Not at home in church anymore
PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2003 10:21 pm
I really don't know how to say this, or if it belongs in General, but I'm kind of struggling with a church issue.
You see, I go to a Baptist church that just recently joined the Southern Baptist Convention, mostly because my family has always been Baptist in denomination.
However, over the last year, I've felt more and more out of place, more and more like an outsider. There are several reasons, but among them are that almost everyone is pro-military, pro-war, and political conservative, and to seem otherwise automatically pegs you as a *spiritual* liberal not trusting in God's sovereignty.
Another is that my personal beliefs on many secondary issues, while they do not conflict with Baptists, they also aren't in complete agreement either.
Also, the worship style (lots of praise and worship music and some hymns) doesn't "click" with me, I guess. It doesn't seem that special or deep, except on occasion, and normally I don't get into it much.
In short, I just don't feel "at home" anymore. Online and elsewhere, I currently identify myself as "non-denominational" because I feel that labeling myself a Baptist would be untruthful since I'm not strongly convicted to agree with YEC or the idea that women are created to be helpmeets to men, for example.
I don't know if I'm being selfish and not doing what God wants, because I know you're supposed to go to church to show your love for God, not "to have your needs met."
I'd like to know about other denominations and what they believe, (and out of curiosity, I took a test on "What Christian Denomination Are You" at SelectSmart and got the following: #1 Mennonite Brethren #2 Methodist/Wesleyan Church #3 Southern Baptist).
My main problem is that I can't be that open with my family about this struggle about where *I* belong. If I said that I was tired of my current church and that I wanted to look for a place where I felt at home more, my family would be really upset, especially my mother, because it would be interpreted as a selfish rejection of a perfectly good church and an attempt by me to force the rest of my family into whatever I wanted to look into. (Although I personally don't care. I'm not one to force other people into my personal interests, preferences, or anything else, and I don't want to break up the family. I just want to be myself.)
I can't drive yet, so I could see how wanting to look for a different church would be selfish in that way, but the issue and the upsetness (if that's a word) would still be there, because my family would still see it as rejection even if, next year when I can learn to drive, I drove myself and paid for the gas money out of my personal finances.
I've kind of dropped out at my church for the reasons I listed, and my mother interprets that as spiritual backsliding, makes comments about how I used to love church so much, and says that I need to get more involved. . .^sigh^
I just want advice on this, and possibly prayers for guidance. I know it's probably best to just not think about it and stay where I am because that's just the way things are, and I've tried that, but it doesn't work.
You see, I go to a Baptist church that just recently joined the Southern Baptist Convention, mostly because my family has always been Baptist in denomination.
However, over the last year, I've felt more and more out of place, more and more like an outsider. There are several reasons, but among them are that almost everyone is pro-military, pro-war, and political conservative, and to seem otherwise automatically pegs you as a *spiritual* liberal not trusting in God's sovereignty.
Another is that my personal beliefs on many secondary issues, while they do not conflict with Baptists, they also aren't in complete agreement either.
Also, the worship style (lots of praise and worship music and some hymns) doesn't "click" with me, I guess. It doesn't seem that special or deep, except on occasion, and normally I don't get into it much.
In short, I just don't feel "at home" anymore. Online and elsewhere, I currently identify myself as "non-denominational" because I feel that labeling myself a Baptist would be untruthful since I'm not strongly convicted to agree with YEC or the idea that women are created to be helpmeets to men, for example.
I don't know if I'm being selfish and not doing what God wants, because I know you're supposed to go to church to show your love for God, not "to have your needs met."
I'd like to know about other denominations and what they believe, (and out of curiosity, I took a test on "What Christian Denomination Are You" at SelectSmart and got the following: #1 Mennonite Brethren #2 Methodist/Wesleyan Church #3 Southern Baptist).
My main problem is that I can't be that open with my family about this struggle about where *I* belong. If I said that I was tired of my current church and that I wanted to look for a place where I felt at home more, my family would be really upset, especially my mother, because it would be interpreted as a selfish rejection of a perfectly good church and an attempt by me to force the rest of my family into whatever I wanted to look into. (Although I personally don't care. I'm not one to force other people into my personal interests, preferences, or anything else, and I don't want to break up the family. I just want to be myself.)
I can't drive yet, so I could see how wanting to look for a different church would be selfish in that way, but the issue and the upsetness (if that's a word) would still be there, because my family would still see it as rejection even if, next year when I can learn to drive, I drove myself and paid for the gas money out of my personal finances.
I've kind of dropped out at my church for the reasons I listed, and my mother interprets that as spiritual backsliding, makes comments about how I used to love church so much, and says that I need to get more involved. . .^sigh^
I just want advice on this, and possibly prayers for guidance. I know it's probably best to just not think about it and stay where I am because that's just the way things are, and I've tried that, but it doesn't work.