Category: Religion

  • When you see the Light, head toward it!

    It was one of the darker nights of the year and I was driving along a road in deep East Texas.  The road was one with which I was unfamiliar and full of curves and bends and hills.  At about the time I became aware that I had missed a turn somewhere and was headed in the wrong direction, I discovered that I was very low on gasoline.  I had gone to far to turn back, but I was frightened to drive on because my engine might stop on that dark and lonely road any moment.  I decided to drive on and search for some sign of civilization where there might be fuel and someone to point me in the right direction.

    The more I drove, the more concerned I became. Just when I thought my engine was about out of fumes, I saw the glowing red light of an airplane beacon atop some structure in the distance.  I felt certain it must be in or near a town with a filling station.  If I could get there, I could fill my car with fuel, seek directions, and head on with confidence toward my destination.  As I followed the beacon, I came to a road I recognized and managed to coast the last few hundred feet to a gas pump. I filled the tank and I got directions so that I could complete my journey in safety and in peace.

    If you've ever experienced something like this, you surely understand how out of control my anxiety was that night.  And, you also understand what a welcome sight that beacon was, with its promise of fuel and guidance.

    Whenever something like this happens in the course of living – when we are alone, lost, and almost out of resources – we feel frightened, apprehensive, and alone.  But then, on the distant horizon there is the bright beacon of God's love, the light of God's grace, the glow of God's promise.  We see it through the darkness and our faith draws us forward to a place of peace and security.

    John 3:16-17 speaks to us of that beacon of Love Divine. "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life. Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him." The Word Made Flesh is for us and with us, wherever we may be!

    When the night is dark, when the road is scary and unfamiliar, and when you are running on fumes, look for the Light.  Turn to him.  Trust his good news to be truly good for you.  Let him help you find your way forward as you continue the journey in peace, knowing that you are completely secure in God's immeasurable love!

    Ron Short Sig Blue

     

  • Something More About Making Church a Safe Place

    Like many other denominations, The Episcopal Church has developed a series of courses that are intended to help make the Church a safe place.  We have courses called Safeguarding God’s Children, Preventing Sexual Harrassment in the Church, and Preventing Sexual Exploitation in the Church. Those who work with children and youth, clergy, employees, vestries, and others are required to take this training.

    I’ve been thinking it would be helpful to add a course to help our leaders recognize and address other behaviors that compromise the wellbeing of our communities of faith. To be truly safe places – physically, emotionally, and spiritually – our congregations and schools need to be havens of blessing and places of peace where people know they will not be subjected to emotional terrorism, disrespectful criticism, gossip, bullying, power and control tactics, and other such characteristically unchristian behaviors. 

    Well-meaning clergy and leaders often allow people to behave in these ways because of some notion that disruptive behavior has as much of a place in the Church as any.  We’ve been heard to say, “Bless her heart, that’s just Mattie.  We’ve just learned to tolerate her.”  Hmmmm…  Really?  Why would we tolerate behavior that undermines our efforts to serve Christ “in unity, constancy, and peace?”  Why would we ignore words and actions that are in stark contrast to the Baptismal Covenant in which we promise to “persevere in resisting evil…proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ…seek and serve Christ in all persons…strive for justice and peace…respect the dignity of every human being?”

    My interest in this topic is heightened by next Sunday’s Gospel (John 2:13-22). There is Jesus standing in the Jerusalem temple as Feast of Passover was drawing near. The scribes and Pharisees he has encountered so far in his ministry make it clear that Jerusalem, the center of their power and influence, is a dangerous place for him. Nevertheless, it is the center of religious life, and the temple is the most sacred of places. It is natural that he would want to be there in spite of the risks.  Jerusalem is the holy city of that time and the temple its most holy place. One would expect it to embody all that invokes the most holy feelings. In a people set apart, commanded to behave in “peculiar” ways, one would expect no less. Yet what Jesus finds is no different from the street outside the temple gates.

    Some scholars say that his outrage came from the dishonest commerce going on. Animals offered for ritual sacrifice had to meet rigid requirements. Those purchased from approved temple vendors were guaranteed to be acceptable. Those brought from home may not be. Purchases could only be made with temple currency. It has been suggested that both the sacrifice acceptance policies and the required currency exchanges were opportunities for corruption that created a scandal and an additional burden for the poor. These abuses would have given Jesus adequate cause for righteous indignation but he may have had reason enough without them.

    Quite simply, this holy place looked just like the marketplace. What should have been a model of another way of living, of relating to one another, an example of God's ways, had become no different from the ways of the world. “The model of God had become the mimic of man.”  Jesus expected his Father’s House to be a House of Prayer. 

    As Christians, we are called to be witnesses to our neighbors, not their clones. If our beliefs do not lead to conforming our lives to the life of Christ, what is the point of believing?  If the ways in which we conduct our affairs in the Church are indistinguishable from the ways of secular commerce, how can we sincerely pray “thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven?”

    Our Baptismal Covenant calls us to be peculiar in the eyes of the world. Our presence in divine worship expresses our desire to do so for the purpose of affirming Christ's presence wherever we may be. It is not an easy task. But it is a task of such importance that it gives our lives a richness of meaning and purpose that transcends anything offered by the world. 

    The history of the world, and especially our religious history, suggests that sin can always draw us from our best intentions. Will we continue to be tempted to think churches should be run more like business instead of suggesting that business would be better if they were run more like Church? Will we look for salvation in self-help publications instead of the holy habits of prayer, Sabbath keeping, offerings, and worship? Like Paul, we find ourselves saying "For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do."

    I submit that critical, disrespectful, grouchy, disruptive behavior should not be tolerated in our communities of faith any more than Jesus tolerated those unholy behaviors in the temple. Each one of us can be a better manager of our own behavior and attitude.  We can also watch over one another in love and confront our sisters and brothers in Christ when their words and deeds have a negative impact on the safety and sanctity of our faith communities.

    There are times when to be “nice” is to avoid being “Christian.”  After all, Jesus was anything but “nice” to the people he confronted in the temple.  Take comfort from the spectacle of Jesus overturning the tables of the moneychangers. Know that this same strength, courage, and righteousness upholds us every day of our lives and especially when we need to say to the Matties of our congregations, “No! That tone is not acceptable here among us. It disturbs our peace and Jesus has higher expectations.”

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • What ONE Can Do at Ashland’s Calvary Church…

    Gay and I are grateful for the warm and generous welcome we have received during our first week at Calvary.  There is an inviting vitality and authenticity among you and we are very happy to be here.

    In addition to routine pastoral duties, there are three main objectives that I need to accomplish during the time I am with you and prior to the call of your next settled rector.

    •    Help you establish patterns of parish life with a full time rector.  During the Holy Conversations last fall, the membership of the parish resoundingly expressed the desire to call a full time rector.  The vestry and the nominating committee are well into the process of doing just that.  As that process moves forward, you’ll have opportunities to practice on me as your full time rector in the interim!

    •    Help you with necessary organizational and administrative adjustments prior to the arrival of your full time rector.  Those who are interviewing for the position will want to know how things get done at Calvary and who is responsible.  There will also be questions about how the communications system works and what equipment is used to support the ongoing life of the parish in its mission. I’m working with the vestry and parish leadership to address the most important of these organizational and administrative adjustments.

    •    Help you strengthen your commitment to faithful stewardship and generous giving.  God is providing all the resources to provide for Calvary’s mission.  You want to be operating “in the black” and have a balanced budget by the time your new rector arrives.  The key to both of those realities lies in the heart of the giver.

    Each one of you has a vital role to play in this final stage of transition as you prepare to call a rector.  Following the example of ONE Episcopalian, here’s what YOU can do:

    •    Worship ONE additional Sunday per month.  If you are attending once a month, make it twice.  If you are attending twice a month, make it three times.  And so forth…

    •    Move up ONE step toward the tithe. The Episcopal Church teaches that the tithe – giving one tenth of our household income – as the minimum biblical standard.  If you are now giving one percent, step up to two.  If you are now giving two percent, step up to three.  And so forth…

    •    Move forward ONE pew when you come to worship.  The pews in the front of the nave are almost empty.  Newcomers will be more at home at first on the back pews, which are now almost full.  (Ten of the sixty-six worshippers last Sunday were visitors).

    •    Participate regularly in ONE Calvary service activity.  Whether it is outreach to those in need, visiting the sick, preparing a meal, singing in the choir, taking care of the altar, or helping out in the parish office, each ONE of you needs to be actively engaged in service to Christ and this church.

    •    Spend ONE hour in prayer each day.  Does that sound like a lot?  Pick up your Book of Common Prayer.  If you spend fifteen minutes each day saying Morning Prayer and fifteen minutes each day saying Evening Prayer, you are half way there!  Add five minutes at noon and ten minutes at bedtime and you’ve spent forty-five minutes in prayer.  That leaves only fifteen minutes, which can be easily accomplished during your daily routines as you remember people or concerns that need your prayers.  If you are homebound, this can be your special ministry to your Calvary family because you have more time than others who are working and raising families.  Remember what Jesus said to his disciples that evening in the Garden of Gethsemane, “Could ye not watch with me one hour” (Mt. 26:40)?  I’m not asking any more than Jesus asked!

    There are many other ways in which you can and do make a difference at Calvary.  Don’t stop!  But these five things are contributions almost every member of the parish can make and when that happens the results will be phenomenal.  You, as ONE member of Calvary Church, do make a difference.

    I’ll see you in Church!

    Ron Short Sig Blue
     

     

     

    The Reverend Ronald D. Pogue
    Interim Rector

  • When I look at your heavens…

    It took months for photographer Randy Halverson to photograph the stars above the White River in central South Dakota, Arches National Park in Utah, Canyon of the Ancients area of Colorado, and Madison, Wisconsin. He combined his images in a time-lapse video with music by Bear McCreary, composer of soundtracks to "Battlestar Galactica" and "The Walking Dead."

    Along with a star-filled sky, Halverson captured the tail of a meteor and the northern lights. In this four minute video, Halverson takes us through "Temporal Distortion." There is also a 23-minute version.

     

    God took a long time and immeasurable care to create a universe that sustains human life.  We are the stewards of it.  What a privilege.  But I'm not the first to notice!

    Psalm 8 (NRSV)

    O Lord, our Sovereign,
       how majestic is your name in all the earth!

    You have set your glory above the heavens.
       Out of the mouths of babes and infants
    you have founded a bulwark because of your foes,
       to silence the enemy and the avenger.

    When I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers,
       the moon and the stars that you have established;
    what are human beings that you are mindful of them,
       mortals that you care for them?

    Yet you have made them a little lower than God,
       and crowned them with glory and honour.
    You have given them dominion over the works of your hands;
       you have put all things under their feet,
    all sheep and oxen,
       and also the beasts of the field,
    the birds of the air, and the fish of the sea,
       whatever passes along the paths of the seas.

    O Lord, our Sovereign,
       how majestic is your name in all the earth!

    Give thanks to God today for your amazing place in this amazing universe.  Do something today to exercise your role as a steward of it.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • May God continue the good work begun in you!

    My service as Rector in the Interim at the Church of the Good Shepherd is drawing to a close. I will begin a new interim assignment at Calvary Church in Ashland, Kentucky on Shrove Tuesday.  You are preparing to welcome your new spiritual leader, The Rev. Brian Cole.  The community to which I am going has just said farewell to The Rev. Jeffrey Queen, who served as their interim for two years.  In the midst of all this change, I am reflecting on the wisdom St. Paul shared with the Corinthian Church regarding transitions in leadership. 

    The Corinthian Christians were having difficulty adjusting to new leadership.  In his first letter to them, St. Paul describes how transitions are a normal aspect of the life of Christians in community.  His focus is upon the common purpose of building up the Church in its mission.

    For when one says, ‘I belong to Paul’, and another, ‘I belong to Apollos’, are you not merely human? What then is Apollos? What is Paul? Servants through whom you came to believe, as the Lord assigned to each. I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth. So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth. The one who plants and the one who waters have a common purpose, and each will receive wages according to the labour of each. For we are God’s servants, working together; you are God’s field, God’s building.  – I Cor. 3:4-9

    I might have written it this way:

    It is human nature for one to say, ‘I liked Fr. So and So’, and another, ‘I didn’t like Fr. Such and Such’.  Both are Pastors who tried to help you in your journey of faith using the gifts the Lord gave to each of them.  One planted seeds, another watered them, but the resulting growth came from God.  So, it’s really not about the Pastor, it’s about God!  Each of us Pastors has a common purpose and that is to help you have enough faith to do the work God has prepared for you to walk in. – I Ron 3:4-9

    I am not the Pastors who came before me.  Nor am I the Pastors who come after me.  God has gifted each of us in different ways according to the leadership God desires the Church to have in a particular place and time.  Each of us brings something different to the communities we serve.  Each one builds upon the work of those who came before, so the changes each one brings are not intended to dismantle things.  Instead, the changes are related to the common purpose we share and are to be understood as additions or enhancements to what has been.  Our common purpose is to help you be the Church in mission.  It’s not about Fr. So and So or Fr. Such and Such.  It’s not about me.  It’s about God and God’s mission of reconciliation in the mission field at your doorstep.

    You have been very open to changes during the last eighteen months.  However, change is difficult for many people. We don't like it when something upsets the equilibrium and pushes us out of our comfort zone.  So we resist and complain.  Resistance to change, while human, can undermine the true spiritual discernment that has led to this union of Pastor and People, thwarting God's purpose.  Most complaining about change when a new Pastor arrives constitutes avoidance of the real work to which God is calling the faithful.  Valuable spiritual energy is wasted in an activity that is useless to the cause of Christ!  So, I urge you to embrace the changes that are coming your way as new ways for God to work through you and your community of faith.

    This time of transition is a unique opportunity for God to work wonders through divine interaction with the new relationships that are being formed.  That is why departing clergy must step away.  God is creating a new context in which to bring about growth.  Trust God enough to invite your new Pastor and encourage one another to fully express the gifts God has given to help you be the Church.  You will grow, the Church will grow, and the Kingdom of God will grow.

    So let no one boast about human leaders. For all things are yours, whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or the present or the future—all belong to you, and you belong to Christ, and Christ belongs to God.  – I Cor. 3:21-22

    Gay and I will continue to hold you and your new Rector and his family in our prayers.  We will miss you, but we will rejoice as we watch from a distance as a new era of fruitful ministry unfolds.  May God continue the good work God has begun in you!

    Faithfully yours,

    Ron Short Sig Blue

    P.S. – Here is the diocesan leave taking policy, which the Senior Warden and I have signed.