Ministry in Steel Toe Shoes
Building the Beloved Community
Navigation
  • Home
  • About Me
  • About My Shoes
  • About Unitarian Universalism
You are here: Home › Practical Arts › In Which A Minister Looks to Attend Church on Her Sunday Off And Is Reminded Why Religion Is In Decline
← Sermon: Do we tolerate intolerance?
How To Tell Who Is A UU Minister (And Why You Should Care) →

In Which A Minister Looks to Attend Church on Her Sunday Off And Is Reminded Why Religion Is In Decline

August 16, 2015 | Filed under: Practical Arts, Worship

I am blessed to have one Sunday off each month, and I usually sleep in and rest up that day, grateful for a precious TWO DAYS OFF IN A ROW (Monday being my usual day off). I don’t usually think about attending church; it would defeat the purpose of a day off for me to attend my own congregation (where I am always The Minister, even if I’m just there to attend worship), and since attending church is really about being in community, there is little point in my going somewhere for a one-time “drop in” experience.

But I don’t get to attend worship without leading very often, and this morning a Facebook post from a colleague inspired me to seek out a Sunday morning worship experience. I’m a worship leader, after all, and there is always something to learn about putting oneself in new and different worshipping experiences.

Everything that happens after this is what I assume millions of people go through every Sunday morning, as they find themselves yearning for the opportunity to connect with something larger than ourselves, a chance to encounter the Mystery, the Holy, the Sacred. It’s rough going out there, folks. We know that, but today I was reminded.

So the big question, where should I go to church?

First I just looked at churches physically close to my home. “I’m just looking for an EXPERIENCE,” I thought. “The exact theology doesn’t matter to me.” I actually started by looking at Catholic churches. I enjoy “high church,” even though I’m happily part of a low church tradition. But then I see that the services are just called Eucharist.

“It just says eucharist,” I said to my husband, who was raised Catholic. “How do I know what the sermon is?”

“There is no sermon,” he said. “Just a homily. Besides, you’re not supposed to care what the sermon is.” (He knows ministers think people should come to church no matter what.)

I winced. “I guess the homily’s about a reading from the Bible, isn’t it.” I’m starting to remember things I don’t like about Christian churches.

I spend a little more time looking at websites for traditional Christian churches. I looked at my local Episcopalian church, knowing that’s a more liberal faith tradition, but they too simply name “Holy Eucharist” as the service, and in reading over their description of what to expect on a first visit, I’m realizing how much time is going to be devoted to communion, which I’m not a huge fan of (the insistence that we’re drinking the blood of Christ is very off-putting to me).

“Uh oh. This says I’ll need to wear a name tag. I don’t want a wear a name tag,” I whine to my husband. (We all wear name tags at my church, by the way. But I’m wanting an EXPERIENCE! not chit-chat.)

I also look at my local Methodist church. My grandmother was a Methodist, and for a moment I treasure the idea of feeling connected to the faith of my ancestors. But the minister is an older white guy, and…well…ugh.

In fact, all of the church websites I looked at had older-than-me white male ministers. No offense to my white male colleagues, of whom I have many, but I have to admit, when deciding where to go, I found myself trying to get a feel for the community from the website. If the only clue I have is from the photo of the minister, nothing conveys “traditional church” like a white guy.

By the way, many church websites were terrible, and it is embarrassingly shameful how few church websites show their location and worship times on the home page. An out-of-date website conveys “we’re an out-of-date congregation.”

Okay, it was beginning to occur to me that I might not be able to find what I want close to home. I briefly flirted with attending worship at another UU congregation, but I am still A Minister in those communities, and I’m wanting an EXPERIENCE!

I finally google “liberal San Diego church” and am reminded of the existence of a liberal Christian church about 25 minutes away. The website affirms that they are open to all, including people who don’t believe in God (I am not atheist, but I figure that a church that is open to atheists is going to be the kind of liberal faith I can get behind). And I am not too late for the one worship service they offer!

And after an hour of worship I’m reminded:

  • Ugh, even liberal faith traditions are still referring to God as “He” and “The Father.” I’m not down with an exclusively male God.
  • Being asked to sing about an exclusively male God is almost worse than hearing about him.
  • Sacrifice theology is also not my thing.
  • 45 minute sermons don’t lend themselves to creating an EXPERIENCE!
  • I hate, hate, hate pass the peace/greet your neighbor times in worship. HATE. THEM. I’m there for an EXPERIENCE! not for chit-chat.
  • I’m a Unitarian Universalist.

 

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

Tweet
← Sermon: Do we tolerate intolerance?
How To Tell Who Is A UU Minister (And Why You Should Care) →

4 Responses to "In Which A Minister Looks to Attend Church on Her Sunday Off And Is Reminded Why Religion Is In Decline"

  1. Anne-Marie says:
    August 16, 2015 at 1:56 pm

    Was this written satirically? It seems like you spent a lot of time pre-judging the experience to try to find an experience as close to the one you offer as possible, only to be disappointed that it was not that close… if we’re not uncomfortable, we’re not growing.

    Reply
    1. Rev. Steel Toe says:
      August 16, 2015 at 2:27 pm

      No, not satirical at all! The woman who cuts my hair, for example, has spoken with me about her difficulty in finding a church she would like to attend. In listening to her, I have thought, “I don’t get why it’s so hard.” But now that I’ve had the reminder of what it’s like, I’m reminded why more and more people don’t attend church at all.

      I wasn’t looking for a UU experience or I would have gone to a UU congregation. I think I was seeking an experience like I had at Glide Church in San Francisco (which I wrote about here: http://sharonwylie.com/2012/06/glide/).

      The service I attended this morning was modern and attracted primarily young adults (people in their 20s and 30s). They have active justice ministries. They are multigenerational. I had every reason to expect that it would feed me, and I was disappointed that it didn’t.

      Reply
      1. Anne-Marie says:
        August 17, 2015 at 8:39 pm

        Okay, but… as I read this, it seems like you rejected a lot of possible experiences because you assumed they would not be what you want – too white, too christian, too boring – and yet you hadn’t been to any of them. Then you picked something you hoped would be to your liking, and it wasn’t, either. So if the thing you thought you would like, you didn’t, perhaps one of the ones you didn’t want to go to you would have found something utterly new and inspiring. I have no idea why my mom even did this, but around the time I was in junior high, we went up to an evangelical church in Seattle one Sunday. It was really long – closer to 2 hours than 1 – there was tons of singing, and the sign of peace went of for 20 minutes, including a woman coming up to us and saying, “Let me give you a hug, honey.” I loved it. My youth group and I went to a Mormon service one Sunday which was … it was an EXPERIENCE (testimony Sunday, no less.) One of these Sundays, I’ll hit up my local megachurch because I hear it’s quite a thing. It isn’t likely to be my thing, at least not long term, but I think the farther from you it is, the more likely it is to be an EXPERIENCE.

        That said, if I were you, I’d never go to church on my Sundays off either. 🙂

        Reply
  2. Suellen Sorenson says:
    August 16, 2015 at 3:34 pm

    Next time you’re looking for an EXPERIENCE please come to church with me. Reading this article, I found myself wishing you were with me today. The entire church experience was AWESOME!

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Rev. Steel Toe 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