There actually now are websites where people can confess their sins and have someone pray for them. Sites such as mysecret.tv and ivescrewedup.com were created by Christians that are among a growing segment of evangelicals now embracing more traditional or even ancient faith traditions.
“We do believe there is value in confessing our sins to each,” states an Oklahoma pastor whose megachurch sponsors mysecret.tv. In less than two years, 7,500 confessions have been entered on the site, with ministers and others praying over them as they are posted. “This process may be a more modern way of people discovering the value of that tradition.”
Other usually non-evangelical expressions of faith are gaining acceptance among the faithful. Observance of Lent, and the idea of fasting, or “giving up” something for the season is increasing. Weekly communion is becoming more common. Following the Liturgical Calendar is practiced in churches that never did so before. Even monastic-style communities are being formed among evangelicals.
Informed observers see the trend toward such practices as an indication that people are growing weary of the “contemporary, shopping-center feel of the megachurches embraced by baby boomers, with their casually dressed ministers and rock-band praise music.” Folks are looking for a deeper level of spirituality and a more meaningful sense of God’s presence in their lives. Church history professor Chris Armstrong of Bethel Seminary in St. Paul, MN notes that some are turning from “churches that look too much like the rest of the world – a little too much like malls or rock concerts.”
Not all evangelical Christians are on the bandwagon, however. The Dumbowskis of Oregon are so alarmed at this “mystical spirituality” that they established a web site, publishing house, and e-newsletter to combat the trend. They feel it is a denial of the gospel message and is not Christianity as presented in the Bible.
I’m not sure how they can deny that weekly communion is non-scriptural, though. The reformers who launched the movement that became the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) reached the conclusion from their study of the New Testament that the early disciples of Jesus practiced “the breaking of bread” when they gathered “on the first day of the week.”
Deanna Doan, a founding member of an evangelical worship group that practices weekly communion said of the practice, “In a church like ours, it serves the role of being that anchor that continually ties us back to the larger Christian church and to Christian history.”
We in the Disciples tradition have been saying that for almost 200 years.
