Ministry in Steel Toe Shoes
Building the Beloved Community
Navigation
  • Home
  • About Me
  • About My Shoes
  • About Unitarian Universalism
You are here: Home › Ministry › Why Come To Church More Often
← Christmas Eve Homily: Let Christmas Come
Church 101: What to Say in the Sunday Receiving Line →

Why Come To Church More Often

December 26, 2014 | Filed under: Ministry

Why should you come to church more often? Because you want to.

I hear this from my congregants all the time. That it’s hard to come on Sunday mornings–people want to sleep in, they have lots to do–but when they do, they’re glad. “I need to come more often,” I hear again and again.

One of our regular Sunday morning volunteers told me she volunteers to make herself come. That’s as good a reason to volunteer as any I’ve heard.

I am not baffled by this thinking at all. I know as well as anyone that it’s hard to do things that are optional, and coming to church is optional. Our lives are filled with the things we have to do. Culturally, church used to be on the “have to” list, but that’s changed in recent decades,

Why is it so hard? For one thing, worship services start on time, not on demand. Arts attendance has also been declining, and fewer people are going to the movies as well. We are increasingly accustomed to being able to watch what we want when we want it, and dragging ourselves out of the house to get somewhere for something that starts at a specific time takes effort.

And let’s face it, most of us struggle to do the things that are good for us. Oh yes, attending church is good for you! Google “mental health church attendance” if you don’t believe me. Attending church is up there with eating more fruits and vegetables on the list of “things that are good for me but I struggle with anyway.”

But there’s more to it than “it’s hard to get myself to church.” Church attendance used to be a signifier of conformity and commitment to cultural norms. Now, at least in the liberal religious tradition, it’s an expression of counterculture.

  • The world around us is increasingly online; church requires presence and face-to-face interaction.
  • The world around us privileges the needs of the individual; church privileges the needs of the community.
  • The world around us requires little commitment from us; at church we are often asked to volunteer time, give money, and make commitments to continue to volunteer time and give money.
  • The world around us allows us to isolate ourselves from people of different generations, with different values and beliefs; church requires us to get to know these people and even DO things with them!
  • The world around us values materialism, consumption, and entertainment; church challenges us to commit to values that call us outside ourselves.

That last point gets to one of the cruxes of attendance: church doesn’t even always feel good. One of my congregants categorizes services as either candy or medicine.  “Candy” are those services we leave feeling joyful and full of love for the world and for each other. “Medicine” are those services where we’ve been challenged to make change in our lives and in the world. Like choosing to watch a somber documentary film instead of the latest Marvel movie, coming to church is sometimes the no-fun option. But taking our medicine is “good for us,” my congregant would say, and I agree with him.

I’m sure there’s more. Attending church is so countercultural that many of us are afraid to mention it to friends. Does anything more powerfully say “weirdo” these days than “I went to church on Sunday?” (My colleague Jason Shelton calls us “dorks,” which he applies specifically to Unitarian Universalists and not just churchgoers in general. I can live with that.)

So if you’re struggling to get to church regularly, know that there are strong cultural forces that make it difficult. And maybe knowing that will help you actually get there more often. You may be glad you did.

Did you like this article? Share it with your friends!

Tweet
← Christmas Eve Homily: Let Christmas Come
Church 101: What to Say in the Sunday Receiving Line →

3 Responses to "Why Come To Church More Often"

  1. sandra frazier says:
    December 27, 2014 at 7:03 am

    So very well said. I know I feel better when I go to church and I am sorry to have missed this homily.

    Reply
  2. Jennifer says:
    December 27, 2014 at 7:23 am

    Hi Sharon–
    Thanks for this post. I have always found that going to church contributes to further a sense of meaning and purpose in my life, for many reasons. I did google “church attendance and mental health’ and found an interesting article on the “society and mental health” site. I only read the abstract, since I am not subscribed to their database, though I’m planning to get hold of the whole thing. The article discusses a study that found differences in the impact of church attendance on depression. Those attending mainline Protestant churches were the only ones with lower rates of depression, this higher rates of mental health, correlated with church attendance. Those at Catholic and Evangelical Protestsnt churches had somewhat higher rates of depression, according to the abstract–with Catholics faring slightly better than Evangrlical Protestants. Not having read the article fully, I don’t yet know what the authors postulate as the reason(s) for this, but I find it interesting!
    Best,
    Jennifer

    Reply
  3. Jennifer says:
    December 27, 2014 at 7:25 am

    Lol that was supposed to say “furthering,” not “further”

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Jennifer Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archives

Recent Posts

  • Unitarian Universalist Prayer Beads 2024
  • Are you still UU? (A post-GA reflection)
  • My Daily Log for Depression
  • How to Evaluate the Minister
  • It’s Not About the Lattes: And Other Things Millennial Parents Want UU Congregations to Know

Blogroll

  • Hold My Chalice
  • PostSecret
  • Sermons in Stones
  • Universalist Prayers

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Categories

  • Announcements
  • Church 101
  • Church 201
  • Church Construction
    • Architecture
    • Arts
    • Best Practices
    • Buying A Building
    • Interiors
    • New Construction
    • Renovation
    • Steeples
  • Church Newsletter
  • In the Media
  • Ministry
    • Fun
    • Pastoral Care
    • Practical Arts
    • Prophetic Outreach
    • Self Care
    • Spiritual Practice
    • Teaching
    • Worship
  • Sermons

Tags

Anti-Racism Books Chalice UUC Community Congregational Health Construction Faith in Action Free and Responsible Search General Assembly Grief Immigration Reform Interdependent Web Leadership Living Our Principles Mental Health Mission MLK Movies Past Pledging Poem Prayer Religious Identity sabbatical Starr King Church Starr King School for the Ministry Tea Theology UU Church of Berkeley UU Congregation of Marin UU History Voluntary Simplicity

Anti-Racism Resources

  • Being a White Ally
  • Colorlines.com News for Action
  • Paul Kivel
  • Unmasking Racial Micro Aggressions
  • White Guilt (3 min. video)
  • White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack

Unitarian Universalism on the Web

  • Church of the Larger Fellowship
  • Discover UU
  • DRUUMM (People of Color Org)
  • Find A UU Congregation
  • Standing on the Side of Love
  • UU Allies for Racial Equity
  • UU Association
  • UU Legislative Ministries
  • UU Quotes
  • UU Service Committee
  • UU Theological Groups
  • UU World (Magazine)
  • UUA Blogs
  • UUA Bookstore
  • UUpdates News Aggregator

Immigration Reform

  • CA Immigrant Policy Center
  • Detention Watch Network
  • Immigrant Legal Resource Center
  • Immigration Bulletin Daily
  • Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights
  • UUA Immigration Justice

© 2025 Ministry in Steel Toe Shoes

Powered by Esplanade Theme by One Designs and WordPress