I started writing a Facebook post to a few friends this
morning, and it ended up saying things I am feeling strongly right now. I hope all of you know how important my faith
is to me and how much I rely on being part of a church body where I can
worship, learn, and serve. Several of
you have prayed for me to find that church.
Thank you so much for your prayers.
After attending Gwinnett Community Church for several weeks, I wanted to
either commit or move on.
Since there are no perfect churches, I approached this
decision not seeking perfection or even total comfort, but the place where God could work
with, me and I could feel right about being there. This is definitely the south and a good
evangelical church stands on every corner.
I exaggerate, but not a lot.
Being a product of my own specific faith journey means there are certain
things I hope for in a church and from the people who are there. Much of it is common sense – friendly, Biblical,
loving, good teaching - but some are rather intangible and more about feeling
connected.
Website searches found a few churches for the final check-it
-out list even before I arrived. Because
we had family plans on my first Sunday here, I chose the church that had an
early service, so we could do our brunch.
(That’s the same way I got to Shalom the first Sunday and never left.) That
church was Gwinnett Community Church (GCC).
Friendly greetings awaited me at the door, the worship was God centered
using music that blesses me and leads me to worship. The pastor used a Bible version that just
happened to match the new Bible I had purchased specifically for carrying
purposes. Before he began his message on
a challenging scripture passage, the pastor quoted a saying from long ago in
the church that has been part of our Women’s Bible Study covenant at Shalom: In
the essentials – unity; in the non-essentials – liberty; in all things – charity. He shared his insights into the passage at
hand, and did so with grace for those who might have a different view, and yet
with clarity and the challenge to consider the passage carefully. His words provided clarity for me.
I decided to return and to jump into a women’s event later in
the week. After two more women’s events
and full participation in a summer Bible study, it seemed right to consider whether this was the place to
start establish roots or to move on. The
time to evaluate arrived, and that would involve a visit with the pastor, who
had actually been gone quite a few weeks on a missions trip and a short
vacation.
GCC seemed to be the right church, at least for
now, but I had a couple of little things niggling me. Praying about those and asking the Lord to erase those concerns or make it very clear if they were significant certainly led to
anticipation for what the day would hold.
In the course of the Bible study and separate from any question or
prompting , the leader directly spoke to my concern about rigidity or too great
a list of essentials. More and more it
feels like neither I nor even Biblical scholars have all the answers. God is simply bigger, greater, more powerful,
more knowing, than that. He has revealed
much in His Word and we can know God by knowing Jesus, but I really think that
we will just never know it all, not even in heaven because He will still be
that same God and we will be worshiping Him because He is GREAT!
I love all the traditional favorite verses in the Bible, but
where I am right now puts Isaiah 55:8-9 firmly in my list and in the current
top spot for favorites. It's the verse that says "For my ways and not your
ways,” says the Lord, “neither are my thoughts your thoughts. For as the heavens are higher than the earth
so are my thoughts higher than your thoughts and my ways higher than your ways.” I also love the quickness (aliveness) of the scriptures. They really are new every morning, because we
come to them as a different person, and thus they speak to us differently. Don’t get me wrong, there are bottom line
truths where I stand, but my essentials
list is pretty small compared to how I was raised.
In any case, I scheduled an appointment with the pastor for
right after Tuesday Bible Study. In
addition to flexibility in the study, that morning the interaction and
heartfelt sharing addressed another niggle that perhaps studies were taught more than shared. Learning that there was plenty of room for sharing
here, and for differences of opinion, was a direct and hopeful sign.
The meeting with the pastor went well. He is a genuine person with a love for the
Lord and for his congregation. He holds
them in esteem and wants to see people of all ages grow in their faith
walk. Three years ago the church was
dying. Today, with this pastor and
strong leadership, it is vibrant and
growing. I may be among the newest, but
most of the people have been there less than three years. It is a church that is finding its way and
place in the community. So, I have
decided to join GCC and see what God has for me there. I will wait for His call to serve. I am excited for what might be in store. In any case it will be good, because God is
good, even if I don’t always “get it.”