Archive - March, 2009

Church Planting

Yesterday the ELCA came out with an article yesterday talking about the importance of Church planing in the ELCA. The article highlighted a 2007 mission start in Lake Ann, Mich.  The church that started with nothing is now worshipping 160 people (mostly children) in an renovated firehouse garage.  They hope to have their own worship center by 2011.

The ELCA as a whole is really trying to think intentionally about the future and is doing it with church plants:

In 2008 the ELCA has identified 70 locations in more than 25 states to begin new congregations.  Fifty-seven of those are under way — 41 as congregations under development, and 16 as synodically authorized worshiping communities.  There are another 197 congregations under development that started in previous years in urban, suburban, rural and small-town settings.  Of the current congregations under development, about 2 percent are American Indian/Alaska Native, 47 percent European American, 1 percent Arab/Middle Eastern, 14 percent Asian/Pacific Islander, 14 percent African/African American/Black, 19 percent Hispanic/Latino and 3 percent are multicultural.  There’s one prison congregation and one maritime congregation under development.”

This brought me back to my final year of seminary.  I had some professors at the seminary who thought that I should be a church planter.  I thought about it and prayed about it and talked with my wife about it and we decided to go through the process.  I talked with my synod mission director and filled out the application.  I got a phone call that I had been accepted into the program!! I thought that was great and I was ready to go!  However, I was then told that I had to go through a number of interviews.  The interviews were based on what I had done, not what I know.  I thought that was a little strange — granted experience is important but I think that as a church we mainly do things on what we have done in the past and we stop trying to be innovative.  We stop trying to think outside the box in all aspects of ministry.  Instead of asking ourselves what we are doing and why we are doing it – we look back at last years newsletter and say “if it ain’t broke, why try and fix it?”  Is that the way we should be running our church’s?

Back to my experience — needless to say I was not “accepted” into the mission development program of the ELCA.  The reason they told me was that I did not have sufficient ministry experience to be a mission developer or church planter.  Experience?  I worked three years at a Lutheran Camp and two years as a youth minister before seminary, but that was not as ordained clergy.  So I did not have the same experiences as someone who is ordained and now that I have been working as an ordained pastor for the last 7 months I can say that I have learned many things and I have experienced things that I never thought I would have in ministry.  But does my lack of pastoral experience take away from my success as a church planter?  There are needs in the church to spread Gods word to those who do not hear it  – there is a need in the church to create meaningful worship for people who might be fed-up with traditional church models.  Why are we hindering those who are energetic and enthusiastic to start something new, to think outside the box when it comes to ministry?

Don’t get me wrong, I do see the other side of the argument.  It does take a certain skill set for someone to be a church planter. It does take someone who is willing and able to spend their days and time reaching out to the community they have been sent too, it takes a lot of motivation and accountability for someone to be a church planter and I tip my hat to those who are doing it.  When I step back I do question if I could spend my ministry planting churches — but I don’t know where God is going to send me and what my call later in life will be.

At this point in my minsitry I am trying to transform the church from the inside out.  I am trying to think like a missional pastor and reach out to those who might be on the fringe of the church or on the outside of the church.  I want them to feel like there is a place in God’s house for them as well. I am trying to meet them where they are at and tell them to “come as you are” – I do not want people to think like they have to change to come to the church.  The church should be a welcoming place, not only welcoming in a sense of feeling like they belong with the people gathered but welcomed in God’s presence as well.

Monday Morning Church

Good Monday Morning!!

Welcome to those of you who are new to Monday Morning Church.  I would like to welcome you to this weekly email.  My intent for this email is to bring church every Monday morning (actually afternoon) to help you think more about your faith life every day throughout the week.  I will also include prayer requests and happenings around the church.  If at any time you would like your email to be taken off this list please don’t hesitate to respond to this email you received.  Likewise if you have someone you would like to add on to this list (they do not have to be a member of St. Mark’s) please forward me their email address and I will add them.  For privacy reasons I do not share email addresses with anyone.

I think I mentioned in a previous Monday Morning Church that I am walking with reading from Detrich Bonhoeffer during Lent.  I would like to share with you what I read this morning.

“Costly grace is the hidden treasure in the field, for the sake of which people go and sell with joy everything they have.  It is the costly pearl for whose price the merchant sells all that he has; it is Christ’s sovereignty, for the sake of which you tear out an eye if it causeses  you to stumble.  It is the call of Jesus Christ which causes a disciple to leave his nets and follow him.
Costly grace is the gospel which must be sought again and again, the gift which has to be asked for, the door that which one has to knock.  It is costly, because it calls to discipleship; it is grace, because it calls us to flow Jesus Christ.  It is costly, because it costs people their lives; it is grace, because it thereby makes them live.  it is costly, because it condemns sin; it is grace because it justifies the sinner.  Above all, grace is costly, because it was costly to God, because it cost God the life of God’s Son– “you were bought with a price”– and because nothing can be cheap to us which is costly to God.  Above all, it is grace because the life of God’s Son was not too costly for God to give in order to make us live…..

Biblical Wisdom
For you were bough with a price’ therefore glorify God in your body. 1 Corinthians 6:20

Questions to Ponder

  • If costly grace means that God wants things from us as well as for us, what might those things be?
  • What is the difference between following Jesus Christ (costly grace) and simply believe things about Jesus Christ (cheap grace)?

THIS WEEK AT ST. MARK’S

3/23/09       No Monday Night Worship During Lent
3/24/09       11:00am   Lectionary Bible Study @ St. Mark’s
No Evening Bible Study During Lent
3/25/09        6:00pm        Lenten Dinner
6:30pm     Praise Team Practice
7:00pm     Holden Evening Prayer
7:30pm     Choir
3/26/09
3/27/09
3/28/09       9:00-11:00am First Communion Instruction

3/29/09       8:00am Church
9:15 am Sunday School and Adult Forum
10:30am  Church

Looking Ahead

April 4th -     Church Spring Cleaning  8-12noon
Come and help make the church look its best
April 11th -    Easter Egg Hunt 2:00-4:00pm
Fun for the Whole family, come out and enjoy the fun
April 5th -      Palm Sunday
April 9th –     Maundy Thursday Service 7:00pm
April 10th –   Good Friday Service 7:00pm
April 12th -     Easter Sunday – Potluck Breakfast
April 26th –    Vanderkamp Sunday
April 30th –    Church Directory Picture Day 3:00pm – 9:30pm
May 3rd –      Seminary Sunday

Lamp Post

Lamp Post we saw on our family walk one night.

Catching Up on Life

Most colleagues that I have talked with say that the seasons of Lent is pretty busy for them.  For most clergy in the mainline there are extra services, extra sermons to prepare and I know many that have themes that run through the entire season. I must say that for me — my schedule has been light.

Our Wendesday night service we do the Holden Evening Prayer, and I have very little responsiblities.  I do not preach and we don’t have communion.
The last two Sunday I’s have not had to preach so that had freed up a lot of time during my week.  But with that free time I have been catching up on life — on all the work that I have put aside because of the amount of meetings and day to day work that I have had to do.

So all in all, right now life is good.  I have been on a blogging hiadius — one of the reasons is because I have been too busy to sit down and formulate my thoughts.  But it is also very hard to get back into it, at least for me.

There are some things that are coming up around the church that I am pretty excited about.  I am also involved in alot of different community and church organizations that I would like to talk about.  I must say that I have experienced things in my short time here in CNY that I never thought I would and I am greatful for that.  I will talk about more of it soon.

Monday Morning Church

Happy Monday Morning

It was different for me to log on to my computer this morning and hear from my friends about how much snow they are getting all up and down the East Coast.  I sat back in my chair and told them that here in Baldwinsville I did not see one flake fall from the sky.  The “Snow Capital” of the world did not get any snow!!

I think I am fully prepared for snow from Thanksgiving to Easter.  I tell myself that I do not have the right to complain about the snow between these times.  If it snows before Thanksgiving or after Easter you might hear a complaint from me.

I want to say thank you again to everyone who participated in the celebration/service last Saturday. It was a memorable evening and I am so glad that I was able to celebrate with everyone.  Just the idea of putting something together like that and have the reception that we did means alot to me and my family.

Psalm 22
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from helping me, from the words of my groaning? O my God, I cry by day, but you do not answer; and by night, but find no rest.  Yet you are holy, enthroned on the praises of Israel.  In you our ancestors trusted; they trusted, and you delivered them.  To you they cried, and were saved; in you they trusted, and were not put to shame.  But I am a worm, and not human; scorned by others, and despised by the people.  All who see me mock at me; they make mouths at me, they shake their heads;  “Commit your cause to the Lord; let him deliver— let him rescue the one in whom he delights!”

9I will tell of your name to my brothers and sisters; in the midst of the congregation I will praise you:  You who fear the Lord, praise him! All you offspring of Jacob, glorify him; stand in awe of him, all you offspring of Israel!  For he did not despise or abhor the affliction of the afflicted; he did not hide his face from me, but heard when I cried to him.  From you comes my praise in the great congregation; my vows I will pay before those who fear him.  The poor shall eat and be satisfied; those who seek him shall praise the Lord. May your hearts live forever! All the ends of the earth shall remember and turn to the Lord; and all the families of the nations shall worship before him.

28For dominion belongs to the Lord, and he rules over the nations.  To him, indeed, shall all who sleep in the earth bow down; before him shall bow all who go down to the dust, and I shall live for him.  Posterity will serve him; future generations will be told about the Lord, and proclaim his deliverance to a people yet unborn, saying that he has done it.

Pastor’s Reflection

Pain

When I read this psalm all I can think about is pain.  I imagine Jesus hanging on the cross as these words come from his mouth.  I feel what he is feeling and it is hard to imagine.  Then I ask myself what does real pain feel like?

Too many of us have experienced true pain….emotional pain in the loss of a parent or child, physical pain from an injury….sometimes our pain is too much to bear alone.  Well the end of the psalm talks about two things that can take away our pain.  The first being the community that is gathered together.  If you are experiencing pain one of the best places to go is a gathering of a community, a community where people have experienced the same kinds of pain that you are feeling.(That is easier said than done)

The second place you can turn to is to God.  God is the one who can take away all our pain.  When it might not feel like it in the midst of our pain God resides, God is in the places we least expect to see God.  Times when we feel like we are further from God, God is there.

When I think of true pain I remember the 1997 Blockbuster Titanic.  I think of the storyline between Rose and Jack and what they went through.  Then I imagine them holding hands after the ship sank and Rose saying Goodbye to Jack after she realized he was gone.

It is so hard to say goodbye — To know that there is someone that we love that we will never see again.  But my hope is that through the love of the Christian community we can gather together and support one another through our tough times and celebrate with one another when times are good!

Prayer

Oh Lord, you know our hearts, you know what we long for and why we hurt.  We ask your presence be upon all who are hurt, all who mourn and all who need your comfort and grace.  Be with those people and strengthen them to reach out to you and their brothers and sisters in Christ.  Enable those who they reach out to, to give them strength and hope and love.  In Jesus Name  Amen.