Quote:
Originally Posted by n david
The article has several good points to think about.
IMO, the big 3 reasons I see for lack of men at church:
1) Pure laziness. They work during the week and want to sit and watch football on Sundays
2) Either no men's ministry or a very boring one (this is one area where I wish my church was better. The men's ministry hardly ever does anything, and when they do it's generally meeting on a saturday morning for breakfast. Woooot!)
3) Wimpy messages that focus more on Olsteen-style be positive, not negative, "you can do it!" junk; instead of preaching against sin and for living a holy life.
I don't believe the music has much to do with it; however, I'm biased, being the music minister at my church. Perhaps the skinny jeans trend turns some off, but not the music.
|
A major reason men aren't as interested in 'church' as they used to be I believe has to do with the lack of teaching and modeling concerning the proper role men have in the church and in the home. A man who just wants to plop down on the couch after work and watch tv is a man who has no clue (or doesn't care) about his role as a spiritual leader in his home or in his church (if he even bothers with church). People don't see church by and large as the kingdom of God involved in governmental functions of ruling and taking dominion spiritually and morally, and having a positive dominion-oriented impact on society. So, men just don't see much there to interest them, because there's really not much there to begin with.
As for 'men's ministry', churches ought to be teaching men how to be leaders, how to be one who 'is heard in the gates' of society, how to lead their family in the ways of God. But this is hard to do when Jesus is presented as a 'care bear' who exists to make everything all right or who exists to fulfill our wants. That is a presentation that is geared toward women, who need to feel secure and 'taken care of'. And that aspect of God's care is certainly necessary (can't leave women out!), but if that is the ONLY type of God being presented, or if mostly being presented, men aren't going to recognise that as anything worth following.
Men need several things to be 'fulfilled' -
1. A woman to rescue.
2. A cause to fight and die for.
3. A brotherhood to belong to.
4. A king to follow.
Jesus is a most worthy king to follow - he literally 'went to hell and back' for us. What man would not feel honoured to follow such a glorious and faithful leader? He is a great King, the greatest King, and it is an honour and a priviledge to serve him faithfully and valiantly.
Normal men do not resonate with the idea of expressing sappy, sentimental 'love' to another man... 'Jesus, come and take me away' just doesn't work with a normal guy.
Christ loved the church, and gave himself for it. In this manner men ought to love their wives. Yes, Christ is head of the church, and the man is the head of the woman, but the power of the chivalric aspect of sacrificing oneself for the "love of one's youth" cannot be underestimated.
(Of course, such a thing requires a woman who is not a quasi-lesbian brat who demands to 'wear the pants', but requires an actual WOMAN with true femininity...)
Christian men ought to feel they are a 'band of brothers', brothers in arms in the service of the king. Fighting a cause worth their efforts, worth dying for. What greater cause can there be than the salvation of mankind, and the enforcement of the Pax Christi upon this world of spiritual darkness?
All these things and more are essential to the God-endowed natural makeup of men... and most if not all these things are missing in 'church' these days. They are also missing in society, in general, having been replaced with effeminized Phil Donahue neutering (aka Babylonian castration) and a false 'machismo' which is nothing but an evil caricature of true godly manhood.
There is a reason 'sports', especially FOOTBALL (american football, not that goofy european kickball game) has such a grip on men... The team is alike a military squad, coach is the Leader, they work together to defeat the enemy... The exact same purpose was served by jousting and other tourneys in the medieval period, it provides a safe way for men to be men without actually needing to cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war and ravage some poor town in the next valley.
And simply trying to fit 'Onward Christian Soldiers' into the worship service isn't going to cut it.