The church culture in which I lived as a boy was not one which was afraid to invite people to enter into an experience with Jesus which might evoke some kind of emotional response. People were given a safe place to confess their sins and seek forgiveness. While crying tears of repentance was not required, many an altar has been salted with shed tears. It was a spiritual environment which overtly invited those who worshiped to give their hearts to Jesus. Preachers would invite people to do the work of repentance at the altar and then would kneel down alongside them at the altar to pray with them.
I have a preacher friend who often speaks of connecting head and heart as he leads his people in worship. In many churches the heart seems to be forgotten. The message is more about how the community needs to respond to the call of Jesus rather than a word that encourages individual response. Service has become the key word instead of salvation. The focus is so much on the community's response to Jesus that there is no room for people to encounter Jesus in an experience which might be described as a personal conversion.
Back in my college days at Asbury College a roommate went home over Christmas and found himself at an altar confessing his sins. As he told the story there was a friend who was kneeling beside him who kept saying, "Now, Larry, you are not that bad. You do a lot of good things for people." As I remember the story, it seems to be a visual which depicts the reluctance the church has in calling its people to a time of confession and repentance that could lead to a conversion, or salvation experience. It is important that we carry our head with us to worship, but neither should we leave our heart at home.
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