You have set my feet in a broad place II – Du stellst meine Füße auf weiten Raum II
During yesterdays network meeting of FBHO at Fossum Kirke – sometime during the afternoon – the thought crossed my mind: what is so different about these projects? Hasn’t the church been doing these things forever? So, what is the difference? What is new about this movement?
Halfway through the evening I noticed that the pieces of the puzzle started to fit together and with that – I hope, I understand a little bit more, what FBHO is about – it’s about our focus.
And in the same moment, a few more questions pop up:
Apparently, the structural changes push us to specialize. And is that the reason, why we seem to rediscover this task of the church and also focus on the poor?
And is this specializing, the reason why we start complaining more and more, that we are doing someone else’s work – myself included?
It seems, we are turning in a circle here…
It is true, that the threshold is quite high in a great number of church buildings as well as in its organizational structure AND in the welcoming situation. According to the findings of a New York Lutheran colleague, it takes 6 moths for a person to enter a church – to go over that threshold. And if – for any optical or communicational reason, we do not feel welcome, it might take another 6 months to enter a church again.
It seems, something’s wrong here!
Thinking back of Psalm 31,9, I tend to ask: Does the church tend to set its feet in a rather narrow space?
So many missed occasions for meeting our fellow human being and meeting Christ!
At this point, we really need to ask: Does church life only exist within the walls of the church?
Of course we do invite the world in our churches! However, if we do not change the threshold-and-welcoming-situation, we should not wonder, if people are hesitant about entering the church compound.
And still we have this promise of Psalm 31,9: You have set may feet on a broad space.