Close your eyes and imagine a church sanctuary filled with those who all think, believe, and feel the same. They all say AMEN at the appropriate times. They all pay exactly ten percent of their income. The songs are all well accepted and sung with both bravado and familiarity. The Preacher of the day is recognized with constant bobblehead responses. After service, everyone remains to greet each other and inquire about the glorious victories of overcoming.
Open your eyes and realize this perfected vision is not real. Christians are not cookies cut out of the heavenly bread of life each perfectly identical to the other. This picture is what Psychologists refer to as groupthink. It is a place where the congregation values consensus and conformity over vulnerability and self-examination.
The church needs a liberal sprinkling of skepticism. Without criticism, dissent, and critique, there is no place to grow. There is nowhere to go to be more than the status quo. An unexamined faith only leads to idolizing an ideal image, a disdain for outsiders, a denial of personal faults, and a lack of growth. Without a dose of dissent, there is no place for healing.
We need a liberal dash of skepticism, uncertainty, critique, and self-examination. Further, this infusion of questioning is to be handled with care and respect. The number one roadblock to faith for a true skeptic is not a theological stance about Jesus, but the behavior of those who claim to follow Jesus. Those of us who diligently question almost everything find it striking that those who are in the knowing, act as if they have a monopoly on what it is to be proper or good. This ownership comes with dread, a rejection, a fear of any who would ask why.
Those who have doubt or uncertainty should not silence their questions to be accepted by the Body cemented. We should not silence the skeptic for the sake of the comfortable. Being a skeptic does not automatically mean heresy any more than the status quo automatically equates to perfection.
Those who are asking questions are vital to the church. They make the church vibrant, accepting, and accessible. They give the comfortable a chance to grow a little.
Great insight, Larry.