Meet the mysterious Gungors

Once regarded as Christian music royalty, in 2014 Michael and Lisa Gungor were branded heretical and banished from evangelical Christianity because of statements they had made about creationism and Genesis’s account of the flood two years earlier.

These days they’re careful not to lay claims to pre-packaged Christianity and are more likely to emphasise all the ways that they’re unorthodox.

Yet, as faces of the Grammy-nominated musical collective known as Gungor, they still perform to packed houses and feature as guest artists at Christian conferences. And, with 250,000 subscribers to the Liturgist Podcast Michael co-hosts with ‘Science Mike” McHargue, there’s clearly an audience hungry for what the Gungors are offering.

So who are these Gungor fans and why do they still value the ministry of a couple that others label “heretical”?

Michael grew up “a guy on stage” as a pastor’s son and worship leader. He and Lisa met at college in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and began playing music together, which led to travel. They got hired by a big church and soon their whole lives revolved around writing music for church, leading music in church and pastoring people.

It was when they began to travel that things began to unravel.

“We began to see behind the scenes of some of the biggest churches in the world, the biggest movements. We were in arenas and stadiums and seeing the whole three-ring circus of big Christianity in the world, and began to question ‘What’s the point of all this?’”

It started with small simple questions such as “Is this how Jesus would live out his faith in the world?” before they became more intense, until eventually Michael says he just couldn’t believe “any of it” anymore.

“I think we realised along the way a lot of these constructs we had of God really became like an idol and needed to fall apart.” – Lisa Gungor

“I basically just let go of my faith entirely for the first time in my life,” Michael explains.

“That was actually a very freeing moment for me because I think, up to that point, faith was sort of synonymous with certainty in my head.”

“So that led us into some interesting places… because when your job is a Christian musician – and we were pastoring a church that we had started in Colorado – and then all of a sudden I’m like ‘I don’t know that I believe in God anymore,’ that makes for some dramatic stories … and career turbulence.”

When Lisa began to pray and discovered what she had always known as the internal voice of God to be silent, she found the experience “completely terrifying.”

“It felt like I’d been tricked. You start wondering ‘Is this just something I made up in my head? Was I hearing my own voice? What was that thing?’”

Despite the disorientation, she found the process refining.

“I think we realised along the way a lot of these constructs we had of God really became like an idol and needed to fall apart. This idea of the transactional God really needed to fall apart – ‘If I do this, I get this and that’ can only last for so long once you realise the holes in that kind of theology.”

Lisa recently recorded a video with Buzzfeed to promote her newly released book The Most Beautiful Thing I’ve Seen: Opening Your Eyes to Wonder. Unfortunately, Buzzfeed originally titled her interview “I stopped believing in God after pastoring a megachurch.”

“That’s just not my story,” Lisa explains. The video has since been retitled “How I lost faith in the megachurch,” but not before the old critics became riled up, requiring Lisa to set the record straight on her Instagram.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bn9zRmtD0sT/?hl=en

Two years into that journey, news of the Gungors’ changing beliefs hit American Christian news outlets and churches began cancelling concerts with the band.

The media reports coincided with what Lisa describes as the hardest year of their lives, when their beautiful baby girl was born with Down syndrome and required two heart surgeries.

“So about two years later it caught up … all this stuff blows up publicly and [we’re] accused of all these things and called all these terrible names. We were basically tossed out of the tribe. It was all really hurtful. We felt so alone in all the things we were questioning,” she says.

In response to the media, Michael posted a blog that proved, unsurprisingly, to be like a red-rag to a bull.

“Do I believe God exists? Yes. Do I believe Jesus is the Son of God? Yes. Do I believe that Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness? Yes. Do I believe that God literally drowned every living creature 5,000 years ago in a global flood except the ones who were living in a big boat? No, I don’t. Why don’t I? Because of science and rational thought.”

“… What’s happening here is some people thought Gungor was in their huddle, and now we are displaying some signs that we might not be, and they are freaked out a little bit by it…. So, no World Magazine, Charismanews, Christian Post, and whoever else is talking about this… Gungor is not, and has never been a fundamentalist band seeking to spread young earth, biblical literalism across the planet.”

Now, four years later, the Gungors’ faith journey continues, as does the criticism. But having freed themselves from orthodox Christian labels and expectations, the Gungors say they’ve never been happier, less fearful and felt more free.

“We were basically tossed out of the tribe. It was all really hurtful. – Lisa Gungor

And, as co-host of The Liturgist Podcast, Michael and his partner “Science Mike” have gathered an online community of a whopping 250,00 subscribers, in a fortnightly conversation about science, faith and culture. Online reviews from the podcast’s listeners explain its appeal.

“The Liturgists is a place of belonging for those of us skeptical, burnt out on evangelical Christianity, and longing for a place of open and honest discussion. There’s so much more to this podcast, it is healing and hopeful,” writes one listener.

Another says, “As a recovering Bible College graduate the invitation to join others in their doubt has reinvigorated my withered faith. I have been introduced to so many great thinkers within the church through your work and it has reminded me why I wanted to study the Bible in the first place.”

Yet another writes, “As someone who has a complicated history with her Christian faith, this is one of the few Christian podcasts that really speaks to me. It gives me hope to hear the hosts talk about their experiences with faith and doubt, topics which so many Christians seem to either shy away from, or rely on canned answers and platitudes to explain away.”

“It’s an interesting group of people. [Science] Mike and I are biased, I’m sure, in thinking that our that our tribe is the best in the world,” Michael laughs.

“But, I mean, it’s just a strange group of people because we have as many about as many evangelical Christians as we have atheists in the same space. Which is bizarre, right? I mean, where does that exist elsewhere in the world we have? … people that disagree all the time, but for some reason it’s this really thoughtful, intelligent, heart-full, generous, ‘come in, it’s OK to disagree’.

“It’s just a strange group of people because we have as many about as many evangelical Christians as we have atheists in the same space.” – Michael Gungor

“And that’s why we started it,” Michael explains. “I didn’t find the need to hold on to the unbelief (if that makes any sense), I was able to kind of let go to mystery and eventually like re-integrate the language that I had grown up with of God and Jesus and Christ and all the things, but it just was not as close-fisted anymore. And then that led to the work with Liturgists.”

“The Christian faith taught me that to leave the 99 for the one is a beautiful thing.” – Michael Gungor

Michael doesn’t attend church anymore, but tells me about their recent visit to a church in Los Angeles. The couple sat at the back and Michael remembered that when he was a worship leader, he would look at the people in the back rows and think “these guys don’t get it.”

“Now I’m like ‘these are my people!’ you know? People that don’t know whether they buy any of this stuff … people that are on the margins of what’s happening.”

“I’m always happy – not happy, I’m willing – to leave the power centre. And it’s gotten us in trouble. And it’s lost us a lot of money and popularity and whatever through the years, to say things that are not acceptable to say, but I think the Christian faith taught me that to leave the 99 for the one is a beautiful thing.

“So I hope to aim our music at those who feel like ‘the one’, you know? Who feel like they don’t belong, feel like they don’t know exactly what they think about things. And I just I love looking at them in the eye and saying, ‘You’re OK. You’re welcome. You’re beautiful. You’re loved.’”

Whether the Gungors fit the definition of orthodox Christianity or not these days is unclear. However, what is clear is they’ve built out a kind of “halfway-house” for Christians who are looking for a safe place to wrestle with their faith.

Some of those Christians might eventually walk away from Christ, in much the same way that some of Jesus’ own disciples who were present when he gave the Great Commission in Matthew 28, walked away in doubt. Yet for some Christians who are facing what St John of the Cross’s famously termed “the dark night of the soul,” the place the Gungors have carved out is evidently – and paradoxically – exactly what they need to hold on to their Christian faith.

Some would even go so far as to say that Christianity could do with more “halfway-house builders” like the mysterious Gungors.