Ned Flanders and Me

POSTED ON: 11.22.06

I have a confession to make and I hope it doesn't make you think less of me. Ned Flanders and I have become friends. It hasn't always been this way. For years before I began to pastor a church I knew just what the problem was in American evangelical culture, and it wasn't sin, it was church people, it was Ned and his friends. The "frozen chosen" I think I have heard them called. They were old, tired, non missional, unmoved by the gospel, and thought the Left Behind movies were a great idea. They had driven our precious Lord's bride into the ground and deserved at least to be mocked in our young, hip, missional conversations and sermons and maybe even killed in some sort of Old Testament fashion. I used to think that when my time came to Pastor I didn't want or need any of them. I just wanted to see people saved. I didn't want to "swap sheep" in fact maybe we wouldn't let anyone join the church that was trying to come to us from another church in town. I could see us now, raw, gritty, authentic, and somewhat angry but not enough to be called sin, tattooed and rough around the edges. Ned would hate it, but we would reclaim the gospel he and his cronies had taken and perverted into this withdrawn, judgmental joke. We would see the lost saved and develop them ourselves.

In December 2002 my time had arrived to Pastor and I came to The Village with all the ignorance and arrogance of a 28 year old with all the answers and few questions and immediately began learning that I was an idiot. Over the last four years I have been challenged, refined, chiseled and rebuked. And somehow in the middle of all of that Ned and I became good friends. It started over a cup of coffee (and I'm not speaking in code here. Ned does not and will never have a beer with me). I started learning some things about him over that cup of coffee. First of all, we are very different. He loves Sandy Patty records, has 5 icthus' on his car (one of each member of his family) and only watches the PAX network on television. As I learned all this about him I wondered how we could co-exist or honestly even have a conversation, but then the strangest of things happened we found some common ground. It seems that Ned and I have, as hard as this is to say, some similar passions. I found out that day that Ned loves both the church and Jesus very much. On top of that he wants with all his heart to see his neighbor, Homer, come to know Christ, and prays for him constantly. It was a shocking revelation to me. The problem that I thought plagued us wasn't the problem at all.

It's a strange thing to wake up and find out you are the very thing you hated and rebelled against to begin with. Judging men not by the content of their souls but by how they dress, talk and drink. I was expected when I came to know Jesus to wear a suit on Sunday, part my hair on the side and then hairspray it down, quit drinking completely and learn to speak "Christianese" fluently. If I did those things I was welcomed and loved if not, I was the outcast. I find it heartbreaking that I have tendencies to do the same to others. The expectations have changed, it's not a suit it's an un-tucked shirt, it's not your hair parted down the side it's messy hair that you spent 15 minutes making look messy. But it's the same madness, the same judgments, and the same sin that plagued my fathers before me. We think our methods are the methods instead of a method. So Ned and I are friends. We fight a lot, usually over philosophy of ministry and volume of music, but on weekends like last weekend when we baptize dozens and dozens of grown men and women I can see him back there, last row on the left earplugs in, surrounded by raw, gritty, authentic, and somewhat angry but not enough to be called sin, tattooed and rough around the edges people and he loves the place and I think he might even like me.

Comment by Caleb Campbell on 11.22.06

Thanks Matt for the good word. You are absolutely right, loving ned is hard, and I find myself discounting fellow christians based on their philosophy on outreach, and what "holiness" looks like.

A good friend of mine put it this way "We are in a battle between the Church and Satan. Let's waste time shooting arrows into our brothers in arms." These are our family, not our enemies.

There are bigger problems than thinking Petra means progressive.

Caleb Campbell
www.encounteraz.com

Comment by Mike Albin on 11.24.06

I once served as a worship leader in a church where the people actually called themselves "the frozen chosen" with a smile across their faces. They were conservative in dress, suits and ties for the guys, best dress for the gals. When I lead worship they would stand there staring at me, almost motionless, unless I encouraged them to clap. I would also refer to them as Ned Flanderish, with all the trimmings that come with his character. I would wonder why they wouldn't worship with their hands raised high and tears streaming down their faces, I mean, after all that Jesus had done for them! And they wondered why my hair stuck up in such a strange fashion and why I wore jeans on Sunday.
Then I got to know them. Little by little, and also found out how much they love Jesus, how much they want to follow Him with all their hearts and serve Him, and not in a law following religious way,, but because they loved Him so.
And I found out that they were worshiping Him with song, just not in the now deemed "right way" with hands in the air and dancing with reckless abandon. And I heard Jesus tell me, "Judge not....cause I love these guys too".
Sitting down talking with "Ned" at times I found that his heart burned with a love for Jesus that was stronger than mine, and that dispite the volume, He enjoyed the worship time and had been touched by the new versions of older hymns and found himself humming the choruses of the new tunes on the way home.
I once made a statement at a staff meeting about "worship" that the contemporary of today will one day become the traditional of tomorrow. A few folks got mad at the idea that their idea of church would ever fade away, probably the same way I will at a meeting in the future when some young punk with a heart for Jesus tells me that my "old school" needs to change.
I hope I can laugh.

Comment by Adrian Warnock on 03.20.07

Great post! Wouldnt it be great if we could all get to the point where we were willing to learn what we can from anyone. None of us have the monopoly on truth. One thing blogging has taught me is that other christians think very differently from me, and are not necessarily evil monsters intent on deceiving the whole church! We are all learning and can learn much from each other.