Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

Why do Christians clash? … conflict in the church 

Churches are more vulnerable to conflict than any other group, community, or organisation, writes Chris Goswami. Why?


Conflict shutterstock360089609



You may have heard of the Christian stranded on a desert island for many months, entirely alone. Eventually, a passing ship picks him up. As they are leaving the captain asks:

“What are those three huts on your island?
“That’s my house, and that’s my church” the man replies, pointing.
“And what about the third hut?”
“Oh that’s where I used to go to church”.


Yes it’s an old joke, but here’s a recent comment:


Churches are more vulnerable to conflict than any other group, community, or organisation


This comment might surprise you, but I suspect it won’t surprise many of us.  

This is a view among several church mediation specialists. Yes, it is just their ad hoc view, but if you have been a member of any church for more than a couple of years, you will recognise that people in church do fall out. Muttering and murmuring is not unusual …


“Why have the leaders not addressed this? That’s what they’re there for!…”
“This music group never listen to me, they completely ignore my opinion…”


How do we feel when we find ourselves in a church conflict? If you’re anything like me, it’s hard to stop thinking about it. You feel angry, hurt, your self-esteem is damaged and you find it hard to communicate. The original “offence” might have been quite minor:


“The youth group left the hall in a mess – again…”
“Shhh!” … the glare directed at a family with young children as the service begins…


But maybe it was repeated – or maybe it was the last straw in a series of “thoughtless actions”. You stoke it up in your mind. Maybe you silently “rehearse” what you will tell the other party when you give them a piece of your mind. You can’t stop thinking about it, you nurse your feelings of victimhood – and become even more angry.

Or maybe you’re the confrontational sort. You rise-up and your frustration gives you “licence” to make comments that will hurt, perhaps even at a church meeting.


“The previous minister would have sorted this by now!…”
“My mother left those for the church. Who said they could be thrown out?…”


Conflict shutterstock431385100

To be sure, we don’t like it, we would rather it didn’t happen, we pray about it, but conflicts in church are common. Maybe more common than our workplaces or friendship groups.

 

WHY is this?

Why do we get into disputes in our churches? And why can they appear harder to resolve than, say, in our workplace?


We have high expectation
We treat church as a special place with standards higher than the world and we expect (other) Christians to meet these standards. Whereas at work or with our neighbours we might overlook an offence or inconsiderate comment, in church we are the body of Christ so people should behave better than that – right?


We have high ownership
We identify with our church at a deep level. Our church is part of who we are. It’s our special place. We work hard at running our groups; we dedicate ourselves to making our entrance-halls look friendly; we care about how the coffee tastes.

This is all good, but ownership can go too far. We can be intolerant of anything that threatens “the way we do things round here”. We quickly take against certain kinds of speaker or worship, and, yes, we might even have our own “reserved seat”. The stakes are high indeed!


But we have a volunteer mentality
At work we have passionate disagreements. Sometimes face to face, or sometimes by email where there is that competition for who can send the last email. But in most cases they are resolved quickly because we have established hierarchies and … well in the end, we want our pay cheque.

So I disagree with my boss, we have a stand-off, but then he calls the shot and like the Roman Centurion says “Chris, just do it”. I do it and get on with my job. And people who work for me might get irritated with me, but in the end I say “look that’s the way it has to be” and they accept that. Usually relationships recover quickly.

In church it’s more like herding cats. Gently, repeatedly persuading people to come over to our way of thinking. This is the best way – it’s distinctive – but it can also fail. Then we feel hurt. We get cross. Eventually we may even take out our metaphorical revolver, hold it to the head of the leader who “failed to support us” and release the fatal shot …

Conflict shutterstock143097238


I’m sorry, but I’m leaving this church


(…and we’re not that sorry).

 

WHAT can we do?


Firstly, take heart – the Bible is packed with conflicts!

The Bible is all about conflict. If we took the quarrels and battles out of the Bible we would end up with a thin, unexciting, read.

Think I’m exaggerating? Take a look. Of course, gruesome battles and family back-stabbing litter the Old Testament, but look also at the New Testament. There are disagreements over who gets what (Acts 6), arguments about how new believers are treated (Acts 15), pleas from Paul’s to leading women to resolve their quarrel (Philippians 4), and Paul himself falls out with Barnabas (Acts 15) and Peter (Galatians 2).

In fact every one of Paul’s letters references some conflict between Christians. Even Jesus did not deny conflict – more often Jesus was the cause of conflict … And of course the reason Jesus died on Good Friday, was to resolve a conflict.

Conflicts in churches are between people who care – and the Bible is packed with conflicts between people who cared.

What do we learn from all these conflicts? I’ll be looking at scripture and interviewing church mediation specialists to find out. Come back soon! In the meantime a question:

Do you agree that conflicts are common in church? Why?


This post is the first in a short series. Another post that might interest you is Why was there so much violence in the Old Testament? This series is based on an article by Chris Goswami that first appeared in Christianity Magazine.

Chris Goswami is Director of Marketing & Communications at Openwave Mobility and is studying and training for ordained ministry in the Baptist Church. He was named 2015 Christian blogger of the year for www.7minutes.net, where this article has appeared. This is the first part of a longer post. It is republished with permission.

 


Please note, the images in this post are purely for fun!

All images Shutterstock



 
Baptist Times, 06/04/2017
    Post     Tweet
Hark! How all the welkin rings
A reflection on our rich, muddled history of carol singing, by Andrew Gant
Advent peace
A reflection on the peace offered by Christ - and how we may cultivate it in our hearts amid the busyness of the season. By Simon Mattholie
'More than confessions... useful lessons'
Jon Magee has been a Baptist minister for 41 years. His new book Confessions of a Baptist minister reflects lessons learned in those years - and the call of God that underpins them
'A plan made from all the pent-up views of everyone I talk to'
Baptist church member David Nelson had hoped to travel to Israel, but with few flights available, he embarked on an alternative - cycling from Yorkshire to Downing Street to deliver a message to the Prime Minister about Israel/Palestine
Should we have new blasphemy laws?
The suggestion was recently raised in Parliament. Adrian Gray explains why Baptists should express their clear opposition to any proposal to re-introduce blasphemy onto the statute book
The Future of Arms: blockbuster films or the new reality of war?
New technologies are changing the way war is fought. A new project from the Joint Public Issues Team aims to equip our churches to engage in discussion and advocacy about the ethics they raise as we seek to fulfill the Christian vocation to be peacemakers
     The Baptist Times 
    Posted: 18/12/2024
    Posted: 11/12/2024
    Posted: 28/11/2024
    Posted: 18/11/2024
    Posted: 14/10/2024
    Posted: 02/10/2024
    Posted: 22/07/2024
    Posted: 07/05/2024
    Posted: 12/02/2024
    Posted: 22/12/2023
    Posted: 16/12/2023
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast