Elizabeth and all:
I can only think of one preacher who ever REALLY publically humiliated me...and from what I heard his wife told him that he should stop--which he did, so I will not mention his name here.
As for Al's request for fantasy doorkeepers, I think they definitely should be allowed.
I might even be one myself, seeing that I never "made it" to "real" doorkeeper.
I probably would have scared people off from the meetings.
And for scoring for these fantasy doorkeepers:
10 points for the front door check-in position...
20 points for exhibiting special wisdom in determining whether visitors would defile the meeting or not....
10 more points if visitors are admitted and sit where they are shown....20 if this is a successful sister seating.
30 points if the visitors stay for all worship....
30 more points if the visitors stay for the entire morning meeting....
BONUS! 150 extra points if the experience was so good that the visitors came back for the afternoon meeting.
(doorkeeper scores points based on HIS visitor contact skills, and continues to score points based on what that visitor does throughout the assembly day as a result of his (the doorkeepers) initial interaction with said visitor. NOTE: the above scores are to be multiplied by the number of visitors the doorkeeper "intakes" and "processes").
The doorkeeper(s) on seating can take their share of the intake doorkeeper's points--just divide by number of doorkeepers performing that function.
Those on the back door get 30 points automatically no matter what, because:
a) it is a thankless job
b) if anybody would try to do a sneak attack on the meeting, the backdoor doorkeeper would be right in line for it
c) any stray emissions of gas would waft their way back to his area
Also, 30 extra points per doorkeeper for a Lord's supper procession successfully conducted.
Oh, and I forgot about the person giving the message for the Lord's supper:
0-20 points for a Lord's supper message from a doorkeeper.
-40 to 40 points for a Lord's supper message from a leading brother or elder.
-120 to 120 points for a Lord's supper message from GG, unless he has a special burden for the morning, in which case normal scoring is suspended, because there can be no quantification of such out-of-control behavior.....MAYBE one can just write it off (or any GG day--morning, noon and night) as negative googol (which is 10 to the 100th power, I believe).
And, for the "garden variety" brother delivering a Lord's supper message: 0-120 points.
No negative here, because one must have a fair amount of gumption to tell a whole congregation to be seated and then walk up to the microphone to address them about something as important as the Lord's supper, if one is not recognized as being "anything" in the assembly. 0 points is the lowest, because however ineffective the message might be, given that the said brother is sound in doctrine and life, his bravery in getting up will cancel out a lame message. The congregation will definitely break even.
I give these scores from the perspective of one who was in the Fullerton Assembly for 16 years, during a time when it was as large as it would ever be. I realize that people from Champaign, Springfield, Tuscola or Spokane (most any assembly where the population was under 50) may find this cumbersome.
Perhaps we can have different leagues.....bear in mind that these numbers are pre- 01-19-03; many assemblies mentioned below do not even exist anymore (which doesn't matter; after all, this IS fantasy):
the 'A' league for groups like Calgary, Madison, Spokane, and Tuscola (under 50 members)
the 'AA' league for groups like Huntington Beach, Arcata, San Francisco and Placentia (50-100 members)
the 'AAA' league for groups like Fullerton and Forest Park (Chicago area) (over 100 members)
I hope this isn't too complicated, and would appreciate any contributions. I'm not really a sports fan, but I felt this would be some good fun to have on the forum. We were so often so serious in the old assembly about things that it was twisted. Even the priests in the Old Testament partook of the offering as part of their provision from the Lord. As far as I could tell, the poor doorkeepers never got a chance to gnaw on the bread leavings from the Lord's supper during their largely uneventful vigils out of sight of the congregation.
(An aside on this: a brother that I used to live with had me "go beyond the call of duty" during a seminar to make sure a meal in process was not burning or burning down the house, and I arrived back too late to partake of the bread, but he allowed me to partake thereof with the doorkeepers, whereupon one of the doorkeepers asked me "are you a doorkeeper"? The poor brother who allowed me thought he would be in trouble.....but that was the whole caste mindset. We were and are brothers in Christ....what difference when one partakes as long as it is in purity and godly sincerity?)
And one thing further that I might add: my own experience with doorkeepers on my first meeting was not memorable, but not negative. Any details in this setup here are gleanings from the writings of the experiences of others, or out of my sometimes twisted imagination, or even from observing things in Fullerton.
Matt