The title of this blog is a word that you will not find in dictionaries because it does not exist. But it should. “Demonominationalism.” What does it mean? It describes mainline churches who fly the flags of their denominations for all to see. They want the culture to know that they are Methodists, Baptists, Church of Christ, etc.
Studies consistently show that people seeking to find God today do not care about denominations. In fact, they don’t even care about churches. They are looking for communities of faith who are open and honest about who they follow, who live what they profess, and who will accept others as they are. They are searching for communities who will embrace their questions, understand their doubts, and help them face their fears.
This is why I use the term “demonominationalism” rather than “denominationalism” to describe churches who lift up their various denominations rather than lifting up Christ. You see there is a “demon” attached to the first term. That’s because this is one of Satan’s favorite tools to divide the Body of Christ.
Jesus was so concerned about this that He prayed about it in the Gospel of John’s seventeenth chapter. He said, “Father, may they be one, as we are one.” Jesus also said that when He is lifted up, He will draw all people to Himself.
Churches need to understand that when they lift up anything less than Jesus, it creates division instead of unity, confusion instead of clarity. Congregations get caught up in how they worship rather than who they worship. How you’re baptized becomes more important than why you’re baptized. Who can serve communion becomes more important than why communion is served.
“Demonominationalism” lets everyone know who’s in and who’s out. “Believe the way we believe and you’re in. If you don’t believe the way we believe, you’re out!” When the church of Jesus Christ battles against itself the world shakes its head and Satan smiles because he knows that a house divided against itself cannot stand.
I’m praying for the day that Jesus’ prayer is fulfilled. Imagine what would happen if all churches laid down their denominational banners and rallied behind the cause of Christ. It would revolutionize the world.