Tag: Discipleship

  • Strategies for Summertime Spirituality

     

    Summertime signals opening of swimming pools, buzz cuts for boys, weekday outings to museums and zoos, homemade ice cream, watermelon season, an upswing in agricultural enterprises, and the beginning of summer vacations. We also start the summer slump in churches across America, with a decline in attendance and anxious messages from church treasurers about cash flow because offerings go down when the people are not there.

    Our culture has declared how things are supposed to work between Memorial Day and Labor Day and that’s that. The Church tends to conform to the culture. Whatever happens during the rest of the year, in the summer, we are both in and of the world.

    On several occasions, I have tried to counteract the summer slump and had little success. Call me a die hard, but I’m going to try again. Any success at all is better than none when it comes to reminding God’s Holy People what our relationship with the world is supposed to be.  

    St. Paul put it this way, “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God – what is good and acceptable and perfect” (Romans 12:2). Jesus called his followers to be light and salt and leaven in the world (Matthew 5 and 13). Light, salt, and leaven are agents of transformation – light dispels darkness, salt adds flavor, and leaven causes the dough to rise. When the agents of transformation are present, things are no longer the same. Through our prayers and our lifestyle, we are God’s change agents.

    With that in mind, I have a few suggestions for how to enjoy summertime while still fulfilling our sacred purpose.

    Maintain the spiritual discipline of worship. If you are in town on Sunday morning, your presence in worship with your community of faith helps keep the emphasis on God, both for you and for your fellow worshipers. When you are there, you are making a statement – a witness – that God’s reign in your life is not suspended just because it is summertime. Vacationers may be visiting your church while you are out of town. You may also use the time in worship to contemplate the different things you are doing/seeing/experiencing during the summer. What about those mountain majesties where you hiked? What might God have had in mind when creating the orangutan you saw when you took the children to the zoo? What kind of divine purpose is being worked out in the harvesting of hay, which kept you working from sunrise to sunset yesterday?

    Find a church in which to worship while traveling. In addition to maintaining the discipline of worship while you are in a different place, you may discover new friends, new ideas, and elements of diversity you have not known before. Maybe you can bring something back that will enrich the life of your own community of faith. The churches you visit will have an opportunity to extend their hospitality to you and hear about the church you love back home. If you have children or youth who will be traveling with you, ask them to get on the internet and find a church where your family can worship “wherever you may be.

    Don’t send your pledge on vacation. The operational costs of your church continue even when you are not there. In warmer locations, the costs increase significantly because of the need for air conditioning and watering. There is no legitimate reason why church leaders should have to experience anxiety over cash shortfalls in the summer (or anytime of year for that matter). Make it a matter of faithful stewardship to bring or send your contribution before you leave on vacation. Or, if you forget, you may still mail a check or use online banking to get your gift to the altar while you are away.

    Get involved in ministries you don’t normally have time for. If summertime affords you a little extra free time or a slower pace, use some of that time to serve Christ and the Church. Maybe there’s a need for Sunday School leaders, workers for a home repair ministry, or someone to do some maintenance around the church. Is there a mission trip, retreat, summertime conference, or bible study you would otherwise decline due to the busyness of your life? Does your summer schedule allow you to attend a weekday service that you can’t attend at other times of the year? God would like to spend more time with us and have more of our attention. Summertime may open up some possibilities for that to happen and blessings will flow into our lives.

    Whatever you do, think God! Be intentional about your spiritual journey. Begin and end your days with prayer, so that, in all the cares and occupations of our life, we may not forget God, but remember that we are ever walking in God’s sight. Look for signs of God’s hand at work in the world around you. Habits that affect the rest of your life can be formed during a three-month period. Don’t let a hiatus become a habit!

    I’ll see you in Church!

    Ron Short Sig Blue

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ron Pogue
    Interim Dean
    Saint John’s Cathedral
    Denver, Colorado

  • Claim the High Calling…

    To have a vocation is to be called by God to do something. Some vocations are rather specific, such as a call to Holy Orders, a call to teach the Christian faith, a call to work for peace and justice from a religious perspective. All believers share a call to serve God and our neighbors as stewards of what God has provided to sustain and enrich creation. Each time we renew the Baptismal Covenant we promise to live by the implications of our Baptism.

    In the biblical stories of creation, the vocation of stewardship is given to human beings alone. I think it is fair to say that the vocation of stewardship is one of the things that makes us human. No other creature is given such responsibility nor the ability to exercise such responsibility. Along with the call to be faithful stewards of God's creation, human beings possess the ability to act with purpose, to create, to communicate in complex ways through many languages, and to live in a conscious relationship with the Creator. Because the story of our faith says this vocation was given to humans by the Creator "in the beginning," I sometimes say that stewardship is in our DNA.

    Last Sunday, I was reminded twice of the call to faithful stewardship.

    At the principal service, our retiring hymn was "Come, Labor On." It's a hymn that stresses divine call and human response. The first part of one stanza got my attention; "Come, labor on. Claim the high calling angels cannot share." Not even the Holy Angels are expected to do what humans are called to do. To each order of creation is given certain roles that are not given to other orders of creation. Among the roles human beings are given is the vocation to serve God as stewards of creation. That responsibility does not belong to angels or any other creature. As beautiful, mysterious, powerful, and wondrous angels are, their vocation is different from that of humanity.

    Later in the day, the Cathedral was full of the creatures with which we share the planet earth – dogs, cats, fish, snakes, ferrets, and other pets – that their human protectors had brought for our annual blessing of the animals. People have a special relationship with their pets. Pets bring a lot of joy to our lives. But as wonderful as these creatures are, they do not share the calling entrusted to their protectors. The Creator did not call them to do the things humans are called to do and they are not endowed with the same abilities and responsibilities as humans.

    All this is to say that our annual emphasis on stewardship, which happens in many Christian churches in the fall of the year, is more than a fund raising campaign. It is an opportunity to celebrate God's call to be faithful stewards of God's bounty. It is an opportunity to take a closer look at our relationship with our possessions, our neighbors, and our planet. It is an opportunity to see how we can grow in generosity. It is an opportunity to invite God to use us more and more as instruments who move the world toward the vision God has for it. It is an opportunity to address our need to give as a central aspect of our humanity. It is an opportunity to celebrate the life God gives us through a new covenant to give to God in gratitude for what God has given us and to share our life and treasure with God's people.

    Over half of the teachings and proclamations of Jesus have to do with possessions. I believe that is because he realized how easy it is for us to be possessed by our possessions. I believe he also understood that possessions are those things that are most likely to come between us and God, us and our neighbors, us and creation, and even to come between our selves and the selves we are meant to be, our spiritual identity. And, I believe Jesus wanted all people to be liberated from whatever enslaves us. The story of Jesus' encounter with the rich man who came to him seeking eternal life is recorded in all three of the synoptic gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke). Jesus told the man that the only thing he needed to do was to sell his possessions, give the money to the poor, and follow him. Mark's version of the story is slightly different. Mark's version of the story reads, "Jesus looked at him and loved him. “One thing you lack,” he said. “Go, sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me” (Mark 10:21). Jesus said what he did out of love. He knew the man was enslaved by his wealth and true liberty for him would not be possible until he ceased relying on his stuff more than he relied on God. He was inviting the man to be a faithful steward of God's bounty, to become fully human.

    And that is the invitation that is annually extended to each follower of Jesus during the fall stewardship emphasis. That is why I look forward to this time of year. Every year, I hear from people who took the next step in pursuit of "the high calling angels cannot share." I hope you will be one of them this year!

    I'll see you in Church!

    Ron Short Blue

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ronald D. Pogue
    Interim Dean
    Saint John’s Cathedral
    Denver, Colorado

     

  • Discipleship = Friendship

     

    The writer of the Gospel of John seems to have been more interested in Jesus’ friendships than the writers of the other gospels, and this may be because the author of John was perhaps Jesus’ closest friend – the “beloved disciple.” We usually identify this beloved disciple as John, although the gospel does not give him a name.

    Of all the gospels only John remembers that at the Last Supper, Jesus declared his disciples to be not servants but friends. He tells them, “No longer do I call you servants … but I have called you friends” (John 15:15). John also tells us of the close friendship Jesus seems to have enjoyed with Mary and Martha of Bethany and their brother Lazarus, whom he raised from death (John 11:1-44). And, John passes on to us the somewhat disturbing story of Mary’s impulsive gesture of pouring expensive perfumed ointment on Jesus’ feet and then wiping them with her hair (John 12:1-8). 

     

    Friendship occupies a middle ground between familial love and romantic love. The common interests that help create friendship can make friendship an easier one than some of our familial relationships. Friendship is different from kinship in that we choose our friends on the basis of common interests or experiences. In The Four Loves, C.S. Lewis says that while lovers long to look into each other’s eyes, friends stand side-by-side looking at the shared interests that drew them together and made them friends in the first place.

    So, what are we to make of Mary’s shocking gesture of pouring expensive ointment on Jesus’ feet and then wiping them with her hair? Whatever this act meant, it was profoundly troubling both then and now. John attributes Judas’ discomfort to his greed. In the parallel story in Luke, Simon the Pharisee is embarrassed because of the reputation of the woman who anoints Jesus’ feet. We may have similar reactions. Like Judas we may be bothered by the seeming waste of expensive perfume, or like Simon we may think the gesture is inappropriate. But Jesus seems to view the actions of Mary as an unusual gesture of friendship. Jesus was so comfortable with himself and with Mary’s friendship that he was able to accept such an extravagantly intimate gesture.

    In the fourth century, St. Gregory of Nyssa said, “We regard falling from God’s friendship as the only thing dreadful, and we consider becoming God's friend the only thing truly worthwhile” (Gregory of Nyssa, The Life of Moses). Jesus, God Incarnate, has called us friends. He has invited us into a relationship. If we accept this invitation, our friendship with God in Christ will deepen and become intimate. We will be able to do things for God that we would not otherwise do. And as our intimacy with God grows, it will become a fragrant offering, filling not just our house but the entire world with the perfume of Love Divine.

    I’ll see you in Church!

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • The Renewal of the Baptismal Covenant

    Baptism E WindowYesterday, on the Feast of the Baptism of Christ, we renewed the Baptismal Covenant.  We do that from time to time so that we can remember that we are God’s beloved sons and daughters whom God has invited to live in a covenant relationship.  A covenant relationship is one in which each party is bound to remain in relationship even when the other does not live up to the promises of the covenant.  The most important thing to remember about our covenant relationship with God is that God always remains faithful to us, even when we are unfaithful to God. God is always there, calling us back into that unique relationship.

    I suppose the most impressive thing about this God of ours is the fact that, instead of sitting upon a throne, aloof and disinterested in the affairs of the people he has created, our God has chosen to enter into a covenant with us.  This is a difficult thing for some to believe.  I even find myself sometimes asking, when I sense my own unfaithfulness and that of the world around me, "What's a nice God like you doing in a covenant like this?"

    As God's covenant promises were declared and established in the Baptism of Jesus – so God’s covenant promises are declared in our Baptism.  In our Baptism we, like our Messiah who has gone before us, are anointed and our identity as God's children is established.  Through Baptism we become members of God's family and are ordained to the priesthood of believers.  

    Whenever Baptism is administered, it is a sign of God's action and God's intentions toward us.  God gets involved with us in a covenant relationship because God desires to be in fellowship with us and wants to work in and through us toward the fulfillment of our lives and the life of all creation.  Who we are determines what we do, how we respond to the world and all the people and events of life.

    Carl Sandburg once told a group of students at a Harvard commencement, "you need the spirit of Lincoln, who in the divided house of his day knew what to do because he knew who he was."  To be taught that we are children of God and to define ourselves in that way changes what we do with our lives.  It is news we can embrace or resist.  The fruit of our lives reveals which we are doing.

    In Baptism we are marked as Christian disciples and heirs of God's grace.  Few of us can actually remember our Baptism – its precise details.  But we can remember that we are Baptized just as we can remember that we are born.  In remembering our Baptism, we get back in touch with who we really are, God's children, called and set apart for a special purpose. We renew the covenant God has established with us so that there may be a renewal of forgiveness, faith, and ministry in our task as God’s own beloved people.

    In Alex Haley's book, Roots, there is a memorable scene the night the slave, Kunte Kinte, drove his master to a ball at the big plantation house.  Kunta Kinte heard the music from inside the house, music from the white folk's dance.  He parked the buggy and settled down to wait out the long night of his master's revelry.  While he sat in the buggy, he heard other music coming from the slave's quarters, the little cabins behind the big house.  It was different music, music with a different rhythm.  He felt himself carried down the path toward those cabins.  There he found a man playing African music, his music which he remembered hearing in Africa as a child – the music he had almost forgotten.  Kunta Kinte found that the man was from his section of Africa.  They talked excitedly, in his native language, of home and the things of home.

    That night, Kunta Kinte went home changed.  He lay upon the dirt floor of his little cabin and wept. Weeping in sadness that he had almost forgotten, weeping in joy that he had at last remembered.  The terrifying, degrading experience of slavery had almost obliterated his memory of who he was.  But the music had helped him remember.  

    This is a parable about Baptism.  It is a parable about how easy it is to forget who we are and whose we are.  So the Church is here to remind us, to remind one another, that our freedom has been bought with a price, that someone greater than us has named us and claimed us, seeks us and loves us, with only one good reason in mind – to love us for all eternity.  Whenever we see the water poured and each time we feast on the bread and wine of the Eucharist, let us renew the Baptismal Covenant, which we, from time to time, have broken. Each time someone is brought to these holy waters, let us remember our Baptism and be thankful. And each time we step back into the mission field at the Church’s doorstep, let us remember that we are beloved of God so that we can share that blessing with others.

    I once had a small piece of one-way glass on my desk with an inscription that said, “Lord, make my life a window for your light to shine through and a mirror to reflect your love to all I meet.”  That is exactly what God hopes will come of my Baptism, and yours as well.

    I’ll see you in Church!
    Ron Short Sig Blue

     

     

     

     

    P.S.  Thanks to Tom Booth for his photo of the Baptism of Christ panel in the East Window above the High Altar of Christ Church Cranbrook.

  • A Faith for Fathers

    The greatest lesson I ever learned about faith, I learned from my Father.  I had accidentally sailed a balsa wood glider up onto the roof of our home in Houston.  When my Dad came home, instead of getting a ladder and climbing up to retrieve it, he picked me up and boosted me onto the roof so I could get it myself.  We lived in a 1950's era "ranch style" house, so the roof wasn't actually that far off the ground, at least to my dad, who was 6' 4" tall.  I had never been on the roof before.  It was frightening – mostly the getting up.

    When I began to express my fear, Dad said, "Don't worry.  I won't let you fall."  His hands and arms felt strong, his voice was firm and confident.  He had been on the roof himself.  He believed I would be okay.  So, I forgot my fear.  My trust in him was stronger than my fears and Dad didn't let me fall.

    I found my faith. Through the experience of trusting, I discovered that my Dad was trustworthy.

    I have been able to live my life with an abiding faith, often tested by the things that test everybody's faith.  It goes back to that glider on the roof, my Dad's strong and loving arms, his reassuring voice, and his dependable promise, "I won't let you fall."

    That has made it easier for me to trust my heavenly Father, who promised, "I will never leave you nor forsake you."  Earthly parents, though fallible, have a role to play in the formation of faith in their children's lives.  In fact, parents are the primary faith-givers.  Christian parents' chief evangelical, disciple-making opportunity is with their children.

    Even helping a child retrieve a toy stuck on the roof can be an occasion for faith-forming.  The world needs dads to give their children a fear-conquering faith.  Of course, Moms do it too.  But this is Father's Day!

    Ron Short Sig Blue

     

  • Last Supper ~ Revisited

    While at the Diocese of Kansas Gathering of Presbyters last week at the Spiritual Life
    Center in Wichita, I saw The Last Supper depicted in some small
    porcelain figurines around a small table on a shelf near the
    Refectory.  Someone (probably one of my colleagues) had rearranged the
    figures in an interesting way.  Instead of Jesus being seated in the center and all the disciples gathered around him, Jesus was positioned at the corner of the table, extending bread-filled hands outward, while the disciples were all centered on themselves.  There is an epiphany here!

    Last Supper Revisited

    Do the disciples of Jesus have a tendency to mistake deliberation for mission?  Are we too busy with our meetings to offer the Bread of Life to the world at our doorstep?  Are we too focused on feeding ourselves to be useful to our Lord in feeding the multitudes?  How can we who receive him become a sacrament to a world in need?

    Ron