More than one
Board of Ordained Ministry in Methodism is fond of asking candidates for
ordination, “What if John and Jeff came to you and asked you to marry them?” The “right” answer is supposed to be “Oh, I
would listen to them and love them but – even if I disagree with the church’s
posture – I would decline, explaining I am in covenant to uphold the Discipline.”
I fully
understand that people who can’t uphold the way we do things may pose a few
problems... But what if, after deep prayer and theological wrestling, a minister
feels for the sake of conscience that this lone piece of civil disobedience is
not only desirable but actually required by God? Is this the kind of person we would not
want leading God’s people? Would we
refuse to acknowledge God’s calling him or her into ministry? or lay in wait to put
her/him on “trial”? Don't we need a little courage among our leaders? even if we might disagree with their stance?
Facebook
message #2. A good friend, the day before speaking at a church weighing whether
to become a reconciling congregation or not, hoping to persuade them to be accepting, asked for prayer, noting that “I'm
tired of showing up and saying the equivalent of ‘Like me, please. Consider me as worthy as you are.’"
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We are upon the season of Thanksgiving. I want to express something my best words, or even a painting, ballet or symphony would fail to articulate – and that is how very grateful I am for those I have met, befriended, and now love, who are heartbroken, whose very life is like a trial, whose dignity has been eroded, and yet is miraculously intact, resilient, a shimmering wonder, a mirror reflection of the very loving heart of God. You have good cause to lash out at our church, which we know is deeply flawed and always in need of reform - but then it has this nasty habit of being mean... And yet you stay, and that shows me what God’s grace looks like. I love all of you and am standing, not so much with you but a little bit behind you, hoping to follow, or maybe to help catch you if you’re knocked down. Thanks be to God for you, for us, for grace.