Saturday, November 12, 2011

Christian Love is Foundational to Christian Unity

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Living Out the Command to Love One Another
We need to express our love. We are called by Christ to live in love.  They will know we are Christians by our love.
In John 15:12-13, Jesus says we can do better: "My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you."
That's the type of love we are to love each other with. How does God love us? What is His love like? God's love is unconditional. God always loves us. No matter what we do or how we act or what we say God always loves us.
The Old Testament gives us ways to express our love.  Proverbs 17:17. It says A friend loves at all times. How much of the time? All the time!
And Who is our best friend? God! So, how often does God love? God always loves you. You can do nothing to stop God from loving you. The highest lesson you can ever learn in this life is that God never stops loving you, no matter what you do. He loves you with an unconditional love. That is just how we must love one another. That's how we should love each other in the home.
We must allow the Holy Spirit to purge the cold from our hearts and letting the warmth of Jesus love take charge in our life. And I will tell you that if your heart has a lot of harshness in it, a lot of foulness in it, a lot of anything but love in it, you can cleanse all that if you allow the Water of Life, Jesus Christ to flow into your life and cleanse away all of the things that are in your life that ought not to be there.
Love puts others first. Real love thinks of others first. -- Love is not selfish.
  • Love is slow to demand. -- Love is quick to give.
  • Love is slow to belittle. -- Love is quick to appreciate.
  • Love never harms -- it never controls.
1 Corinthians 13:4-7. Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
Our love needs to be lined up with Jesus and then it will be the right kind of love. How can we come to church and sing songs of love and praise and then go home and with the same mouth yell out hate at each other? If that is happening to you, then you need to get your life in alignment. We do that with the wheels on our cars.
1 John 4:7, 8  states “Dear friends, let us love one another. This is almost like begging, isn't it. "let us love one another. for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.
In Matthew 22:39, Jesus gives his summation of the Ten Commandments that Jesus is saying. "The second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself." affection were given to the neighbors next door.
Love imitates. If you love someone you will naturally attempt to replicate what you admire. We need to imitate Jesus, as much as we possibly can. 
This principle is aptly stated in 1 John 3:16. “This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers”.
Jesus laid down His life for us. So, what should we do? We should lay down our life. Do you see how love imitates? If you love Jesus, you find out what He did, you do the same thing. That's how it works. Love models what love respects. This is the precise reason we preach from this pulpit that the best way to have good works is to fall in love with Jesus. That's how that happens.
How should we love? As Jesus loves us, so we ought to love each other.
1 John 3:18. Dear children, let us stop just saying we love each other; let us really show it by our actions.
Love is:
  • Slow to Suspect -- Quick to Trust
  • Slow to Condemn -- Quick to Justify
  • Slow to Offend -- Quick to Defend
  • Slow to Expose -- Quick to Shield
  • Slow to Belittle -- Quick to Appreciate
  • Slow to Demand -- Quick to Donate
  • Slow to Hinder -- Quick to Help
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Sunday, November 6, 2011

A Presbyery Executive Calls Us to Embrace the Virtues of Love and Mutual Respect

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Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,


I read John 13 in my devotional reading this morning, Jesus said, “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another.  Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” (vs. 34-35).


I have been a member of this presbytery since January 1, 1990.  I have always appreciated the collegiality, respect, accountability and love which has been present.  It has spanned even the great divide there is in the church and culture.  Lately, in the most recent round of discussions about ordination standards, changes in the Book of Order and discussion about churches withdrawing, I have felt (to my horror) the collegiality, respect, accountability and love slipping.  I pray we can regain some of what has been slipping away before we open our mouths on Saturday at the Presbytery meeting.


It seems to me, this time is hitting us harder as a Presbytery because we are divided down the middle.  In our March meeting 43 voted to approve 10A, 50 voted against it.  I have heard both the right and left say they want to retreat to “like-minded” places.  That is the epitome of what is going on in culture – then we can lob philosophical and biblical bombs at each other from the safety of “like-mindedness”.


Could we, with God’s grace, model something new – respecting conscience, seeking truth, living collegiality and love?


“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another.  Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” (John 13:34-35).

With love in Christ,    David Feltman


A few quotes from THE OUTLOOK, “Why stay? How to stay” (June 27, 2011) – 


“But part of what sets the church of Jesus Christ apart is a call to be agents of reconciliation, breaking down barriers and dismantling wall of hostility between disparate groups.  Our life together is not diminished by conversation, but enriched.  The church is not the big sort; rather, through Christ, it is the big mix, marked by grace, generosity, friendship and radical hospitality – truly counter-cultural practices.


That’s why my heart sank when in response to the recent letter from former GA moderators urging the church to ‘move forward in unity,’ one evangelical pastor wrote, ‘Sorry, not a chance’ and championed a retreat into like-mindedness.


I was equally saddened when a progressive pastor suggested the former moderators didn’t need to ‘beg’ conservatives to stay, that we should be careful of making an idol of unity, remain self-differentiated and just let them go – like it’s no big deal.”  


“Why Stay?”                Heidi Husted Armstrong p. 29


“Ecumenism – the search for the visible unity of Christ’s church – is not restricted to relationships among denominations.  Perhaps the most pressing ecumenical challenge today is the search for unity within denominations.  Reformation era division of the church and the ensuing proliferation of denominations do not provide justification for further splits in any denomination.  The chief ecumenical task before the PC (USA) now is to pray and study and work for our own visible unity.” 
 

“Why stay? Why go?”             Joseph Small. 26


“One of our cherished principles is freedom of conscience in Scriptural interpretations.  It is not a boundless freedom, but if we are to stay together as a broad spectrum church, our life together needs to be marked more by generosity than by restrictiveness.  Where significant differences persist within our fellowship, such generosity is especially incumbent upon the majority”.     


“Making space for wholeness”           Sheldon Sorge p. 35

            “There is no shortage these days of high talk about churches splitting or leaving or worse, ‘winning’ or ‘losing.’  I hate that talk more than I hate having to deal with this whole matter.  There is no purer church out there.  That is the great Protestant if not Presbyterian heresy, i.e., to think that we could, by separating ourselves from each other, create a more faithful church.


            Baloney.


            Our baptism has stuck us with each other, even with people who are ‘wrong’.  It is hard work being the church.  We will do almost anything to keep from having to be the church.  We so much prefer the wide gate where the road is easy and populated with folks like us.  Such a way, Jesus tells us, ‘leads to destruction.’  The narrow way is where, ‘the road is hard that leads to life.’ (Matt. 7:14)


            Jesus keeps messing things up, doesn’t he?  He keeps giving us folk on the right who are wrong and on the left who are wrong and in the middle who can’t figure any of this out, and he calls us his own, embarrassing us with his intrusive presence.  He’s not the savior any of us would have chosen….”

“Muddled in the middle: reflections on a presbytery vote”              Thomas S. Currie p.23

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Rev. David Feltman, General Presbyter, North Central Iowa Presbytery

Friday, November 4, 2011

Do We Really Pray for Unity? Or Do We Think We Are Better than the Christians Who See Things Differently than Us?

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Unity Requires Ditching Our Religious Superiority Complexes

Too many Christians have religious superiority complexes that tend to block the unity we are called by God to manifest in God's church.

If we are to reach the unity we pray for, it will take some work on our part -- the Spirit will lead us, but we must be willing.  We must begin to see others through the eyes of Christ.  We must see each Christian for Whose they are (Christ's) and who they are in Christ.

That means looking beyond human imperfections to the union we have with Jesus Himself.  Liberals must seek to no longer look upon Conservatives as their backwoods cousins, but rather as brothers and sisters in Christ.  Conservatives must not see Liberals as aliens from another planer, but as fellow children of he Living God.  We must seek to be the family that God desires us to be, glorifying the Lord as we partner in the Missio Dei.

Can we be tolerant of different points of view and different scriptural emphases?  Conservatives see purity in line with the historic confessions.  Liberals see purity as in line with newer theological points of view. 

But is Christ calling us to a profound display of peace and unity despite those known differences? Might a greater witness to the world, at a higher level of reality, be our finding unity in our vast common ground, rather than labeling the other side wrong because of our different reading of certain Scriptures?

If both sides -- and there are definitely two sides in this thirty year fight -- keep playing the "I am better than you game" we are doomed to disunity and division.  But if we can rise into the unity we have in Christ -- in all the glorious things that blessed phrase means -- then the world will know that we are Christians by our love, and by God's amazing grace. What a day of rejoicing that will be.

S. Glenn Wilson, November 4, 2011

Unity in the Upper Room -- The Outpouring of the Spirit's Power was a Result of the 120 Disciple's Unity!

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The Upper Room

You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witness in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. Act 1:8


When the day of Pentecost came, they [the believers] were all together in one place. Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where they were sitting. They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them.  Acts 2:1-4

Unity is a powerful thing in the Bible.  Little wonder that the evil of this world opposes Christian unity.

Jesus death was the spiritual fulfillment of the prophetic Jewish feast of Passover. The feast of Pentecost was fulfilled by this event, which marked the birth of the Church. Notice that this holy anointing, this preparation for ministry, happened when they were all together in one place. And Acts 1:14 tells us that were of one mind, constantly joining together in prayer. Unity was not the result of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit; rather the outpouring was a result of their unity

It doesn't take a lot of people to change the world. In this case there were just 120 who were united in purpose and prayer, waiting expectantly for the word of the Lord to be fulfilled.

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The Faith We Hold in Common is Vibrant Enough and Faithful Enough to Sustain Our Fellowship

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"In the wisdom of God, change does not come quickly or unanimously. And so in our own time, Christ grants us an important opportunity to the bear witness to his love which binds us together even in the midst of our disagreements.

For that reason we must all be very patient, and very respectful, and very gentle with our sisters and brothers who take a different view of this day than we do. They, like we, confess the Lordship of Christ. They, like we, fervently desire to follow Jesus in obedience to the Scriptures.

For a time, in the mysterious providence of God, we are finding something very different in the Bible from what our neighbors find there. It is a distressing and puzzling situation, but far from unusual. And it gives us opportunity to testify that the faith we hold in common is vibrant enough and faithful enough to sustain our fellowship until that joyful day when all our differences are overcome  in Christ."

Those eloquent words above about unity were penned and preached by a professor I had the opportunity to study under when I was at the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary (UDTS), Dr. Mark Achtemeier.  Dr. Achtemeier was a wonderful teacher and I learned a great deal of good things about God in his classes. He was also the moderator of the session at the First Presbyterian Church of Lancaster, Wisconsin when I was a student pastor there. 

So I got to know this renowned professor, an evangelical from a family known for its academic excellence, during a time when he served on the national Presbyterian Church, USA (PCUSA) Committee that worked on the great questions surrounding the Peace, Unity and Purity of the Church in the first part of the last decade.

Dr. Achtemeier is still a self-described evangelical conservative, but he came to see the ordination issue differently than he had before his experiences and studies as a member of that committee.  Recently he gave a sermon that was covered around the world.  What follows is the sermon Dr. Achtemeier preached at Scott Anderson's ordination in the John Knox Presbytery. 

Springs in the Desert

by Dr. Mark Achtemeier

 Isaiah 49:8-13
Hebrews 4:12-13
Covenant Presbyterian Church
Madison, Wisconsin
October 8, 2011

We are gathered here today to ordain a wonderfully gifted Christian man to the ministry of the Word and Sacrament. Scott’s steadfast faith and pastor’s heart and devotion to Christ and the church have been a source of personal inspiration for me and many others. I give thanks to God, Scott, that your gifts will now be fully available to the Presbyterian Church, and to John Knox Presbytery, and to all the individuals whose lives will be touched by your ministry. This is indeed a joyous occasion.


Many of us wondered if this day would ever get here, and what a blessing it is to be witnesses of its coming! Many of you have worked and prayed diligently to make this day a reality. But lest we think this is all about us, I think it important to take a step back and reflect on what God is doing in and through this happy occasion.


Indeed the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing until it divides soul from spirit, joints from marrow; it is able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart.[1]


From the very beginning of its existence, the church has borne witness to holy occasions when the Word of God blazed to life, judging the thoughts and intentions of many hearts, overturning established assumptions, bringing light and life where formerly only darkness reigned.


In the earliest days of Christianity, the Word and Spirit of God kindled a fire in the hearts of Jesus’ followers about the despised and unclean Gentiles. Standing apart from biblical law and condemned by it, these Gentile outsiders were so unclean that Jesus’ followers wouldn’t even eat with them. But God’s Word and Spirit helped the church see these despised outsiders as beloved children of God. The result was a new reading of Scripture, and the joyous movement of a reviled and ostracized people into the fellowship of Christ’s body the church. The Word of God is powerful!


In the late Middle Ages God’s Word blazed to life in the heart of a troubled monk named Martin Luther. The result was a new reading of Scripture and the release of millions of anguished souls from a thousand-year captivity to guilt and fear and condemnation into the clear light of God’s grace and mercy in Christ. The Word of God is powerful!

In the history of our own nation, the Word of God blazed forth in the hearts of abolitionists and prophets and reformers. The result was a new reading of Scripture and captives emerging from bondage, former slaves set out on the long road toward freedom and dignity and equality. “The Word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword!

Such revolutions are not the product of human devising. At the height of the Reformation a friend of Martin Luther’s found him sitting idly one day over a drink. ‘Dr. Luther,’ said the friend, ‘look at everything that’s happening, look at the crisis that’s upon us. Don’t you think you should be working?’ Luther sat back in his chair, looked at his mug, and said, “Here as I drink my little glass of Wittenberg beer, the Gospel runs its course![2]


The Gospel runs its course. What a remarkable privilege to be living in a time when once again the Word of God has come to life as good news for the broken-hearted! The Holy Spirit is abroad, blowing across the landscape of our established convictions and setting many hearts ablaze.


These changes are supported by the work of many scholars, but their origin is not the scholar’s study. How many of the changes leading to this day have been Damascus road events, holy occasions when ordinary life and ordinary assumptions are caught up short as the Risen Christ begins to speak.


The Spirit moves and hearts are changed. And when that happens we are able to go back to the Scriptures and see all those things we missed earlier. We employ all the classical guidelines for interpreting Scripture: We read the Bible in its historical context. We interpret Scripture by Scripture. We follow the Rule of Faith and let the fullness of the Gospel illumine individual passages. Following Calvin we interpret biblical Law according to the purposes of the Lawgiver. Joining with the ancient church we read every text in accordance with the Rule of Love.


When read the Bible as our tradition has taught us, we have found God’s Word blazing to life and all these paths converging on the gracious conclusions that bring us here today. Jesus tells us that when we interpret the Bible rightly, we shouldn’t expect to come away bearing only the old understandings: “Therefore every scribe who has been trained for the kingdom of heaven is like the master of a household who brings out of his treasure what is new and what is old.[3]


This new treasure we have found in the Scripture seems so obvious to many of us, but we have to remember it is not obvious to all. There is nothing unusual about this. Almost always when the living Word has blazed to life there has been conflict and heated opposition. Almost always there have been committed Christians defending the status quo based on long established readings of Scripture. In the wisdom of God, change does not come quickly or unanimously. And so in our own time, Christ grants us an important opportunity to the bear witness to his love which binds us together even in the midst of our disagreements.


For that reason we must all be very patient, and very respectful, and very gentle with our sisters and brothers who take a different view of this day than we do. They, like we, confess the Lordship of Christ. They, like we, fervently desire to follow Jesus in obedience to the Scriptures. For a time, in the mysterious providence of God, we are finding something very different in the Bible from what our neighbors find there. It is a distressing and puzzling situation, but far from unusual. And it gives us opportunity to testify that the faith we hold in common is vibrant enough and faithful enough to sustain our fellowship until that joyful day when all our differences are overcome  in Christ.


Until that day arrives, however, let us be mindful of the particular role that Scott and we have been granted to play in God’s plan. Our passage from Isaiah today describes what happens when the Word of God goes out to do its work. The result is release for the captives, hope for the outcast. Isaiah paints a moving portrait of one such occasion when the Word of God has done its work. He speaks of newly liberated exiles setting out on the long and difficult journey that leads toward home, toward grace, toward blessing. It is a slow and arduous trek across a barren wilderness, but they do not journey alone:
They shall feed along the ways, on all the bare heights shall be their pasture; they shall not hunger or thirst, neither scorching wind nor sun shall strike them down, for he who has pity on them will lead them, and by springs of water will guide them.[4]
I think this passage provides a fitting picture of the hope and promise contained in this day. I believe God will use the life of John Knox Presbytery as a spring of clear water, a source of renewal and refreshment for a tired and weary Presbyterian denomination that is struggling to find its way through a wilderness of rapid change.


Scott has led the way with this, going out of his way time and again to forge bonds of respect and caring and understanding across the lines of separation and disagreement. Other people have responded in kind, so that with rare exceptions, the life of this presbytery has been marked by kindness, mutual respect and forbearance grounded in the love of Christ. This little group of Jesus’ followers provides compelling testimony to a grace of God that is powerful and life-giving even in the midst of deep disagreement.

I also believe God will use your ministry, Scott, as a life-giving spring of water for sustaining weary exiles who have been alienated from the church of Jesus Christ and are seeking a way back home.


I recently read an essay by a woman named Chely Wright, a Kansas farm girl and a country music singer. She writes about being a gay person growing up in the church, calling to mind third grade kickball games where the kids would pick up sides before playing. Inevitably there would be that one awkward, uncoordinated kid who always got picked last or not at all. “[E]ventually,” she writes, “that kid would stop hoping to be chosen for either team…”


And eventually that kid would probably develop an aversion, perhaps even a life-long, deep loathing for the game of kickball. It’s a protective mechanism that humans employ to preserve the most tender parts of their psyche. That’s what it feels like for an LGBT kid in a place of worship.  That kid is repeatedly given the message that he or she will never, ever fit in and be acceptable to God or to the congregation.[5]


Chely Wright was pointing a loaded gun into her mouth when God spoke to her over and above what the church was saying. That Word from God touched her heart and started her on a long journey toward wholeness. Today she writes, “It is my deep belief that someday I will meet my maker and I will be asked who I am and what I did for others. Everyday, I am working hard, preparing my answer to be, ‘I am a gay, Christian, farm girl from Kansas who sang Country Music and I did the very best I could do — to know God and to share God.’”[6]


Scott, as we gather here today, you and I both know there are thousands upon thousands of Chely Wrights out there, beloved children of God who have been ostracized and alienated from the faith. They have learned through bitter experience to associate the name of Jesus with hostility and rejection and condemnation.
I rejoice in the sure hope that your gifts and your ministry will nurture and strengthen many people in the faith. But I am especially hopeful that your ministry will bring healing good news to all the Chely Wrights who have been rejected and alienated from the Christian faith. What we do here today won’t solve the problem. But I pray your ministry may at the very least provide a spring of water in the wilderness for sustaining and refreshing those weary exiles on the long journey back to the God who loves them.


I sometimes wonder if there really is hope for many such journeys to take place. There is a passage in Isaiah just after the one we read today where the exiles are wondering the same thing. “My Lord has forgotten me,” they say.[7]  Their alienation seems too hopeless, their darkness too deep, for these dreams of restoration to have any meaning for them.


God’s response is powerful. I was with a person the other day who needed to remember a phone number, and while I was searching my pockets for a scrap of paper he simply wrote the number on the palm of his hand. It’s a messy but effective system these hand-note-takers have.
Well God’s response to the exiles who have lost hope is to show them his hands: “See, I have inscribed you on the palms of my hands,”[8] he says. God has not forgotten these alienated children. There, written on God’s hands are the names of every anguished soul, every broken spirit.

Scott, I rejoice that today we ordain you to the ministry of the Word, and I am confident that you will both proclaim and embody the deep love which that Word conveys for all of God’s exiled and brokenhearted children. You will not always see immediate results, but that loving, powerful Word of God will not return empty. It will accomplish the purpose for which God sends it. Good new will come to all the exiled souls.
They shall feed along the ways, on all the bare heights shall be their pasture; they shall not hunger or thirst, neither scorching wind nor sun shall strike them down, for he who has pity will lead them, and by springs of water will guide them.
May God make your ministry a spring of life-giving water, Scott!
In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.


Dr. Mark Achtemeier has served the Presbyterian Church since 1984 as a minister,
author, speaker and theology professor.
He may be contacted at  mark.achtemeier@gmail.com.



[1]
Hebrews 4:12
[2]
Quoted in Helmut Thielicke, The Waiting Father, trans. John W. Doberstein (New York: Harper, 1959), p. 90.
[3]
Matthew 13:52
[4]
Isaiah 49:10
[6]
Idem
[7]
Isaiah 49:14
[8]
Isaiah 49:16

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Rev. Scott Anderson, PCUSA's first openly gay minister


Dr. Mark Achtemeir answers questions after a sermon