Christ Is Risen, Please Bring Cookies.
He continued: “Go, eat rich foods and drink sweet drinks, and allot portions to those who had nothing prepared; for today is holy to our Lord.” – Nehemiah 8:10a (NABRE)
Each Sunday I preach at our UCC churches in Michigan, I meet people who tell me this is their first time back in person in years. When I ask why, I’m struck how often they say that my visit caused the church to have a special coffee hour, which in turn caused someone to ask them to bring cookies. They didn’t come because they needed to see the Conference Minister. They came because the church needed the cookies.
I do not believe people return to in-person worship in order to eat treats, but they may well return in order to deliver them. It’s easier to receive a call asking you to bring brownies than it is to get one asking why you haven’t been coming to church. The first call is an invitation while the second can sound like an act of desperation, or at worst, an accusation. “Where have you been? We’ve missed you,” sounds too much like, “Where have you been? Shame on you.”
Online worship is real worship and nothing to be ashamed of. People have complicated reasons for not going places in person, including health, so who are we to judge? But if the original reason is no longer the reason, and not attending has become the new norm, it can feel scary to return.
“Will people ask me where I’ve been? Will I have to defend myself? Will they ask me to join a committee?” Less threatening to imagine walking in the door to hear, “Thanks, those brownies look delicious.”
Sometimes it takes a special occasion to break the habit of being out of the habit of coming to church. So if you have one, celebrate it—and if you don’t, just make one up. Every Sunday is a little Easter.
But don’t just invite people to attend, like guests. Invite them to contribute, like the helpers and hosts they remember being and may long to be again.
Prayer
For worship online, in person, and for the refreshments to follow, we give you thanks, O God.
Lillian Daniel serves as Conference Minister with the Michigan Conference UCC. She is the author of Tired of Apologizing for a Church I Don’t Belong To and When “Spiritual But Not Religious” Is Not Enough.