I pastor the slowest growing church in America. We started twelve years ago with 90 members and have un-grown to 30. We're about as far as you can get from a "user friendly" church - not because our congregation is unfriendly, but because our services are unpredictable, unpolished and inconsistent.
We're an "odd-friendly" church, attracting unique and different followers of Christ who make every service a surprise. We refuse to edit oddness and incompetence from our services. We believe our oddness matters. We want our service filled with mistakes and surprises, because life is full of mistakes and surprises.
One Sunday morning, during the time for prayer requests, a member began describing the critical illness of her father. Because she was close to her father, her request for prayer was frequently interrupted by tears. Those around her reached out a hand or nodded with sadness. Some found their eyes filling with tears as well. The woman finished her request as best as she could.
Seated in the front row was Sadie - a young woman with Down's syndrome. Sadie stood and walked up the aisle until she saw the woman in the middle of her row. Stepping over the feet of other people in the aisle, Sadie reached the woman, bent down on her knees, laid her head on the woman's lap, and cried with her.
Sadie "inconvenienced" an entire row of people, stepped on their shoes, and forced them to make room for her, but none of us will ever forget that moment. Sadie is still teaching the rest of us what the odd compassion of Christ's church looks like.
Someone said "you shall know the truth and the truth shall make you odd." Whoever made that statement understood what it means to be a follower of Christ. Followers of Christ are odd. Oddness is important because it's the quality that adds colour, texture, variety, and beauty to the human condition. Christ doesn't make us the same. What He does is affirm our differentness.
Oddness is important because the most dangerous word in Western culture is "sameness." Sameness is a virus that infects members of industrialized nations and causes an allergic reaction to anyone who's different. This virus affects the decision-making part of our brain, resulting in an obsession with making the identical choices that everyone else is making.
Sameness is a disease with disastrous consequences - differences are ignored, uniqueness is not listened to, our gifts are cancelled out, and the place where life, passion, and joy reside are snuffed out.
Sameness is the result of sin. Sin does much more than infect us with lust and greed; it flattens the human race, franchises us, attempts to make us all homogenous. Sameness is the cemetery where our distinctiveness dies. In a sea of sameness, no one has an identity.
But Christians do have an identity. Aliens! We're the odd ones, the strange ones, the misfits, the outsiders, the incompatibles. Oddness is a gift of God that sits dormant until God's spirit gives it life and shape. Oddness is the consequence of following the One who made us unique, different, and in His image!
May our youth ministries be the home of oddness, the place where differentness is encouraged, where sameness is considered a sin, so that the image of our holy and odd God will be lifted up for all to see.
- Mike Yaconelli
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