I have few influences greater than Donald Miller, both inside my “real life” and out. His works have certainly impacted me as a writer; you could’ve played a drinking game with all my Donald Miller references in Struggle Central (drinking milk, of course).
Beyond the mere sphere of writing, though, Donald Miller has impacted my very life. I owe much of my California journey to Through Painted Deserts, and meeting him at Storyline last fall was such a thrill.
Donald Miller is not new to controversy, and lately his blogs have taken some heat. The snowball started when he said he doesn’t connect with God through singing, further confessing that he doesn’t even attend church regularly. Connects with God and others elsewhere.
Needless to say, evangelical America pounced on him. A so-called “Christian” who doesn’t go to church? And an influential one at that?
I also probably would’ve blasted Donald Miller a decade ago, good little Christian though miserable little church-goer I was.
But now?
Well, I think I’m kinda with Donald Miller on this. I think I hate going to church, too.
Before delving any further, here are the three Donald Miller posts in question. He also did a fantastic Relevant Magazine video-interview to clear the mess:
“I Don’t Worship God by Singing. I Connect With Him Elsewhere.”
“Why I Don’t Go to Church Very Often, a Follow Up Blog”
“Church Anywhere and Everywhere?”
I love the interview’s sarcastic start: “Don … what’s your problem with the Church, man?”
Y’all should definitely watch the entire interview. It’s worth it. As for this post, I’m going to focus on his three lovely blogs.
Going to Church: Are We Stalking Jesus?
For over twenty years, I went to church because my parents made me or because I felt I “should” even though my relationship with Jesus went nowhere. Forget that I also attended church disconnected and alone for most of those years.
Donald Miller described the endless tedium of going to church as such:
My friend Bob Goff says when we study somebody without getting to know them, it’s called stalking. Bob says Jesus is getting creeped out that we keep stalking him. He’d like us to bond with him in the doing.
I think Bob Goff needs to write a book called Stalking Jesus and sell a bazillion copies. I’d never thought about going to church as Jesus-stalking, but gosh, that fits.
It doesn’t fit for everyone, I realize. But for some, it does. That stalking image certainly fit me all through high school.
Isn’t it inane and borderline sad to attend church week after week only to see and hear of Jesus without actually seeing Him, knowing Him, doing stuff with Him?
So, let’s start there: stalking Jesus is not good. I would not recommend that sort of church for anyone.
Going to Church: Do You Like Singing?
Unlike Donald Miller, I certainly do connect with God through song. I’ve always thought this odd, considering I’m not musical. However, I once spoke with a musical person who said he connects more with God through sermons than singing. So, maybe I’m not that odd.
After high school, I branched away from my parents and found a church with awesome worship music. I loved it. After years of mindless ritual, I finally started connecting with God at church.
I just didn’t connect with God’s people at church.
Going to Church: More Than a Building?
Two years ago, I almost gave up on church. I’d moved to California and had been church-hopping for over a year. I was weary. I couldn’t do it anymore. I decided to give one more place a try. Turns out that was the magical place destined for me all along.
I loved the music.
I found a life group.
I got baptized with my life group.
I came out to my life group.
I hung out with my life group beyond our weekly meetings.
I loved my life group.
This was church, I realized. Not a building. Not an offering basket or rows of candles. Not even a message and amazing music.
People. Church was people.
I suppose I’ve “known” this simple truth my whole life. But I’ve always followed the “truth” with: “Yeah, butttt every Christian should still go to church.”
Yeah, butttt why?
Why do we “have” to go to church if that’s not even what church is? What does Jesus even have to say about going to church? Anything?
Going to Church: Are We Powerful?
In writing about church, Donald Miller also spoke about power and agency and how Jesus wants to work with us to “do stuff,” as Bob Goff would say. But are pastors and priests and popes the only ones who hold spiritual “authority”? Is that why we “need” church? Because we need them?
Is it sacrilegious that Donald Miller and his friends held communion with hot chocolate and cookies in a barn? What about the story where he baptized his friend under a waterfall despite not being any sort of “important church person”?
Two years ago, I received some unexpected reactions to my own unconventional baptism. “Oh…” read one text upon learning of my water park baptismal. When I told another that my un-ordained 24-year-old life group leader would be dunking me, I received an in-person eyebrow-raise.
But why? Why are we all so unsettled by the thought of church beyond a Sunday steeple?
Can’t baptisms and communion and singing and community happen outside Sunday, outside a building, outside Americanized rituals?
Why can’t “church” be people singing or not singing, inside or outside? Or painting together? Or watching Breaking Bad? Or serving the homeless? Or dancing? Or taking communion? Or baptizing one of their own at a water park on a Tuesday night without a pastor in sight?
Like Donald Miller explains, I don’t doubt that many find genuine community by going to church. It is how I originally found my life group, after all. I realize going to church can be a solid “starting point” for Christian community.
As circumstances have devolved in my life, though, I just don’t like going to church anymore. Maybe I’m not supposed to; maybe I was never supposed to. Maybe I’m also a kinesthetic learner like my hero.
Maybe it’s better to live church than attend it.
What are your thoughts on going to church? Do you feel obligated, or do you enjoy going to church? How do you experience “church” outside of church?
It’s really difficult for me to understand why this is an issue for anyone. Did you not make full surrender of your life when you came to Christ, or is he only allowed to have parts and pieces of you? (not you personally, i’m speaking to everyone who struggles with church) The bible is just very clear about this issue. So what doesn’t add up for the church forsakers? Hebrews 10:25 Don’t forsake the assembling of yourselves together. I think there is widespread biblical ignorance on the subject. I would hate to think it’s just widespread rebellion against God’s Word to us… There is another area of confusion about church and the whole assembling thing. Seems like lots of folks think that if I find a life group at church that maybe a couple of us can skip church on Sunday and go to the ball game or something else. The problem is the failure to understand the corporate (body) structure of a local assembly. When God place you in a particular group of believers you can’t just peel off a few people and still call it church or worship at the park. What you do when you skip out is you weaken the body. Paul also described local assemblies as spiritual buildings. When you skip out, it’s like a few beams or pieces of framework missing. Paul talks about the body in a collective gathering as something that cannot reduplicated any other way. You are either strengthening the church by your presence or weakening it by your absence. There is no such thing as a middle ground.
Ephesians 2:21–22 (NKJV) 21 in whom the whole building, being fitted together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord, 22 in whom you also are being built together for a dwelling place of God in the Spirit.
Here he is indicating that something supernatural occurs in a gathering of the local assembly that invites the presence of the Holy Spirit to indwell you in a way that you are not indwell at a personal dimension. You really are missing out on something valuable and powerful by your indifference and self-indulgent attitude. Either you belong to HIM, or you don’t.