Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Piercing Words from a Bishop

Okay, two days after I was romping around Sikeston in running shorts, we have snow on the ground here in Southeast Missouri...

Two things about this post...First, in a February post I raised the issue of the Church's need to abandon that which prevents Jesus followers from fulfilling the command to make disciples and to reach the least, the last, and the lost. This post relates to that original question. Second, I am a part of the particular branch of the Christian tree which is United Methodism. I love my roots and I love my connection, but we who are United Methodists face a real crossroads in our history. We are structured for maintenance more than we are streamlined for whatever we need to become, so that we may offer Christ in a new millennium. The following words come from someone who is now one of our bishops (leaders). The "Wesley" to whom he refers is John Wesley, an 18th century priest in the Church of England who is regarded as the father of the awakening and renewal movement commonly known as "Methodism." THE BOOK OF DISCIPLINE is our denomination's guidebook of doctrines, official positions on issues, and procedures. I'll let these words stand on their own for now, and possibly comment on them in later posts.

"When Methodism fails to stress Wesley's conviction of the powerful, even prevenient, grace of God as the source of all possibility of new life, Methodism degenerates into insufferable, sentimental moralism in which the Christian life is depicted as simply another helpful means of making nice people even nicer. Discipleship is not a sanctimonious Twelve Step program. A holy person is a testimonial not to the innate possibility within people, but rather to the insistent, transforming love of God in Jesus Christ despite our sin. The laborious, legalistic, minutely detailed procedures and mandates in our current United Methodist Book of Discipline are testimonial not only to a church with too little trust, but also to a church where we attempt to do through moralistic law that which only the transforming love of Christ can do." (William Willimon, "Suddenly a Light From Heaven," in Conversion in the Wesleyan Tradition, Kenneth J. Collins and John H. Tyson, editors. Abingdon Press, Nashville, 2001. Page 250. Italics his.)

Your thoughts? I'll see you around the next bend in the river. We may be in the rapids now...

1 comment:

Swimmin'upstream said...

Wow...sure seems as though the Bishop is right on target. Imagine if Christ had followed all of the man made rules in His time. The poor..the unclean..the gentiles..
the women....etc...would never have had a chance.
As appropriate & purposeful as the Old Testament laws were during their time; when Christ came radical change occurred with eternal results. He changed the world and twisted our interpretation of biblical law. His divine purpose was that ALL inherit the kingdom of heaven.
Don't you think that God would never want man's "imperfect interpretation" of a "perfect book" to stand as a stumbling block for even ONE soul?