Father, Son, and Holy Spirit

Sunday, June 19, 2011

On this Trinity Sunday, here is a hymn we sang at church this morning that praises God in beautiful verse:

We believe in one true God, Father Son, and Holy Ghost,
ever present help in need, praised by all the heavenly host;
by whose mighty power alone all is made and wrought and done.


We believe in Jesus Christ, Son of God and Mary's Son,
who descended from his throne and for us salvation won;
by whose cross and death are we rescued from sin's misery.


We confess the Holy Ghost, who from both fore'er proceeds;
who upholds and comforts us in all trials, fears, and needs.
Blest and Holy Trinity, praise forever be to thee!

- By Tobias Clausnitzer (1668);
trans. Catherine Winkworth (1863)

[The hymn is #85 in the United Methodist Hymnal.]

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Faith: Preach it, or live it!

Friday, June 17, 2011

Coach Brad Steves [Source: Wikipedia]
A news story caught my eye over the past few days. It may suggest something about the current state of Methodism -- or at least that Methodism with which I am connected. But it certainly says something about the media perception of "respectable Christianity" in the broader culture. I'll cite the story first and then offer comments.

My interest is in a story by Robert King of the Indianapolis Star on Coach Brad Stevens of Butler University, the  34-year old basketball coach who has taken the Butler Bulldogs to the NCAA final each of the past two years.

King's article looks at Coach Stevens' faith, which was formed during his childhood at the United Methodist congregation in Zionsville, Indiana. The coach remains a committed Christian and member of St. Luke's UMC in Indianapolis. He inspires his team and his community with his character, and he expresses his faith in practically everything about the way he lives his life. In general King's story is a wonderful profile of a man who, by all accounts, is exemplary. (I've seen other articles online in the past about Stevens' faith, including this one on the UMC's website and this wonderful anecdote by blogger John Meunier; all of them have been complimentary without reserve.)

What gets me is the way in which Stevens is contrasted with former NFL coach Tony Dungy, who is well-known for being outspoken about his own Christian faith and has become a prolific author and speaker on matters of faith and character since his retirement from coaching. (Dungy is also well-known to the reading audience of King's Indianapolis Star, of course, since he coached the Indianapolis Colts for several years.) In presenting Brad Stevens' approach to the practice of his faith, King states that the Butler coach "has always thought faith should be something that's lived out, rather than talked up." But the journalist is not alone in expressing those views: both Judith Cebula of Butler University and the Rev. Kent Millard (Stevens' pastor) are quoted making statements later in the article that support King's initial contrast of Dungy and Stevens.

This sort of thing punches my buttons -- and here I'm not talking about Cebula or Millard, who could have been quoted out of context and used to support a point-of-view the article's author (King) was wanting to advance regardless of their own sentiments. I'm also not talking about Brad Stevens for that matter, who makes no statement at all in the article to support the negative connotations that King is applying to those (like Dungy) who speak openly and publicly about their faith. I'm talking about Robert King himself, who has set up the entire profile of Stevens as based on a view with which he implicitly expects us to sympathize - i.e., that those who are outspoken (read: "preachy") about their faith are uncouth and probably somewhat inauthentic, since clearly they only care about "talking up" their faith instead of living it out. The positive converse, of course, is the humble and quiet approach of Stevens, who leads by example and supposedly won't make anyone uncomfortable at a dinner party by bringing Jesus into the conversation.

If you read King's article and follow what I'm saying here, you can start to see how unfortunate this sort of thing is. First - and most important - it would be entirely possible to profile the faith and character of Brad Stevens on its own merits. That is, after a fashion, what both the other stories I cite above are doing from UMC.org and Meunier's blog. And anyway, the fact that there are other stories are out there about Stevens' faith indicates he's not as quiet about it as King would have us believe: Stevens sat for the interview with the UMC.org author, he's noted in Meunier's post that he was appearing in two services at his home church to be recognized for his accomplishments with the Bulldogs, and the photo attached to King's own article in the Star is of Stevens speaking before his congregation on behalf of his church's capital campaign. Those might not combine to add up to "preachy," but I wouldn't exactly call them "quiet" either.

Second, and most disappointingly, Tony Dungy is used as a complete foil in the article. There is nothing presented as evidence to suggest that Dungy is a hypocritical or inauthentic Christian. There is only the vague suggestion that Dungy's more vocal approach to his faith is obviously less desirable. That's unfair to Dungy, perhaps inaccurate to Stevens, and unnecessary in general. If you want to state that Tony Dungy is a loudmouth hypocrite, then state it and offer your reasons. If you want to make the case that Christians are tolerable when they don't offend polite society, then make it. But don't use a man like Dungy as a foil to shine a positive light on someone else. Both Dungy and Stevens seem to be positive role models and faithful Christians, each in his own way. Can't you just let them?

Third, the tack taken by Robert King here represents one of the most oft-cited and most erroneous opinions about religious faith. He's implying that you can either preach it or live it, but not both. It is clear what he favors, and that's why I said at the outset that his article is offering us a representative commentary on the media's view of Christianity in broader American culture. It is okay so long as it is so unobtrusive as to be almost unnoticeable; in fact, that's when we'll praise it. The media is tolerant of Christians when it doesn't see them as threatening in anyway. It wants a Christianity that equates to good, harmless American citizenship and acceptance of the values of a liberal democratic society. Giving voice to faith is what makes it start to seem threatening, and that's when the forces of culture bear down with persecution and, ultimately, with violence. If you don't believe me, read the Acts of the Apostles.

Don't mistake me. I'm not being critical of Brad Stevens or the way he goes about the practice of his faith. I admire the man, and I suspect his character and witness are far superior to my own. I'm simply trying to point out a phenomenon that appears again and again at the intersection between the church and the culture. In the end, it can never be either "preach it" or "live it." It has to be both. Those who preach but don't follow up their words with deeds are hypocrites and liars. And those who live their faith but are unwilling to give voice to it are cowards who are ashamed of the gospel by which they claim to abide. The culture will always try to domesticate the church, and for that reason its efforts must be vigilantly pointed out for what they are and resisted at every turn.

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Book signing in Raleigh, NC

Thursday, June 16, 2011

The good folks at Cokesbury have arranged another book signing event for me to sign copies of Generation Rising: A Future with Hope for the United Methodist Church.

This book signing will be tomorrow (Friday, June 17th) at the North Carolina Annual Conference in Raleigh, NC.

I'll be at annual conference signing copies of Generation Rising from 12 noon to 2 pm at the Raleigh Convention Center at 500 Salisbury Street, Raleigh, NC 27601.

So if you are going to be at annual conference tomorrow - or even if you are just in the area - please stop by!

UPDATE: I believe the Cokesbury book signing is going to be in the Marriott Hotel next to the Convention Center. I've not been there before, so I don't know if the hotel is connected to it or not. But the Cokesbury representative did let me know that the book signing would be in the 'congressional room' of the hotel.

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Voting for JC delegates

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Here are the elected delegates from the Arkansas Annual Conference for the 2012 South Central Jurisdictional Conference in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma:

Clergy delegates
Rev. C.E. McAdoo
Rev. Michael Roberts
Rev. Roy Smith
Rev. Aubrietta Jones
Rev. Kurt Boggan
Rev. Wes Hilliard
Rev. Andrew Thompson (alternate)
Rev. David Bush (alternate)
Rev. Pam Estes (alternate)

Lay delegates
Deborah Bell
Todd Burris
Jay Clark
Sandy Smith
Brian Swain
John Crawford
Brenda Norwood (alternate)
Brandon Bates (alternate)
Natalie Clark (alternate)

A personal note: I was elected an alternate delegate to Jurisdictional Conference on the final ballot of voting this afternoon. I am honored by the confidence shown in me by my clergy colleagues in the annual conference, and I will endeavor to serve faithfully in all my duties.

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Voting for GC delegates

We are in our final day of conferencing at the Arkansas Annual Conference in Hot Springs, Arkansas. This is the year we elect delegates to next year's General and Jurisdictional Conferences. That means we'll remain in session until the voting is completed - a very open-ended process!

The General Conference delegates for both clergy and laity have been selected, so we'll now move on to the election of delegates to Jurisdictional Conference. Here are the six clergy delegates who have been chosen to attend the General Conference next year in Tampa, Florida:

Rev. Rodney Steele (lead clergy delegate)
Dr. Rebekah Miles
Rev. Susan Ledbetter
Rev. Ronnie Miller-Yow
Rev. Mackey Yokem
Rev. John Miles II

I think this is a very strong delegation. I don't know whether Rodney Steele will stand for election to the episcopacy, but I certainly hope he'll consider it strongly. He would make an excellent bishop.

And then here are the lay delegates who have been selected to represent the annual conference next year in Tampa:

Asa Whitaker (lead lay delegate)
Carole Teague
Karon Mann
Sarah Steele
Clefton Vaughan
Karen Millar

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[Note: I have edited this post to add the lay delegates to General Conference]

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The need for 'vital congregations'

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

I haven't written a whole lot up to this point about the Call to Action report that appeared last fall and offers a plan for reordering certain aspects of the organization and ministry of the United Methodist Church. That neglect has been corrected in part through my new column in the United Methodist Reporter.

A steering team for the Call to Action project was created by the Council of Bishops and the Connectional Table of the UMC. That group produced the Call to Action report late last year, which advocates for the reordering of the life of the church so that we can better pursue our collective mission and ministry.

(You can find out more about Call to Action at this weblink.)

One of the chief areas of focus for the Call To Action steering team was the need to locate the heart of the church's ministry in what the report calls "vital congregations." It's that idea that I am trying to explore in my current column, and I think the CTA steering team was right to identify it as an area of great importance.

Have you read the Call to Action report? I'd enjoy hearing the thoughts and opinions of others about its strengths and weaknesses.

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Upper Room Disciplines

Saturday, June 04, 2011

A new devotional for 2012 has just come out from the Upper Room, and I wanted to let my readers know about it. The volume is the edition of the Upper Room Disciplines for 2012. I had the opportunity to contribute a week's worth of devotions for next year's Disciplines, which was an undertaking that I enjoyed a great deal.

The Disciplines is a devotional that Upper Room publishes each year that follows the lectionary and has meditations for every day of the year. You can think of it as a more in-depth version of the bi-monthly Upper Room devotional guide that many people are familiar with from their local churches. The difference with the Disciplines volume is that it comes in a single binding that covers the devotional readings for the entire year, and that its meditations are intended to be aimed at those who are more mature in their faith and are ready for spiritual reflection at a deeper level.

I plan on using the 2012 Disciplines as my own daily devotional reading next year. I wholeheartedly recommend it for anyone who would like to engage good spiritual writing in conjunction with the lectionary. You can get the 2012 Disciplines via Amazon at this link, or through Cokesbury's online store.

Oh, and if you're interested, I wrote the meditations for August 6-12, which are found on pages 231-237 of the guide.

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Book signing event

Friday, June 03, 2011

Quick notice: I will be signing copies of Generation Rising: A Future with Hope for the United Methodist Church at the Arkansas Annual Conference session this coming Monday afternoon, June 6th.

The book signing will take place from 1:00 to 2:15 p.m. at the Cokesbury book display, which coincides with the lunch break. So if you plan to be at annual conference (or in the Hot Springs area) and would like a signed copy of the book, please stop by!

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Wesley on true faith

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

I'm writing a dissertation at present, which I find to be exciting and challenging and frustrating all at once. It is, as all dissertations are, a huge undertaking. But I'm also researching and writing about a topic I care deeply about and that I think will drive the academic & ecclesiastical writing that I'll do for years to come. So it is a wonderful undertaking, if a somewhat daunting one.

I mention the dissertation because a part of my research has been to try and 'get inside' the theological vocabulary of John Wesley (whose doctrine of sanctification is the dissertation's general subject area).

One such item of Wesley's theological vocabulary is the concept of faith. That's a word that, in contemporary Christianity, is typically treated as synonymous with belief. But read what Wesley says about those terms in the following passage:

"We must cry aloud to every penitent sinner, 'Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved.' But at the same time we must take care to let all men know we esteem no faith but that 'which worketh by love'; and that we are not 'saved by faith' unless so far as we are delivered from the power as well as the guilt of sin. And when we say, 'Believe, and thou shalt be saved,' we do not mean, 'Believe, and thou shalt step from sin to heaven, without any holiness coming between, faith supplying the place of holiness;' but, believe and thou shalt be holy; believe in the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt have peace and power together. Thou shalt have power form him in whom thou believest to trample sin under thy feet; power to love the Lord thy God with all they heart, and to serve him with all thy strength. Thou shalt have power 'by patient continuance in well-doing to 'seek for glory and honour and immortality'. Thou shalt both 'do and teach' all the commandments of God, from the least even to the greatest. Thou shalt teach them by thy life as well as thy words, and so 'be called great in the kingdom of heaven'.

- John Wesley, "Upon our Lord's Sermon on the Mount, V," Par.III.9, in The Bicentennial Edition of the Works of John Wesley, Vol. 1, Pgs. 559-560.

His account of faith seems to me to be a deeper, fuller, and even more biblical understanding than that which gets preached in many Methodist pulpits today. In fact, when I read it, I found myself wondering whether I had ever preached a doctrine of faith in Jesus Christ that was as comprehensive as the one Wesley is talking about above - one that is inclusive of an embodied holiness, obedience, and love. I suspect that I have not, and the thought leaves me feeling very convicted.

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