
Are you?
If so, what does that mean exactly? Are you committed to your membership in your local congregation through thick and thin? Do you confess your sins to brothers or sisters within that fellowship? Do you submit to the authority of your pastor? Do you engage in a discipleship that causes you to sacrifice your own desires in favor of service within the community?
A professor of mine at Duke is fond of saying that, in the early days, it was much easier to become a Methodist than to remain one. All one had to do to join a Methodist society was exhibit a "desire to flee from the wrath to come." But once in, that pilgrim had to show that he was walking the way of discipleship on a quarterly basis or else his name would be stricken from the rolls.
Some people today think that such a severe membership policy would be a good idea for the UMC. But we have to take into account what Wesley was kicking people out of - not the church, but a voluntary fellowship of believers who wanted to engage in a more intentional form of discipleship. For us to kick people out of the church, we are kicking them out of
the church. So the case can be made that we would be hindering their access to the means of grace, whereas Wesley was not.
Of course, it is even more complicated. Because American Christianity is the land of denominations. So if a person is removed from membership in a United Methodist Church, she can always find another denomination down the street to take her in (whereas such was not the case in Wesley's England). So, to counter my above point, it is conceivable that Wesley would remove people from our church rolls with as much gusto as he did from society rolls in his own day. In either time, access to the means of grace (and hence, to salvation) is still present.
The issue of church membership has been front and center in our denomination since the incident in Virginia sometime back when a pastor refused membership to an openly homosexual man who refused to repent of his homosexual practice (and the distinction between orientation and practice is important). As I remember, the Judicial Council eventually ruled that the issue was one of pastoral authority and that it was the elder's duty to determine fitness for membership.
Now I know United Methodists are all over the map 0n the issue of homosexuality. But we should not let our differing views on that hot-button issue cloud our thinking on another very important one - that of pastoral authority and standards for church membership. Questioning whether to admit a person onto membership rolls is admittedly different than discerning whether to allow a backsliding member to remain.
But both beg the question of whether church membership means anything at all.
United Methodists wring their hands that we only have 8 million members in the U.S., but what difference does it make if 7 million of them care nothing about holiness of heart and life?
For the record, I do believe the elder in charge of a local church should determine fitness for membership. The church is not a place where anything goes. As a professor of mine back at Vandy used to say, "Jesus invites everyone to his table; but once you accept that invitation, you are expected to behave with the table manners of the host." That means that we must accept God's grace to be conformed to Christlikeness, repenting of our sin and walking the way of discipleship. And if a bishop, or a district superintendent, or an elder or deacon, or a lay member does not like the process of discernment that the elder in question goes through with the prospective member, then that process should be examined with prayer, holy conversation, and reference to our doctrinal standards as expressed in the
Book of Discipline.
If the church was to take standards of membership seriously, we'd probably all be in trouble. But maybe feeling guilty about our lukewarm commitment to Jesus and his church is something we need to experience. And maybe we need to repent together, and start to learn what it means to live as real disciples.
Labels: Catechesis, Church Membership