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All of this repelled me and I became convinced that to abandon the marginalized for the sake of treasure would be to abandon the way of Jesus.
I resigned in August of that year, accepted a job at a newspaper, and moved to another city.
Yegads, did you get it wrong! Leaving the church to go to the newspaper! LOL! You know I'm kidding. I left the newspaper to go to a church-oriented agency. But you know that.
I'm curious, Bill. If it so repelled you, and I believe you, it repels me to read about it. But why didn't you stand up for what you believed in instead of leaving? Who's helping those marginalized folks now? I'm not meaning to dig at you, but why leave? There was more, I suspect.
Bill Huffhine said:
All of this repelled me and I became convinced that to abandon the marginalized for the sake of treasure would be to abandon the way of Jesus.
I resigned in August of that year, accepted a job at a newspaper, and moved to another city.
My tipping point came after years of a slowly building wave of dissonance between what I was reading in the scripture about "the church" and what I was experiencing in real life with "the church."
I tipped in the spring of 2005 while pastoring a church that my wife and I had begun in 2002. Our new church got off to a great start. It was well-funded by our denomination and I was encouraged to do it full-time, not working on the side. My passion had always been to create safe environments for those who were marginalized to come and explore the person and way of Jesus. We focused much of our energy on reaching out to the poor and hurting. In the first couple of years we saw good growth in a city where nearly all churches were in decline. We went from 4 to about 60 and the majority were college students, high school students, and folks in poverty.
After about two months the funding began to run out. The pressure began to build. Many in my denomination and some "Christians" who left other churches to join us began telling me that we needed to become more of a Saddleback/Willow Creek kind of church, that we needed to stop focusing so much on the poor and marginalized, and that we needed to begin doing what we could to reach doctors, lawyers, and other professionals with deep pockets. I was also encouraged to preach frequently about "tithing" and "stewardship" to bring more money in.
All of this repelled me and I became convinced that to abandon the marginalized for the sake of treasure would be to abandon the way of Jesus.
I resigned in August of that year, accepted a job at a newspaper, and moved to another city. For three years now I've been trying to relearn what it means to pursue Christ and participate in His redemptive mission to the world free from the trappings of Americanized Christianity.
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