Do you know someone who is “dechurched?" You might be asking the question, “what does dechurched mean?” Pastor and author Nicholas McDonald is someone who at one time considered himself, "dechurched." He stopped by and shared on how we can begin a conversation with a "dechurched" friend.
https://thebardowl.substack.com/p/how-to-begin-a-conversation-with
Nick McDonald has a new book set for release this coming, Tuesday, May 20!
https://www.amazon.com/Light-Our-Eyes-Rediscovering-Disillusionment/dp/0593601521
Kurt and Kate mornings. Not just on the radio.
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Do you know someone who is De-churched? Now you might be asking the question, what is De-churched really mean? We do need to. I mean, it's a good question. We need to define what that really means. And there's a lot of nuance here.
Yeah, there is. And we need to take a good look at this, because all of us need to be able to help our brothers and sisters come back.
Absolutely. And you may not even know where square one is, you know. Okay, well, let's start with square one. The old saying is, but, well, what is square one? That's why we invited pastor Nick McDonald to be with us. He's a pastor at Redeemer Indianapolis. His new book is The Light in Our Eyes Rediscovering the Love and Beauty and Freedom of Jesus in an Age of Disillusionment, and the article that came across our path. Uh, was actually he wrote this before the book came out. How to begin a Conversation with Your De-churched friend. If you find yourself in this situation or, I don't know, maybe you might. You never know what the future may bring. I think this podcast will will be good for you. It's good for all of us. Um, let's, uh, define what De-churched means. It's not, you know, De-churched is not one size fits all, is it?
No, it's really not. And the reason this is particularly close to my heart is because I was a de-churched person. So having grown up in the church, there was a period of time in college in particular, where I felt like the church didn't have the answers I was looking for. And so I looked elsewhere. And, uh, there are lots of different people who feel lots of different things about the church. But one of my core convictions is that when I was a de-churched person, I was very reachable. I just needed the right person to have the right conversation with me. And so, um, one of the words we use to talk about de-churched a lot these days is the word deconstructing or deconstruction. And I here's my thesis. I think we overuse that word. I think even people who have maybe stepped away from the church are not really deconstructing. I think where I was is I felt disillusioned. I felt a bit disillusioned. Um, but I wasn't ready to say I don't believe in Jesus. I wasn't ready to say I've abandoned my faith. I was just a little bit lost. And so the way you have a conversation with someone like me versus the way you have a conversation with somebody who maybe says, I don't believe the gospel anymore. I don't believe in Jesus anymore. Those are two very different conversations, and I think it's helpful for us to distinguish between those.
Yeah, I totally agree. And one of the other ways to look at it too. There are many believers who say something along these lines. I love Jesus, but I'm having a hard time with loving the local church because I've been hurt. Because I'm disillusioned. There again, you know, it's been very difficult for me and therefore I am detaching from the local congregation. But maybe I'm watching a online stream. I'm kind of backing off from from the local church itself. And this is a you know, we're talking to a lot of people who are in that boat here this morning, and especially after the pandemic, you know, it almost gave folks an excuse to say, hey, I'm just going to go ahead and stream church. And so they do they do online church. And then they're not showing up at their local church anymore. Or again, maybe they've bounced around from church to church and they just feel like they're in no man's land. What do we say to them? I mean, the answer is, well, give it another try. And not every church is, uh, going to, uh, you know, scratch that itch for you, obviously, but maybe we don't. We have to be careful. We don't want to be hurt, and we don't want to go to a church where they're not teaching the Bible accurately, where it's not Christ centered, biblically based. Obviously, the doctrine is important. Theology is important, for that matter. But maybe we're we're becoming overly critical to the point where we've got ourselves painted into a corner where we're never going to be content at at any church. That's a dangerous place to be, isn't it?
Yeah, absolutely. So I can tell you a bit more of my own journey because I relate to that feeling. Um, you know, when I was in high school, I went to a very, very large youth group, and I would say the, the youth group taught things from the Bible. I wouldn't say that they taught the Bible exactly. I would say the main message I got from youth group was, you have a dream that's in your heart, and God wants you to fulfill that dream in your life. Uh, which I would not now say that is the gospel, but that's the way I was taught it. Um, and so part of my own disillusionment was my senior year of high school. That very youth group, actually, we took a trip to South Africa, to a small village that was very impoverished. And we were walking around and talking to people who lived in tin sheds. You know, they're eating bone broth for dinner. And I just thought about those people who were very warm and hospitable, and I thought about my own life. And I thought, man, uh, if if the gospel is that God wants to fulfill everybody's dreams, it feels to me like he must really not like these people or something. And that just didn't it didn't add up for me. It wasn't it wasn't clicking in my head. And so a couple of weeks later, this was two weeks before I left for college. I had probably, yeah, I would say the worst experience I've had in my life so far, which is the drowning of my youngest brother in our backyard pool. And at that time I was thinking, boy, if if the gospel is that God wants me to fulfill all my dreams while I'm living in a nightmare right now. So maybe, maybe God doesn't want to fulfill my dreams. Maybe God doesn't love me. Maybe God doesn't like me. And so when I stepped outside the church, um, that's how I was feeling. I was feeling like, um, that whatever that message was that I was taught, it wasn't for me. Maybe it wasn't true. And I had all these questions. And so I think you're right. A lot of what hurt me was, uh, a church community that maybe didn't believe or teach the gospel. And what I wish I would have gone back to my I 18 year old self and said is here's the tricky thing about being a human. We are most hurt by people and we can only find healing through people. That's just the way it works. And the truth is, we can be very, very hurt by churches. Um, but we can only find healing. I believe in the church that Jesus gave us. So it's not a matter of, am I going to be part of the church or not? It's can I find the right church? Can I find a safe church? Can I find a church that is going to proclaim Jesus and practice the Christian faith in a way that is holistic and good and healthy?
Well, we're just talking about real stuff here, as we always do every morning. I mean, this is this is the reality for us as believers. It's not always everything works out the way we think it should. I mean, this is a imperfect world. And obviously even in the local church, it's, uh, we're imperfect, right? We're sinners in need of a Savior. But I tell you, it's a lot easier to find one of these types of churches that you described. Uh, Nick, it's, uh, it's a lot easier to talk about that than actually find one.
Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. But, you know, um, one of the things I've had the privilege of seeing over the last several years, even here at our church, Redeemer, Indianapolis. Lots of people, I would say most of our congregation are folks who have walked away from the church for a period of time because they had a sense of disillusionment, but have come into a beautiful, safe community where we show forth Jesus and we talk about, hey, we are all sinful and perfect people. Um, one particular story that I think is really encouraging and maybe encouraging for those of you who know people who've de-churched is, um, in my book The Light in Our Eyes, which is coming out on Tuesday.
Yeah, this is great. It's a new release, I love it. All right. Coming out on Tuesday. Excellent.
That's right. Yes.
So one of the stories I tell, and I tell lots of stories of people who've experienced disillusionment, but also a sense of restoration is the story of my friend Joseph. So my friend Joseph, he's kind of an intimidating guy. He's he's very muscular and, um, he's very smart. So when I say things, he will sometimes say, well, why did you say that? And I'm thinking, I don't I don't know, I'm just I'm just talking. Joseph. Just don't even pay attention to what I'm saying, you know, and but he's he's sort of an intimidating guy. Yeah. So we met when he was feeling some sense of disillusionment. Uh, he had been part of a college ministry where a lot of his friends were also part of that ministry, and every single one of them, through the pandemic, had de-churched and left and I would say truly deconstructed and departed from faith entirely. And he was really the last guy standing. Uh, but we started to have some conversations and he had some really hard questions. He had some really big questions, but one of the things that Joseph did that I thought was really interesting, and he would only say and he would say in retrospect, this was the best thing I did. I didn't know, I didn't know it at the time is that even in the midst of all of his questions, he would come to Redeemer every single Sunday. And for him, one of the things that he looks back on is he says, you know, I had all these, these big questions and these hard questions and we had all these hard conversations. But he would say, the thing for me that helped me feel restored in the love of Jesus is being part of the local church every Sunday. Uh, something we do here at Redeemer is we get down on our knees every Sunday and we confess our sins, and we have different ways that we write our confession every week that are very specific and personal and kind of tick me off sometimes because they're so personal. Uh, but he would say, getting on my knees, confessing my sins, and hearing a pastor say, hey, Jesus loves you. He gave himself for you, uh, through the bread and the wine of communion. Um, the way Joseph put it, I thought he put it very beautifully as he said, you know, after two years of that, it's not that my questions became unimportant. It's just that they became quieter because I realized what I was looking for was the real question behind all of it was, Does Jesus love me? Does he care about me? And so he said, I could only find that through that Sunday morning experience. And so that's what I would encourage those who've, who've de-churched to, to pursue. Is that not just the answers? The answers are important, but also that community that can say, hey, we're all sinners. Jesus loves you.
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One of the things that seems to occur to me we were talking about doubt, people with their doubts and stuff. Nick I think when we struggle, if we're the person who's doubting and we're struggling with our faith, I think the worst kind of doubt is when you have, you know, the Bible well, you you're pretty good with your theology. You're Orthodox, so to speak, and you know all the right answers to the questions you have, and yet the right answers are not satisfying. What do you do if you're in that place?
Yeah, that is so well said.
I. The reason I wrote this book is because I unsuccessfully tried to have lots of conversations with De-churched people for a long time. And so I have a background in campus ministry. I was working with college students at the University of Missouri. And I think of one particular student named Michael. And Michael would always he's just the student you're describing, Kurt. You know, he had all the Bible answers, and he would often bring very difficult questions to me. And I thought I gave him pretty good answers. I mean, I had thought about these questions and I thought I gave him pretty compelling answers, but it was like anytime I gave him the answer, I could see it in his eyes. It was almost like he was disappointed. And after a year or two, I thought, you know, I think the questions that you're asking, there are all these big questions, but but I don't think I don't think they're the questions that your heart is really asking him, because I think what Michael was looking for, and this is something that I've, I've discovered about this particular generation is, is I don't think he was just looking for answers. I think he was looking for hope. I think the heart question behind all of his questions is, um, could you give me a sense of hope for my life, for our world? Does Jesus give me a sense of hope for the future. Um, and this this is a shift a little bit. But, you know, years ago, when I was doing high school ministry, this was maybe 15 years ago, I would do this a little bit where I was trying to, um, teach our students not to place too much, I'll say existential weight on their future spouse or marriage partner, and not to make that sort of their salvation story in their head. Oh, once I get married, everything will be fine. So my my perfect target for that was the movie tangled, the Disney movie tangled. Yeah. Which is, uh, you know, you've got Rapunzel. She's up in a tower. And then this dude, Flynn Rider, he's not a good guy. He's a thief. He comes and he rescues her from her tower, and they get married. And that's the end of the movie. And I would always say to my students, do you know what? I would like them to write a sequel to tangled, when Flynn Rider is still a thief and a kleptomaniac and he's stealing things from the his, his king and queen, father in law and mother in law, and he's eating Doritos on the couch because that's that's where that story's going to end up. And maybe 15 years ago, my high school students, they were just mad at me about that. No, that's not that's not the way it's going to work. It's all going to be beautiful. We're going to get married and live happily ever after. So, uh, five years ago, I tried to tell that story to my students at the University of Missouri, and they just looked at me like, duh! Of course, nothing ever works out. And there's this real sense of cynicism and despair. And, uh, we had a conversation about it one night on campus. I said, are you guys pretty cynical? Um, and just head nodding, nodding all around? Yes, yes we are. Why are you cynical? We don't know. We just are. Uh, and what I realized is that what a lot of those students were seeing is that they would return to their local churches, and they would just see more cynicism and more fear. And the one thing they were looking for hope. It seemed like the one place they wouldn't find it was in the church. And so what I began to do with my conversations with Michael is I started to unpack. Hey, here's the dreams of Jesus. Here's what Jesus wants for you. Here's what Jesus wants for the world. And it was like you could just see it in his eyes. The conversation changed. We had tears. We had okay, this is what I've been looking for. No one's ever told me that Jesus gives me real hope for this life in the next.
Well, this is good. Yeah. The context is is is excellent in your in your article that we ran across. You talk about a comedian who tells the story of the worst comedy show he's ever performed. This is great. It was at a large business conference right here in Tampa. And he told all of his greatest jokes. No laughs, nothing. Zippo at the end of the night. He he concludes and says, man, sorry. I used to be able to do comedy. I guess I just lost it. And the CEO of, you know, he was he was a part of this conference. Uh, he said, no, it's not your fault. I realized halfway through your set that most of my employees don't even speak English. So, uh, that'll do it, won't it? I mean, we trying to trying to speak to your d church friend without understanding why they're De-churched is a little like that. That's why your book and your article, I think, is really important for us. It's helpful.
Yeah, absolutely. And I've been that guy. All right. So don't get me wrong. Uh, but yeah. So some of the categories I lay out in that particular article are things I found very helpful over the years, even to sit down with somebody who's de-churched, or maybe they just have one foot out the door and often they'll use the word I think I'm deconstructing and I'll say, okay, well, let's let's think about that word. Are you deconstructing? Because I would the way I would describe someone who's deconstructing would be, um, you are somebody who would say, um, that you are the authority over the Christian faith. You get to decide what it is and what it isn't. And I've met lots of people in that space. So I remember a particular conversation with a young person several years ago who said something like, um, you know, I think of Christianity as this room that it's been decorated for me, and I feel like it's my job to take down all the decorations that I don't like and put up new decorations. Um, and I thought, you know, I just I can't imagine somebody 200 years ago saying anything like that. It's such a it's such a very particular kind of Western modern way to think about Christianity. And I said to to that person, have you really thought a whole lot about not only, um, maybe your critical thoughts about the American church, but have you, have you thought about the way you think about things? Because that just sounds like the way that we Westerners think about things. Um, so but I would say that's someone who's really deconstructing. It's like I'm the authority, but I think, you know, there's 40 million people who've left the church over the last decade. 40 million. Wow. Um, that's that's more than those who came to faith during the First Great Awakening, Second Great Awakening and the Billy Graham crusades combined. Wow. So this is a huge, huge number of people. I would say the number of people who are truly deconstructing is very, very slim part of that population. I would say a lot of people are people who were like me in college, where they're just feeling disillusioned, and what they're looking for is they're looking for a sense of hope. Can the gospel give me hope? And that's what my friend Michael needed. That's kind of where he was. He just needed to hear that Jesus has good news for your life. Um, now there's another category of of person who's maybe just the doubting person. Maybe they do have some serious doubts, like we were talking about earlier, and they're looking for answers. And so when you give them answers, that's that's what they want to hear. Um, but I think that disillusion Dissolution category is the category maybe we miss. And if we don't understand. Hey, this person is looking for hope and we only give them answers. I think we're going to lose a lot of those 40 million people. So we need to we need to learn to retell the story of the gospel the way that Jesus tells it. It's a story of hope. It's about his dreams coming true, his kingdom coming to this world and making everything new again.
And you know what? Maybe someone who walks away from the church, they never really understood the gospel to begin with.
Yeah, prosperity gospel that'll that'll kill your your faith.
Yes, absolutely. And you know, that's one side of the coin. I also one of the stories I tell in the book is my friend Luke, who lives here in Indianapolis. But he was actually one of my my students at the University of Missouri. And Luke, he had left the church from a very different background. I had left a very, uh, kind of conservative fundamentalist church, but he was part of a very progressive leaning church, uh, growing up, and as he was in youth group and asking his pastor questions, he began to think, you know what? It sounds like a lot of the things that we're saying are just things that people who are politically progressive say. So if I just if I just take the church part out of the equation, I just, I feel like I can get all that somewhere else. Right. And so he left the church. Um, but one of the interesting things with Luke is that we met on campus. We started doing some Bible studies together, and after a couple of years of being connected to a gospel preaching church, Luke became a Christian in a really cool way. So I'm so thankful for his story. But I remember sitting down with him one time and I asked him, So Luke, why? Why did you become a Christian after these two years? I don't really understand your story. I'm not sure why you joined our Bible studies. I'm not sure why you were coming to large group. Um, and he thought about it for a moment. And here's what he said. He said, well, there was one night when you told all of the freshmen that although it was really cool that we were getting together for Bible study every week, it would also be really cool if we did things like hang out together. Okay, so I had maybe a little bit of an awkward group of freshmen. And so I sat down with them and I said, so, so let's, let's do that. And they said, okay, well, what should we do? And I said, well, how about we make pizzas at my house one night? And this is the way that Luke described it. He said that when he walked into our house, um, and he was part of this, I'm going to say pretty awkward little party we were putting together. I mean, this was here's what I was thinking during this party. This is not a good event. I wish I wish Luke wasn't here. This is going terribly. People are talking about their math homework. Yes. One kid will only talk to my dog in the corner. It's a very weird event, and I'm thinking, this is terrible. Um, but when I asked Luke that question, why did you become a Christian? He pointed back to that night and he said, this just felt like only something God could put together. Look at that.
See? So we can't take credit for it. This is just the way God works. He loves to use us when we think, well, you know, we're going down the tubes. And he says, no, no, I just want to make sure that, you know, it's me.
Yes, absolutely. And so it's not about having the perfect answers. We had some hard conversations. I tried to give him some good answers, but at the end of the day, he just saw that God was putting something together that he just didn't see anywhere else. And it gave him the sense of, hey, Jesus is doing things in the world, and I want to be part of that. And and I think that's what he latched on to. And so, um, yeah, I think it was that sense of hope.
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