Wednesday, May 25, 2011

NUDGE! - What if?

Leonard Sweet recently pointed out to me that John Wesley was on the cutting edge of technology during his day.  Wesley, according to Sweet, was an early adopter of a new means of mass communication that would bring learning and education to the people, burgeoning a growing middle class born out of the industrial revolution, and paving the way for our modern information society where information and education was no longer the purview of a lofty few.  Wesley was one of the first to embrace this cutting edge technology over the objections of more than a few of his pastors.  The technology?  The Book.  Wesley was committed to his pastors READING and creating an educated informed laity.  And so began the people called Methodists’ early commitment to reading and in so doing to the Methodist Publishing house and educational institutions throughout the new world.  Methodists blazed the trail in the wilderness of America and wherever they went, they left behind schools, hospitals and educated masses.  And they thus changed America’s destiny.  


There is great angst about the future of the United Methodist Church in America as we look to this annual conference and to the General Conference of 2012 and perhaps rightly so.  But in looking for solutions we need only look back to the principles that drove our early movement.  We were a people that thought outside of the box and outside of the four walls of the church.  We were a clergy that were sent and a people that went.  We started schools and colleges, hospitals and seminaries.  We planted them in far off outpost of the new nation in places others were not yet willing to go.  We were the trail blazers, the early adopters and adapters, the innovators and the daring.  The first to go, the last to leave and the radical revolutionaries of the day.  The early circuit riders planted hundreds of new churches in new communities.  We did church in new ways. Totally new forms were birthed, including the camp meeting movement that led to the Second Great Awakening.  We were a movement!  A movement that at once called for BOTH a fierce commitment to personal holiness AND to social holiness.  We believed that it mattered BOTH how we lived our personal lives AND how we lived in community.  And we used the new technology of the book and the industrial printing press to spread the good news to all the world.  


What if?….What if we as Methodist became as committed to early adoption and innovation in new technologies and forms as we once were?  What if we created new ways of doing church or even doing the business of church and the connection that increased our economies of scale, leveraged technology, brought learning and training by the best thinkers and theologians of our day directly to the local laity, decreased cost and made us more effective, more flexible, more responsive, more organic, and hopefully more connected?  What if we recaptured the passion of a God called, annointed, Holy Spirit driven, movement that was committed to inviting and convincing ALL people to form a life changing relationship with Jesus Christ as Lord AND Savior, in the hopes that they would be “saved to the uttermost” and that they would be convinced to “go on to perfection”?  What if WE became more about those outside of the church than those of us in the church?  What if we could do this without abandoning any of our Doctrinal Heritage? What if we could see lives being changed and hearts being strangely warmed?  What if we could all sing, “My chains fell off; my heart was free. I rose, went forth and followed Thee?  What if…..?"

Stephen Spark, Lead Pastor, Indianola FUMC

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Holiness of Heart and Mind

A few years ago I preached a sermon called, Lives in Covenant - Holiness of Heart and Mind. It kicked off a four week series centered around what it means to be a covenant people. It lead towards a Wesley covenant renewal service. One of the emphases from that week was that we live lives striving for Holiness and that Holiness is only achieved, not through artificial surface showey piety, or right knowledge (orthodoxy), or even right practice or right living (orthopraxis), but is rather achieved through an overflowing and outflowing of love, for God, for oneself (properly understood) and for those around us, both those we are in covenant with and more importantly those that we are not. It is that love for one another that marks us as Christian and it is this passionately intense love that drives us on to perfection. How are you in your walk toward holiness? Are you going on towards perfection? Do you fully expect to be perfected in this life? Is the perfect love of God driving out all fear in your life? Are you seeing Christ more and more converting every part of your life and even the desires and instincts of your heart? This is what we Methodists believe is part of the Christian covenant. 
As we approach annual conference 2011, I am ever more convinced that we must live into the truth that we are a people that live in covenant.  We are people of THE Covenant.  We are to be a people of Holiness of Heart and Mind.  As we gather this year may our hearts overflow and outflow with love for God, ourselves (healthily), the people called Methodists and for, particularly, those that are outside a covenant relationship with Christ.  May God perfect us all in his great and rich love.

Monday, May 16, 2011

The New Blog is up and rolling!

I will be putting up content soon.