My faith has always been a key part of my life, but in recent years, I have stopped being a conventional Christian.
Since June 2013, I have decided that I don’t want to attend Church anymore. After leaving a mega-church in 2007, attending 4 other churches between the periods of 2007-2013, and then deciding I had enough of playing church and will exit churchanity.
This is a controversial issue and I have been keeping silent about it for some time, but I have decided to share my experience and explain my stance on this decision, as I hope not to be misunderstood by friends around me who are Christians.
Beginning of 2007, things begin to change for me. I started searching the bible, and I realized that what I was hearing in this certain mega-church I was attending was getting stale. It was always the grace message, repeated over and over like a broken recorder, and I came to a point that the message that was preached in church did not explain the countless questions that I had. Was Christianity really like what the pastor said? “God only wants to bless you…trust that you have a God that want to give your good things, ask and you will receive, seek and you will find, you will reign in life like Christ Jesus…”
Obviously I was far from reigning in life, with the countless challenges that I encountered in life, the church, the fellow church friends couldn’t answer why I still faced challenges and difficulties that never seemed to ceased. I really didn’t feel like that champion Christian that the pastor preached about in his sermons and started questioning whether it was my faith that undermined the hope that God will answer my prayers.
I started searching the bible, when I realized that no one could answer the questions that I had. The final push out of the mega-church church was when I realized that what the pastor was preaching was contrary to what I found out from the bible and I could not understand why the congregation were exclaiming loud ‘Amens’ to the things that the pastor spoke. The teaching was making them comfortable to sin, about how we are all forgiven for our past, present and future sin, for us not to be worried about our sins, because we are righteous people because of Jesus. And then how we are to positively confess daily that “We are the righteousness of God in Christ” and not look or worry about our sin. That sermon, and many other sermons of the same grain after that made me uncomfortable, and searching through the bible the last couple of months confirmed what I heard to be contrary to what the bible says about sin. I asked myself, “How about being obedient to God, following the will of God? Why doesn’t the pastor ever mention that at all?” or “It is really all about me, my needs and what God can do for me?”
After that season, I convinced hb that I wanted to change church. Hb had no problems with the sermons at all, and more so the church, since we have been attending the past 7-8 years and had many friends there. But we move on, to 4 other churches in the next 6 years but never felt ‘at home’ anywhere. So I finally decided after 6 years that I don’t want to go to church anymore.
It has been difficult coming out of institutionalized church, especially with the initial guilt that I felt, and the perceived lack of fellowship with other Christians. It has been an understanding amongst many christian church-goers, that the more you don’t attend church, the more you will wander from the ‘right’ path. This is a lie. I know it as instead of being further away from the ‘right path’, I have learnt to depend on the inerrant truth in the bible, depend on Jesus fully to lead me on the path He wants me to go, let God speak and confirm through the Holy Spirit through what I read directly from the bible daily, and not to depend on doctrines taught by a man or pastor.
It has been hard finding Christians in Singapore going through the same circumstances, but I thank God for the fellowship of other Christians internationally that I have found through the internet that have been experiencing the same thing. This article that I read during the weekends really spoke to me; No fellowship, no problem!
So, in whatever journey, even in the ‘wilderness alone’ we have been called to undertake in our spiritual walk, I am sure there will be a purpose in it all.
On a separate note, I will likely be continuing sharing my thoughts about ‘This thing we call Church in Singapore’ in the next post.