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Home > Articles > To the Church Called Mainline
To the Church Called Mainline
An open letter to a sidelined segment of the church


Topics:Authenticity, Character, Community impact, Culture, Empowerment, Missional, Relevance, Servanthood
Filters:Church board, Discipleship, Missions, Outreach, Pastor
Purpose:Discipleship
References:Revelation 2:7
Date Added:February 19, 2008

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Posted: February 26, 2008
Mike C.  (Guest)
This would sound fine if it wasn't coming from a mainline leader who, when pressed by a reporter a couple of years ago to comment on the issue of homosexuality in his denomination, continually dodged the question by saying things as ridiculous as, "C'mon, let's talk about scriptural issues." (?!?) And he's complaining that mainline leaders in the middle of the road? Talk about throwing stones!


Posted: March 09, 2008
robert harper  (Guest)
I don't often chime in on these things but... didn't Jesus say that "by this will all men know that you are my disciples, by you love (agape) one for another"? And didn't Our Savior pray that ..."we all may be one as He and the Father are one"? Since we only know in part and since knowlege puffs up, the paramount need for the church (or should I say The Church) is for us to be lead as well as bor by the Spirit of God. "For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they, are the Sons of God. I am not all that eccumenical but there is room for diversity in unity. There is a place for originality in worship as long as it glorifies God. Dogma and Charisma are unified In Christ. In Him we are accepted in the beloved, In Him we are more that conquerers...In Him we are complete. In Him there is room for us all..we are connected IN HIM


Posted: February 22, 2008
Dave N.  (Guest)
This is a tacky attack from someone who clearly understands the caricatures of mainline denominations, but not what's really happening. There's plenty room for critique, but do your homework!



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Each week this month, BuildingChurchLeaders.com is considering how different expressions of Christianity can more faithfully embody the calling God has placed on them. These letters are patterned off the words of Jesus in Revelation 2–3. While they lack the authority of Scripture, they contain many convicting insights brought in the spirit of humility and love for the church. This letter, written by William Willimon, is addressed to the churches that he knows best: those in the mainline.

Behold I make all things new! Even you. How eagerly you began the last century that you so confidently called "Christian." You organized to beat the Devil, to build, to expand, to crusade, to reform, to grow. Quite a contrast to the way your century ended. You, who enjoyed thinking of yourselves as "mainline," got sidelined. Though you are averse to taking my Word literally, for my sake, and for yours, I hope that you will at least take these words seriously.

I, the One who so exuberantly turned water into wine at Cana, tire of your propensity to turn wine into water at your bureaucracies in Nashville, Minneapolis, and Louisville. The best thing about you is your past. What does that tell you? My, how you loved to organize and build! You made North America into the most thoroughly Protestant Christian place in the world. Hospitals, orphanages, schools, nursing homes, printing presses. You really took love of neighbor to a new level, and I'm grateful. And while I enjoyed dismantling sacred edifices rather than building them, you built some beautiful churches. Give me The Lutheran Hymnal any day over most of those tasteless "praise choruses" of some of my evangelical friends.

Fosdick, Harkness, Peale, Steimlie, Thurman, Achtemeier can preach for me any time they like. I wish some of them would steer a bit closer to the Scriptures, but I'll speak to them individually about that. When you mainliners stop talking about me, your preaching tends to get moralistic and trite. I hate that. It wouldn't kill you to get back to the Bible.

You know me, I love to make the oldline new. If you will stick with me, I shall give you a future, new wineskins, and all that. I am Lord of Life, not death. I shall move you from mordant decline to life. I've still got plans for you. You'll be smaller, but small can be good. Ask the Mennonites. You will no longer be in charge of the nation, if you ever were. Remember, the national church thing was your idea of church, not mine. Get back to the basics like worship, service, and witness. Don't mourn the downsizing of your bureaucracy. You were once good at mission. Now that much of North America has never heard of me, it's about time to start thinking of yourselves as missionaries.

Your marginalization may be providential. I promise you renewal, not restoration. Many will be grateful for your mainline open-handedness, the way you manage to make room for such a wide range of faithfulness within your congregations, your confidence that the church is more than an isolated congregation, that I ought to have a Body, and that the witness of the Saints is worth celebrating today.

Personally, I think you tend to be open-minded to a fault. Laditudinarianism is you all over. I wish you would hire some theologians with some guts for a change. Can't you find something more fun to do than General Assemblies, General Conferences, and Diocesan Conventions? Some of your good ideas from the last century may need a decent burial if I can work birth in you in the next.

One more thing. Please get out of the middle of the road! That's where all the accidents happen, theologically speaking. Remember, I wasn't crucified for my moderation.

Excerpted from our sister publication Christianity Today, © 1999 Christianity Today International. For more articles like this, visit www.ChristianityToday.com/ct