Wednesday, June 13, 2012

From the Moderator's Desk...


Rev. David Lee, who serves the First Church in Nitro, wrote a thought-provoking letter to the Council about our current transition and the future of the church. While it was written in the context of Council business, I think it speaks to the larger church context as well. I asked Dave for permission to share it, which he granted. Please take a few minutes to read his thoughts and respond with your own. May God bless you & yours! 
                                     --Peace, Rev. Stephen Baldwin (Moderator, Presbytery of WV) 





To the members of the Council, Presbytery of West Virginia

Grace and peace,

            As we saw on Thursday at the meeting of Council in Elkins, many of the conversations on our docket overlap. (And thank you, George, for allowing us to have the free-wheeling conversation that emerged, rather than constraining it to specific items of business!) Conversations about ministries become conversations about finances become conversations about futuring become plans or dreams or questions or... This felt very healthy and good to me, and I am grateful to have been a part of it today.

            It spurred me to thinking. As chair of the Finance & Development Committee, I have been assigned by the Presbytery to be part of the Negotiating Team, working with congregations seeking dismissal from our presbytery and denomination. So far, we have been working with pastors whom I know fairly well and count as friends. I appreciate their integrity that insists that they wrestle with hard questions and live out difficult answers. I also begin to see that it is not those pastors or churches who are leaving the PC(USA) but it is the PC(USA) who is leaving them.

            Your first reaction to that claim might be denial, or an immediate raising of defenses. Believe me, I understand... It is a very uncomfortable way to phrase what is already a highly charged situation. But it is NOT meant as a condemnation, or an attack. Instead, it is meant as an affirmation - even, dare I say it, a celebration. I believe that it opens up both possibilities and perspectives that otherwise would not be available. Please let me try to explain...

            The PC(USA) is, by the whole culture of its ongoing transformation, separating itself from the vast majority of the Body of Christ, both historically and globally. Supporters of the transformation would probably call it prophetic; opponents may call it apostate. I say that it simply is what is. Whether it is foolishness or fearlessness is something that only God can determine, and God seems to be in favor of revealing that information over the course of time. So regardless of personal opinions, theologies and politics, it is the reality - not only of the present but of the immediate future as well.

            I believe that this gives the PC(USA) and the PWV an opportunity to reinterpret their ministry and role in the world in a new (renewed?) and powerful way. We are PIONEERS... going where we (and almost everyone else) have never been before. If there are those who do not feel the call to leave the settled lands for new frontiers, there is no reason to punish them for their decision: they would hardly make ideal companions on the journey if they were coerced into it. Let them stay home with your blessing - where do you think the settlers who ultimately will follow you will be coming from?

            We are PIONEERS. This means that we are streamlining almost every aspect of our common life. When it is time to load the Conestoga, the whole house isn't going to fit. Pioneers pack only what they need, with the hope and faith that a time will come when they can settle again, and those creature comforts can be reintroduced into their lives. Until then, they take on only what is absolutely necessary. This is not the same as survival thinking. In survival thinking, a person (or church, or presbytery) spares every resource it can in order to prolong the dying process. In pioneer thinking, a person spares every unneeded resource while pouring every needed resource on moving forward. In survival thinking, everyone is a patient - a more or less inactive observer - except for the caregiver(s). In pioneer thinking, there are no observers: everyone is expected and required to commit themselves to the forward progress of the 'wagon train' or caravan. The entire journey is done with the firm expectation that we will reach a destination, as yet unknown, where we will settle and grow and flourish.

            I don't (usually) pretend to be omniscient. It may be that the naysayers and settlers are correct, and that the PC(USA) will wither into obscurity, living on only as a footnote to church history. But it may well be that they are short-sighted, and that the glory of the latter temple will indeed be greater than that of the former if we stay the course, pay the price and commit ourselves whole-heartedly to the task we believe that we have been given. It may be faithful to hold on to what we have been given, but it is faith-filled to dare to leave behind what has become cramped and crowded, where there is no room or freedom to live, love and serve in the way that we believe God has called us to do.

            As we, as a Council and as a Presbytery, go through this time of transition and cultural transformation, it is my hope and prayer that we will face the challenges and changes in the spirit of pioneers: willingly laying aside things that we once cherished in strong, sure hope of attaining something even more worthwhile. Perhaps we will have to make some difficult financial choices. Perhaps we will let go of some things we have done, not because we haven't done them well or seen blessing from them but because they just won't fit into the wagon. But if we can do this with the optimism and courage of pioneers, even the hardships become a part of the story of God's ultimate blessing.

            Thanks for letting me think out loud here. I pray that I haven't offended anyone, and that you will find grace enough to forgive me if I have.


Dave Lee

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