Archive - April, 2009

Our Visit to Midland Lutheran

Midland Lutheran Church, Midland, Texas

Midland Lutheran Church, Midland, Texas

We visited the week after Easter and found few cars in the parking lot, in fact we thought we may have arrived at the wrong time. But we soon discovered we had the time correct, 10:30, so we went in and were greeted by a kind couple who welcomed us and told us to, “try us again, our pastor is gone this week”.

The regular was indeed there and started the service by telling us not to be disappointed that our numbers were so small, after all Jesus only had ten after Easter. The bulletin contained several pieces of paper with one having a order of service in a list on a small slip of paper. That would prove helpful.

The music was traditional and on this Sunday, only organ music was used, not my favorite. The songs were all hymns, difficult to sing. The message was about 15 minutes long and was on the reappearance of Jesus to his disciples. The pastor made a point I wished he would have elaborated on, namely that Easter was not for the world, but for us, Christians. This gave me pause for thought and I was looking forward to hearing more, but the sermon ended before I could understand what the pastor was really trying to say.

I got the feeling that the church was not growing, we were the youngest, and most were over 60 with only two visible youth or children. We were welcomed to take communion and we were made to feel welcomed by the folks in attendance.

The service lasted about 75 minutes, it seemed longer to me. I had a hard time following the service, a traditional Lutheran experience to be sure. We left through a side door, before we did the pastoral assistance said hello and made small talk, but we left before anyone else could talk with us.

I left our information on the pew, but as of yet have not been contacted by anyone. The folks were friendly, but I get the feeling that the church does not have an evangelism program. Next week we head to a larger church, I’ll let you know what we find there. Until then, be blessed.

Glenn Beck Guest Faints

 

A Columbia Law professor faints on live air, Beck offers help.

A Great Book

I just read this book and I commend it to you.  The author describes how he grew up in a fundamental Christian home and lived to tell about it.  He does an excellent job of weaving together his life with what the church was doing in his life, or maybe to his life, and how this affected his world view. 

I loved his depiction of his pastor, Pastor Nolan.  I’m sure his intentions were noble, but the damage done to his charges was severe.  A simplistic look a life is not what the Bible calls for, but Pastor Nolan dishes out his own myopic view life from the pulpit, you have to read it to appreciate it.  Imagine a young boy riding in the car with his pastor, who is shaving and getting dressed while driving, and given the third degree on the way to church.  Mr. Turner is at his best in this scene.

After years of being raised in a “fundamentalist” church Mr. Turner longs for something else. The end of the book is worth the price of admission as Mr. Turner describes his circumstances today, it is refreshing. This is a great read if you may have been raised in the church, but didn’t see how all those rules fit you. Take a couple hundred pages and enjoy the ride. In the end Mr. Turner is all about authenticity and transperancy, check it out!

HAPPY EASTER

The Freese Family

The Freese Family

On this the most holy of days, from my family to yours, we wish you a very Happy Easter.  On this day we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus the Christ who died so that we may have life.

I hope you celebrate today with reverance toward Christ, love to your family and hope to what is yet to come.   From the Freese’s Happy Easter!

Our Visit to Mid – Cities

mid-citiesMID CITIES

Today we visited a large church, Mid-Cities Community Church,  midway between Odessa and Midland, Texas.  It is a beautiful church, done in old European style.  You enter in through a foyer passing a round statue and sitting area just outside the doors.  You are greeted by several folks (a bit overdone) wishing you a good day in a sincere way.  Oh, the parking lot is well staffed with friendly traffic helpers.  We asked where visitors park and were told, “Wherever you want to”.

We were a few minutes early so visited a sitting area that was full of coffee, juice, donuts and other breakfast items and plenty of people partaking in this bounty.  There was a flat screened television in this room, as well as the foyer, that had news and announcments as well as a countdown as to when the next service was to begin.  I especially liked that part, as it gave an idea of what was next.

As it was Easter the sanctuary was very full.  We had ten people with us and no place where we all could find a place to sit together.  I asked one of the ushers if we could sit in the pew that was roped off, he said they were trying to push people forward since they were going to have a large crowd.  When I told him our number he readily agreed to let us sit in the pew that was roped off in the back.

The music was led by a song leader and orchestra that have to have had at least 25 members.  The music was excellent, but for me it felt more like a performance than a worship experience.  It was a typical evangelical service in many ways as we sang three songs, shook hands with our neighbor next to us and heard a sermon.

The sermon was 25 minutes and was good, but not great.  It being Easter I was surprised there was not more emphasis placed on non-believers than believers.  The message made an assumption we knew why you would want to be a Christian, rather than explaining how and why.  There was an attempt made to show how Christ could change your life with a cardboard sign display at the end.  I have seen this many times before and thought it “tired” but my kids quickly corrected me and told me it was “awesome” and they loved it.

Overall it was enjoyable, but was not a moving experience, or even one that provoked much thought.  It did evoke emotion, which is usually the goal in an evangelical and non-denominational church.  I thought it slightly manipulative toward the end with the use of personal cardboard signs.  We were asked to mimic those that carried large cardboard signs on stage with one side before Christ and the other sign after Christ.  We had miniature signs we were asked to fill out and share with a stranger or friend, awkward I think.

The service lasted 75 minutes.  It was done with excellence and attention to detail.  The use of media was good, not overdone, but certainly used to engage the audience.  If I were grading, I would give it a B plus.  If you are a big church fan you would feel right at home.  However if small churches are your thing, well you might feel a bit lost.

Next week a smaller church, maybe even Lutheran.  Until then, be blessed.

Church Shopping

My Former Church

My Former Church

And so it begins – church shopping. We left the church we were attending and where I had been a pastor for a variety of reasons. The worst part about leaving a church is finding a new one.

  • Will the church have a warm feeling?
  • Will we like the pastor?
  • Will the music be good?
  • Will the church offer programs and options for our kids?
  • Will the church be theologically compatible with our beliefs?
  • Will it be a good fit?

So many questions and SO many churches.

I invite you to follow me, beginning tomorrow, as we visit several churches in the next few weeks and give you an honest assessment of our thoughts of that church. I will look the things I mentioned previously and give you my opinion as to the “feel” of the church. Of course my report will be subjective and seen through my eyes. Come on along for ride, should be interesting.

Tomorrow we visit a rather large church, Mid-Cities Community Church. I have attended before, but it was over ten years ago, I’m sure much has changed since then. I’ll let you know what we findd

AWSOM Powered