Faith Works 10-12-19
Jeff Gill
Making adjustments on the field
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For those who've found my last few columns depressing, I do  apologize!
My intention has not been to sound negative, but to be  candid about some changes that are not so much happening as have already  happened around us, and to be honest about how these social changes are  impacting church life.
While my niche here is to speak to people of faith in all  sorts of settings, I know the biggest chunk of readers are involved and active  with local churches. My own calling as a congregational minister, a parish  pastor, means I'm particularly attuned to what's going on in those circles. And  I think a little candor about some changes and their implications, while  possibly painful at first, can get us to a healthier spot.
Any time of year, but especially during an Ohio autumn, it  can be both tempting and risky to engage in football metaphors. Especially  because while that's popular with some, it can really turn off quite a few  others . . . but I hope you'll bear with me.
As any casual observer knows, there are upsets in football,  pro or college. "On any given Sunday" is a catchphrase of the NFL that you  never know when a struggling team can catch a winning team by surprise, and end  up with a win. (This should give hope to Browns fans, anyhow.)
And in the college game in particular, you might see a  highly rated team bobble a bit in the first quarter, but then come storming  back to win by a landslide. It's said that the coach has "made adjustments."  Making adjustments is, I'd argue, the big difference between a good team and a  great team, and it might even be the main distinction between a winning and  losing record. You prepare all week in one way, and then the opponent comes out  with a new formation or a surprising spread, and if they're running right  through you, or stopping your entire offense, you can't just keep doing what  you practiced. If it's not working, you make adjustments, right?
Or you can yell and scream and shout and tell them to do  better while doing the same thing, and maybe it will change. Probably not,  though. You drop back another linebacker, you shift the blockers on the sweep  or pitchout, you make adjustments and find out what DOES work against the team  you're actually facing, not just the one you had up on the blackboard in the  locker room.
My point these last few weeks has been to suggest that  churches, like many other institutional expressions of ideas or ideals or  hopes, can be slow to make adjustments. If it worked last week or last year or  last decade (or half century ago) then it should work now. Three yards and a  cloud of dust worked for Woody, right? 
Until it doesn't. If you keep running the same play, and you  don't make three yards, but get stuffed at the line of scrimmage, or even start  getting thrown for a loss, you need to mix it up. Change the patterns. Make  adjustments.
Many churches are still running "three yards and a cloud of  dust." If it worked back in the 60s and 70s, if it stopped working then it's  because the players weren't executing, because the line isn't blocking right,  or the ball carriers need to step it up, right? Maybe, but maybe not. Maybe our  blockers are simply going where the defenders ain't; perhaps the tackle is  being made even as the handoff is happening, and we're losing ground. Time for  a shift.
It's great advice, except there's no single answer that  explains "make an adjustment." You have to size up the opposition, your own  strengths, and adjust accordingly. There's also resistance to adjustments in  church life because of an assumption that our ways are timeless, and our truths  are enduring. That's true of the Gospel, friends, but is it equally so about  our worship and welcome and invitations? 
A good old phrase is the theological equivalent of "make  adjustments": in essentials, unity; in non-essentials, liberty; in all things,  charity. Congregations can struggle with what's essential to their witness, but  is architecture or order of worship an essential? Can there be liberty in how  we present and communicate and even market ourselves to a wider community,  whose means of communication have changed drastically over the last few  decades?
And as we experiment with our adjustments, let us show  charity, caritas, love to each other as we make mistakes, and get up, and try  again.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking  County; he's made many mistakes. A partial list can be obtained at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow @Knapsack  on Twitter.
 
 


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