Don't start me on 'heritage' or 'listed' buildings!
Sometimes, I hankwer for a massive load of dynamite.
If eople want holy museums, let them fund them.
Meanwhile, if the court, governing body or whatever, after due prayer and reflection, feel that the best thing to do is to move with the times, then that's the way it has to be.
And, no, I'm not comfortable with some modern worship tecniques....neither was the CofE when the Wesley brothers were on the go - as I recall, they tried to ban those nasty, modern hymns of theirs from churches up and down the land.
My own denomination is a prime example.
A few years back, we were reviewing Presbytery records (sorry about the lanfuage....) with a view to writing a history of our 400 years.
We found one, of a minister and Presbytery elder, both of whom appeared in front of the presbytery which sat as a court.
The minister was deprived of one month's stipend, and both were denied the chance to be commissioners at the next General Assembly (which, IMHO, was blessing, not punishment...)
Their crime?
In 1849, they committed the terrible sin of having instrumental music - namely a portable organ - and hymns, rather than psalms and paraphrases, in Church for a special evening praise session!
Times change.
Maybe Handel, Bach, Vivaldi - all of whom I love - will be relegated to the concert hall, replaced by Hillsong, Muywa, etc.