Friday, February 22, 2019

As General Conference Begins


This weekend, a special session of the General Conference of the United Methodist Church meets to discuss proposals for the future of the church.  As we have discussed at Kenton First, our disagreements, while accentuated by issues of sexuality, go much further than those issues.  While no one can see the future, it certainly looks more and more likely that whatever is decided or not decided at GC, the United Methodist Church as we know it will likely face some sort of split or schism.

For me, the United Methodist Church is not just a name on a building.  My grandfather was a United Methodist pastor.  His twin sister and her husband were United Methodist pastors.  My father is a United Methodist pastor.  My brother-in-law is a United Methodist pastor.  I was baptized in the United Methodist Church.  Through the connections in the United Methodist Church, I found the Caleb’s Men group that developed me as a disciple of Christ.  When I felt the call to ordained ministry, I considered other paths, but knew that my calling was in the United Methodist Church.  I fell in love with John Wesley’s standard sermons.  I still hold in my office a list that tracks my ordination back to John Wesley.  As much as the United Methodist Church can frustrate and anger me, I am 100% committed to the United Methodist Church that ordained me and set me apart for vocational ministry.

As I look to the future and know that the church I am committed to may not exist in the next few years, I am absolutely devastated.  It pains me that I see scenarios where I may have to choose a future down another path or in another denomination.  I fear that the church I love to serve, Kenton First United Methodist Church, may not see its future down that same path that I see mine.  The possibilities that may arise are painful, frightening, and daunting, to say the least.

At the same time, this is a glorious reminder that this path has never been about me.

Nor is it about you.

This has always been about God.  God created us.  God calls us into relationship with God.  God created the church and called it to make disciples of Jesus Christ.

When people approach me and complain that worship is not the way they prefer, I often try to gently remind them that worship is not about them.  When people complain the church is not doing enough to serve them, I try to gently remind them that it has never been the mission of the church to serve them.  It has always been the mission of the church to make disciples of Jesus Christ (for the transformation of the world).  That means that sometimes we sacrifice our favorite worship, our favorite programs, our power and influence to serve God.  Because it is never about us, but about what God wants to do in us and through us.

Perhaps in the midst of this conflict of General Conference, God is gently reminding me that this church has never been about me.

In all of this conflict, we can remember that it is not about us.  It has never been about us.  While decisions beyond our control may bring the United Methodist Church into conflict, it remains not about us.  It remains about what God wants to do in us and through us.

In the months to come, there may be pain and difficulties.  Things may not go as we like.  But remember—it has never been the mission of Kenton First United Methodist Church to serve us, make us happy, and increase our comfort.  It remains the mission of the church—no matter what name may be on the sign—to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world.

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