Ironically, many people confuse hyponatremia with dehydration. And they drink more water--making the condition worse--confusing the cure with the cause.
I wonder sometimes if the church suffers from hyponatremia. What is this heresy! Too much water in the font. No, that's not what I mean. But I do think that sometimes we confuse the cause of our struggles with the cure..
--more programs
--more certainties
--more structure
--"stronger" leaders
--more "members"
--more, more, more
We confuse quantity with quality. We replace meaning with marketing. We stray from the way of the cross in pursuit of the path of safety.
Hyponatremia occurs when we consume more water than we can use in the pursuit of our labor. Certainly, members of the mainline church are thirsty these days. As we see membership decline--and the median age of our denomination imcrease. Could God be calling us to empty ourselves--to make ourselves open to something new? We may want to cure our thirst by taking a drink of the familiar. But perhaps we our called to be thirsty. To explore the desires and the stirrings of the Spirit that can not be easily quenched. Perhaps the thirst will lead us to God. Perhaps the thirst is the cure--and not the problem.
Pastor Brad Brown