Moving On

This has been an interesting year in our lives.  Lisa and I moved from Lexington, KY to Lynchburg, VA in July 2009.   Lisa joined the faculty at Lynchburg College as chair of the Religion Department.  We moved here for her career.  I had an opportunity or two, congregation and Regional, that didn’t materialize.  I’ve intentionally not analyzed and rather lived through it working to be aware, awake, and appreciate our good fortune as well as the setbacks.  It has been something of a roller coaster, but when compared to many in this nation and around the world we have little to complain about that amounts to anything important.  Could it be better for us?  Yes.  Is it bad for us?  At times, from our perspective, yes.  Here are a few things I’ve discovered and affirmed this past year.

There are people who want, wish for, or need a sabbatical that serve in ministry.  I am not one of them.  This move to Lynchburg seen through a lens of “sabbatical time” has not been restful nor particularly productive for me.  I wanted to learn a language and it didn’t happen.  I wanted to do better with “house repair skills” and it didn’t happen.  What I did do, though, was write and open a youth ministry guide service.  With the help of Lisa, we created Sacred Steps: Childern’s Sermon Journal and the Youth Ministry Guide.  I think one of these could help our income someday, but mostly it is my way to fill a void that I see in the life of the Church and particularly in our denomination.

From December 2009 to June 2010, I served two congregations in the role of part-time interim minister.  I was not sure what kind of every Sunday preacher I might be nor how I would do with the routine of solo pastor.  I discovered that my education at Brite Divinity School as well as my undergraduate time at TCU was worth the time and expense.  I am grateful for the Sr. Ministers that I served with that required me to do hospital visits, home bound visits, and other ministerial duties that not all Associate Ministers are asked or required to do.  Both congregations had their share of “home bound” persons just waiting for a visit.  I am blessed to have met so many people in the 80’s and older with sharp minds and good humor.  I’ve spoken to men that served in the Army, the Marines, and AirCorp during WWII.  I’m enriched beyond my age for having spent time with them.

I discovered that as much as the denomination spends time working to start new congregations there is even more work and service to offer county seat size congregations that are living through disorientation, anxiety, and are seeking ministers who can help them reinvent or remodel what it means to be Church in towns where they are no longer the place to worship.  There is faithful ministry for these congregations to offer in their corner of the world, but the landscape is radically different.  It will require ministers who do not need a substantial income, but are seminary trained, to do the theological work and walk alongside them to discover that the sun will come out tomorrow and that there is ministry to do.  If these congregations don’t receive some support from denominational structures nor embrace their Disciple heritage through the ministers they employ the meaning of a red chalice on their sign will be absorbed into the great landscape of Independent or Baptists congregations and Christianity will loose its salty flavor.

My peers are exactly that: peers.  I have many colleagues in ministry.  That is the way we speak of each other and it is appropriate.  But, I have a few peers whom I trust with accountability, friendship, and theological discourse.  Too few ministers serving in Discipledom have peers.  Our gated communities have given way to gated congregations and the phrase “my ministry” has made competitors out of partners for resources, ideas, and authority.  Peer relationships.  It is missing and one reason why it is taking so long for our denominational structures to “right” themselves and find a celebrated future.   I am grateful for my peers that have checked-in, listened, harped, and cheered this past year.

My companion in life is Rev. Dr. Lisa Wilson Davison.  This past year affirmed that there isn’t anything we can’t handle together.  We’ve been lucky.  No one seriously ill.  Ours, like others, have been worries over money, bills, career path, and making good financial decisions. As we move to Tulsa we know that it will be a few years before we are back to the relative financial comfort we had in Kentucky.  It is just part of living and making decisions.  We are grateful for the support of our parental units, Peggy, Lisa’s mom, and Yvonne and Mike, my parents.  Each has offered their support, listened, and encouraged us.  Mostly, we believe in each other and trust.  In October we will have been married 21 years.  I’m looking forward to being able to smile, like Ms Eggleston did one day when I visited, when someone is visiting us in St. Thomas and I can tell them we’ve been married 71 years.

Next week we will be residents of Tulsa, Ok and our adventure in life will continue.  If you are looking for a seminary experiences as you prepare for ministry, consider Phillips Theological Seminary. If you are looking for a different worship experience think about finding a congregations affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ).

God’s peace be upon you as you journey in faith.

Brian McLaren’s Response to the President’s Remarks

Brian McLaren’s blog posts and books give casual readers (like myself) a sense that he is evolving: religiously, theologically, politically, and as a person.  It is a good thing.  I wonder how many of the “emergent” followers and second generation leaders would consider McLaren emergent today?  That is another subject for another day.  Here are a few paragraphs of his initial response to President Obama’s oval office chat (that I have not watch in its entirety yet) as McLaren posted to God’s Politics on Sojourners.  Click the title to read his entire post.

My Initial Response to President Obama’s Speech
Brian McLaren | 6/16/2010 | God’s Politics

I was glad the president emphasized the need to break our addiction to oil in his speech last night, and I thought he did a good job of demonstrating commitment to the people of the Gulf region. But if President Obama doesn’t specify the way forward by offering a legislative path, who will? Congress? Politicians whose re-election campaigns are heavily subsidized by the fossil fuel industries and who depend on voting blocs mis-educated by corporate media?

I hope that last night was simply the opening volley in what will be a focused, determined, well-planned, energetic agenda to make a new clean and sustainable economy the legacy not only of the president, but of the government, and not only of the government, but of our generation as a whole.

If political, economic, social, and faith community leaders start articulating a bold vision for a new economy and start demonstrating determined leadership in achieving it, I think they’ll find growing numbers of us are fired up and ready to go.