Friday, October 25, 2013

GOING FISHIN' (for servant leaders)



When I read the stories about Jesus taking the disciples fishing, I wonder how the Nazarene feels about people who aren't into fishing. One night on our way to DC I spent an hour wandering around a Cabela's store in West Virginia. I felt like an intruder. My ride of choice is a Miata and not a truck. When I go hunting, it is for a book or an obscure rhythm & blues record or the world's best pork, hard shell taco.

Jesus and his friends went fishing every chance they got, but my last real fishing trip in Alaska ended with a buddy taking shots at salmon with his .22 as we stood by the river. (Should I be telling you this?) I've caught some bluegill, a smallmouth bass, and even helped pull in a whale, but I'm not a fisherman.

And yet...and yet...I'm still fishing. The last several weeks I have been-along with some others on the Lay Leadership Team-making phone calls to people in whom we see a passion for Christ and leadership gifts. I've been sitting down with people asking them to tell me their story. I want to know what they are good at, what strengths they have, and what kinds of Kingdom tasks would energize them.

These have been wonderful conversations! Every single last one has been a blessing. Each and every one of us has an amazing, unique story, you know?

Some say "yes" right away. Some say, "Can I give you an answer later?" One friend said, "I'm not so interested in what you're asking me to do, but I love to bring people together. Create moments where people can connect and become a community." I sat back, sipped my Diet Coke, and then said, "I believe God wants you to help us form a 'Party Team' that will organize a couple of big events each year when we all can come together!" And some say, "This conversation has been so good...but I need to say 'no' right now." So you never know how these conversations are going to go!

You see we're not trying to push people into a "slot." We want to know who people are, we want to know what people care about and we want to know where people's strengths and weaknesses are so that the serving/leadership place is right.

People have asked why we are doing it this way at FUMCB/The Open Door. My response is always the same.

First, we want people to be engaged, proactive leaders. Not reluctant servants who don't really have a passion for their area of service and need to be nudged forward.

Second, we want people to be doing something that energizes them and brings them joy. (Serving as a leader or team member in the church should not drain people of joy, steal their faith, and cause them to love Christ's church less!)

Third, what we are trying to do in the world is important. Lives, communities and nations hang in the balance. As imperfect as it is, the local church is the hope of the world. So God's people deserve creative, gifted, committed, engaged lay leaders!

If we haven't gotten to you, and you would like to see where God could use you in this world-changing, community-blessing community, please call us.

I'm not a fisherman. But I love-love!-inviting people into the adventure of servant leadership. So maybe in my own way I'm standing knee deep in God's mountain stream, reading the water and the light and the rocks, and trying to catch the brown trout....that is you!

In Christ and for Christ,

Mark

Friday, October 18, 2013

PUTTING FAITH INTO ACTION



"He handed out gifts of apostle, prophet, evangelist, and pastor-teacher to train Christians in skilled servant work, working within Christ's body, the church, until we're all moving rhythmically and easily with each other, efficient and graceful in response to God's Son, fully mature adults, fully developed within and without, fully alive like Christ."  
-(Ephesians 4:11-12, The Message)

Dear Friends,

Whether we think about it or not, each of us has the opportunity to contribute every day to God's kingdom. In small ways and big ways, at home and at work, with our friends and with our family, we can act on our faith in accordance with God's gifts to us.

In fact, putting faith into action is a distinctive part of our Methodist tradition and is woven into the fabric of First Church/The Open Door. The Interfaith Winter Shelter, Habitat builds, youth mission trips, and the Wednesday Food Pantry are all examples of our church putting faith into action. But, we know such good works are only possible because of the individual commitment of each and every one of us.

Paul talks about this with the early church. In Ephesians 4:12, he says that God gave each of us different gifts "for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ." Paul understood that for the early church to grow, each of Christ's followers would need to grow strong in faith, and work together, to build up Christ's body on earth. That's still true today - we're called to be bodybuilders for Christ!

On Sunday, October 20th, we will kick off this year's annual stewardship campaign - Body Building - with a four-week sermon series about building up the Body of Christ: Keep At It (Oct. 20), All Together Now (Oct. 27), Adding Muscle (Nov. 3), and Forget the Competition (Nov. 10). Through this series we'll be exploring how to strengthen our personal faith and build up the ministries of our church.

On November 10th you will be asked to support building the Body of Christ by pledging your annual financial commitment to the church's work for calendar year 2014. Based on these pledges, we will develop our calendar year 2014 budget, and thus map out the scope of our work through First Church/The Open Door for the coming year.

Thank you in advance for your prayerful consideration of this important decision in your spiritual life, the life of the church and in the lives of all those we serve.

In Christ and for Christ,
Mark 

Friday, October 11, 2013

BIG "G" or little "g?"


 
There is a part of the Joshua story in the Hebrew Bible that should be "R-rated" for violence. Some of it is, truthfully, tough to stomach.

However, there is a moment in Chapter 24 that haunts me. Joshua's life is coming to an end and he calls the people of God together. After 40 years of wandering in the wilderness they are now settling in the Promised Land.

The veteran leader starts telling stories about how the LORD God YHWH has been with them. Good leaders are, generally, good story tellers. Joshua tells the people how God was with Abram and Sarai on the journey to Canaan from the Euphrates. He reminds them that God sent Moses and Aaron to lead them out of Egyptian bondage. Joshua recalls how God gave the people strength when they faced the entrenched fortress city of Jericho.

Joshua then asks the people to choose which God they will follow. This isn't a "both/and" moment. This is an "either/or" moment. He tells the people to throw away the familiar gods their ancestors worshiped so they can serve the LORD "with all faithfulness."

Our tendency is to want to add the LORD God to a life filled with other loves and allegiances (career, family, power, control, money, nation, religious tradition). We want to have a god (little g) who fits in with the other priorities and likes and fears and addictions we already have. We don't want an upper case God who insists that life is best when we shape all of life around that God's will and way. Life can become a kind of "theological fruit of the month club" where we exchange one god for another based on the date and time and situation. But God has this irritating habit of insisting on being first. "You shall have no other gods before me," Exodus 20:3 says.

The reason God insists on that, I would dare to say, is not because God has ego issues, but because God knows when we worship a golden calf (or golden family, golden career, golden 401.k, golden religion, golden empire, etc.) we wreck ourselves and others.

Someone sent us a question and asked this: "Will our church budget be a 'upper case G God' budget or a 'lower case g god' budget?" I think they are asking if we will be a community that has a God-sized reach, that is robust and strong and reaching out and serving and transforming the world, or will we just try to maintain what we are doing...serving only the people already here?

How that question gets answered is up to you...it's up to each one of us. Because, you see, how we give to God will determine what kind of budget we will have, what kind of outreach we will have, what kinds of people we will reach for God.

The Bloomington Sandwich Company fills up with college students for Jubilee. That's great...and it will cost more money as we reach more students. The Wednesday Pantry will be feeding more people, and that will cost more money. The Emergency Assistance will be key in the months to come, and that will cost more money. We are offering more growth opportunities to our leaders, the FCJ experience is moving on, and both will cost more money. Our Trustees are beginning to look at long deferred maintenance issues with this historic building, and that will cost more money. There is a United Methodist ministry to the poor in Nome, Alaska...and I would love for us to help, but that will cost money. A friend has told me about a great need for clean water wells in Africa. I may join him on a mission trip in February. If we start drilling wells in Africa, that will cost more money.

Who are we?

What will we do?

How will we give?

And will our god be a "lower case g" god or will we throw our hearts and lives and minds (and money) behind an "upper case G" God?

Somehow all those questions are tied together.


In Christ and for Christ,

Mark 

Friday, October 4, 2013

THE STUFF JESUS TALKED ABOUT SO MUCH



Jesus talked more about money and possessions than anything besides the kingdom of God. Why? Because he loves us, and he knows that the handling of money and possessions can be a challenge for us!

The Carpenter knows that many of us need help in simplifying our financial lives, avoiding debt, living below our income level, and seeing to it that our use of money lines up with our priorities/life mission. Is our money going to the things that matter most to us (and God)?

Last weekend those of you in worship heard an extraordinary personal witness from Jonathan P. about his own journey. At the end of his "St. Louis Story" he shared some basic words about steps to financial freedom. Here is the outline of those steps:

Six Steps to Financial Freedom
Jonathan D. P.

REVIEW. How did you spend your money last month? Put your spending into broad categories like: housing; groceries; clothing; utilities; vehicles (including gas and maintenance); restaurants and entertainment; discretionary spending; savings and retirement; charitable giving.

ANALYZE. What percentage of your money goes to each of those categories? Do those categories align with your heart? If not, then admit that your money and your heart are not aligned.

PRAY. It takes courage to admit your heart and your money are not aligned. It takes courage to go against the grain of society. It takes more courage to do something about it. The kind of courage that only God can provide. The kind of courage that Jesus had.

PLAN. What would your finances look like if you lived on 80% of your income, saved 10%, and gave 10% away? Develop a plan to get there, and involve others in developing that plan. What radical changes might you need to make? Sell a house? Make do with one car? Make do with no car and ride a bike? There are several good faith-based money management programs that can guide you, but remember that ultimately it is YOU who has the power to control your own finances.

SHARE, REVIEW, AND ADJUST. Share the plan with others you trust and that can help hold you accountable. Review your plan regularly to help keep you on target. Adjust your plan as circumstances change. 

CELEBRATE!!! For small things like not eating out for a week and for big things like paying off your credit card debt. The most important reason of all to celebrate is that you are freeing yourself from financial bondage so that you can do God's work and live out the plan he has for you.

+++++

Following the worship services people were emailing me and saying things like "in 30 years of worship here I have never heard this kind of honesty and open sharing." Jonathan said his email inbox filled up quickly with words of appreciation and people admitting they need help.

The leaders of our church have been praying about offering some kind of faith-based financial management seminar designed to help people be good stewards and financially healthy. Watch for more information about that.

I'm praying that we, as a Jesus community, will let God work with us in how we see
-and handle- money and possessions so that we (unlike the man Jesus met on the road in Mark 10) can be free to live and follow!

In Christ and for Christ,

Mark