Lazarus was already dead four days by the time Jesus arrived at the tomb, and the odor of death was rife. “By this time there’s a stench!” Martha told Jesus (John 11:39/The Message). “Did I not tell you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?” Jesus queried (Verse 40/NIV). After the stone had been removed and Jesus had prayed, Lazarus responded to Jesus’ resurrecting power by springing back to life and coming out of the tomb still bound in his grave clothes. “Take off the grave clothes and let him go,” Jesus ordered (Verse 44/NIV).
As I preach at various places these days, I’m always watching for what I call the “odor of death” in congregations-signs that say, “Hey, nothing’s happening here. We’re on the way out. For us, it’s just a matter of time!” The symptoms are myriad. Grass growing between the sidewalk panels. Musty classrooms. Badly formatted church bulletins with blatant grammatical and spelling errors. Broken furniture. Church doors needing fresh coats of paint. Junky literature racks. Weedy flower beds and overgrown shrubbery. Smelly restrooms. No indoor signs directing visitors to various parts of the facility. Poorly-lit outdoor bulletin boards. Yellowed plastic Easter lilies resurrected each spring to grace the front of the sanctuary. Cluttered bulletin boards filled with outdated material. And the list goes on.
“You never get a second chance to make a first impression!” says the old adage. How true. First impressions are often lasting impressions. What kind of impressions are we leaving on people coming through the doors of our churches for the first time? Does their first impression say, “Welcome! We’re glad you came”‘? Even if they attend only once, what is there about your church that will make them want to come again? Does your church have the “odor of death”? Why not do a physical check? Put yourself in the place of a visitor showing up for the first time. Would you want to return Sunday after Sunday?
Grave clothes restrict life and growth. In a step of faith, we need to risk removing the odorous “grave clothes” in each of our congregations, so that for visitors and seekers, everything will say, “Welcome! We’re glad you came.”
May/June 1995