They
don't make them like they used to:
The problem of mass-produced
Christians
HOW often have we heard people
say with frustration or resignation, "They don't make them
like they used to
" The "them" may refer
to buildings, electronic products, furniture or the host of modern
paraphernalia. These days, mass-produced things are made not to
last - so that consumers can buy replacements and newer models.
When churches adopt similar business models for Christian nurture
and spiritual formation, the result is mass-produced Christians.
Programmes are devised and marketed, promising that if people
are put through them, they will come out passionate, committed
and mature.
But is such assembly-line thinking valid in the church? It may
be efficient, but is it effective? Can mass-produced Christians
last the distance? Can they be resilient when trouble comes, or
be able to resist the seductions all around us?
A sea change has taken place in the modern world, and in the modern
church -- agricultural communities have become industrialised
societies. Our living environment shapes our thinking and experience;
hence, our modern thinking has incorporated factories and assembly
lines, even in our conception of church and ministry.
In the Bible, largely written when agricultural models were still
very important, the spiritual life was commonly described and
understood in pastoral and agricultural terms. Hence our relationship
with God is like that between sheep and their good shepherd (Ps.
23; Jn. 10). And the righteous person is compared to a tree planted
near nourishing streams of water, adorned with shade-giving leaves
and bursting with fruit (Ps. 1).
The biblical metaphors for Christian discipleship strongly emphasise
the idea of cultivation - a long process of tending and nurturing
that leads to fruitfulness. Even the artisans and craftsmen in
earlier agricultural societies gave individual attention to the
things they were producing. The idea of mass production was foreign
and unthinkable to them. Hence, the potter works with the clay
and produces pots one by one (Jer. 18:1-6). Each pot is shaped
by him with careful attention.
Such traditional ideas of craftsmanship, animal husbandry, or
farming are largely ignored, forgotten, or written off as no longer
relevant to our highly industrialised societies. But are they?
Especially when it comes to spiritual formation and the journey
of the soul towards God. It is unfortunate that the assembly line
and technically efficient modern factory have become the models
even for producing holiness and Christian character. Great disappointment
awaits those who go in this direction.
The problem with assembly-line Christianity is that it tends to
be very superficial. It does not recognise adequately that each
person is unique and different. It assumes that everyone thinks
alike, has the same temperament, and that all religious experience
can be put in neat little categorised boxes. But human personhood
is not like that. Certainly God deals with us not only as crowds,
but also as individuals.
The psalmist observes that God
knows him intimately -- his movements, thoughts, motivations,
and emotions -- a reminder that God relates with each of us as
individuals (Ps. 139). God is personally involved in our first
moments of existence, creating our inner beings and knitting and
weaving together our physical forms.
And each of us is unique to God. Our thumbs are a wonderful reminder
of this. All our thumbs are generally alike in form and function.
However, each of our thumbprints is unique. No two persons have
the same thumbprint! This is a wonderful reminder from nature
that God does not mass-produce human beings - each a clone of
the other; that God creates us as unique individuals.
If each of us is a unique individual, it follows that while spiritual
formation may follow some general patterns, it does have to allow
for individual variation and for personal journeys that are unique
for each individual. The idea of mass-producing Christian maturity
and holiness through well-marketed programmes, no matter how good
they are said to be, is thus quite foreign to classical Christian
spiritual theology. This is why Gregory the Great (6th century)
identified a wide repertoire of pastoral responses for ministry
to the diverse groups of people in church, and the Puritan pastor
Richard Baxter (17th century) emphasised the importance of pastoral
visitation and the pastoral care of individuals and families.
Our Lord Jesus demonstrated how to do it right. While there were
crowds vying for His attention with their needs and demands, Jesus
gave greater attention to the spiritual formation of individuals
within the context of a small community of disciples. While He
did minister to the crowds out of compassion, when it came to
spiritual formation, He kept a safe distance from assembly-line
thinking. He was not out to mass-produce disciples, because it
does not work that way. Instead Jesus patiently cultivated His
disciples, spending personal time with them that left a lasting
impression.
Even when the church was growing significantly, the leaders of
the church held on to the model of cultivation demonstrated by
Jesus. Thus Paul told his protégé Timothy to cultivate
others in the same way he himself was cultivated (2 Tim. 2:2).
It was a far cry from the modern methods of mass-produced Christianity,
spurred on by a mega mindset and the consequent need to "factory-manage"
and standardise everything, including spiritual formation.
God, on the other hand, is more interested in personal stories
than in collective statistics. There is a personal dimension in
spiritual formation that must be guarded so that our individual
uniqueness is expressed (without falling prey to individualism!).
There is also a long-term perspective in all of this. Mass-produced
Christians are not made to last. Instead we need Christians who,
in Eugene Peterson's words, have a "long obedience"
that is rooted in their individual and collective relationship
with the Triune God. They are more like trees planted along living
streams, growing in the sunshine of God's love and in the showers
of divine grace, as the Heavenly Gardener pays careful and loving
attention to each one.
God is growing "trees" that can be transferred to the
heavenly Garden, and not manufacturing mass-produced products
for some heavenly warehouse. Let us therefore embrace His long-term
and in-depth way of producing holiness, maturity and love, and
not be distracted by spiritual assembly lines that promise quick
and easy results that will fade with time.
QUOTE:
ASSEMBLY-LINE CHRISTIANS
'The problem with assembly-line Christianity is that it
tends to be very superficial. It does not recognise adequately
that each person is unique and different.'