Google that–the number one sin of the church–and almost all the responses will be the same: Jim Cymbala, pastor of the Brooklyn Tabernacle telling Mark Buchanan the church’s leaders are not on their knees crying out to God for the outcasts of this world–the prostitutes, the gang leaders, the druggies.
Included among all the Cymbala citations, I found only two other mentions of the church’s primary sin.
Scott Peck said the number one sin of the church is its arrogance and narcissim, the attitude that we have God all sewn up, that all truth resides with us.
Another pastor said it is “tolerance to the point of obsequious stupidity.” Obsequious: “fawning,” a “servile attitude,” “sycophantic.”
Each of those makes a great point. But here is my candidate for the primary failure of the church in our day.
The greatest sin of the church today is that it does not take itself seriously enough.
By that I mean, it does not take its Lord, its message, its identity, and its role seriously.
Go into almost any city in the land and drop in on church after church. You will find some great congregations and hear the occasional excellent sermon, to be sure. However, again and again, you will walk away shaking your head, convinced that instead of visiting the power center of the planet, ground zero for the actions of Almighty God, you have just sat in on something akin to a family reunion, a civic meeting, or a community improvement session.
A weak sister of the Oprah self-improvement society.
Instead of a sense of urgency, you saw half-heartedness on every side.