall Street that received large bonuses. The rich are not the reason for our down fall. We need to look no further than our own sense of greed to find the culprit. We have chased a lifestyle that was unsustainable and are now surprised that the house of cards collapsed. Rather than take responsibility for our own stupidity in buying too large of a car, too big of a house and too many luxuries we seek to blame someone else. No bank forced you to sign that loan. Americans did it to themselves.

It’s time to stop blaming everyone else and start finding ways to live responsively. Here is the Churches big opportunity and we better not blow it. Teach those in your sphere of influence how to live responsible biblical lives and hope will return. Of all institutions ours should be the leader in this time of discouragement.

From Wall Street to the board rooms of business on Main Street the mood is caution. The result of this mood is that many projects are put on hold as business waits to see what will happen or when a return to normal will occur. Those same men and women then go into their churches board meetings and spread their fear and caution to the leadership of their church. As a result as never before the church is responding not with faith but with fear. We have let the mood of the country set our agenda rather than leading America with Godly vision. All our teaching on living a life of faith has gone out the door as we too often walk by sight rather than faith.

I am certainly not saying we should not consider the times we live in. Nor am I saying we should not listen to the voices of our lay leaders. I am saying it is more important have the mind of God through this time than the mind of man. My belief is that too many are frozen by fear in a time when we desperately need faith.

That faith can be found in a few places. Two years ago I began working with a church in Michigan that had already been feeling the impact of the recession. As they were preparing to build a new sanctuary many in the church questioned the timing of such a bold project. I had the pleasure of interviewing one businessman in the church about this. Here is what he said, “This has been the worst three years of business for me in the last thirty. Yet I think that as people are hurting they will be looking for some place for an answer. We must build this building to be ready to meet that need!”

Wouldn’t you like that kind of guy in your church? Who wouldn’t? I believe he was that kind of guy because his pastor was that kind of leader. What kind of leader are you? Are you the kind that inspires faith and action? Or are you the kind that causes others to shrink back in fear? A lot is riding on your answer to that question. Some see the glass as half empty and others see it as half full. How do you see the glass of this recession? What is your plan of action?

Mark Brooks
Founder and President
The Charis Group

This entry was posted on Monday, November 2nd, 2009 at 10:16 am and is filed under Economy, Leadership. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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