Friday, May 27, 2016

Westward Ho!: General Assembly Heads to Portland

The General Assembly will be in Portland this year; my flight is booked three weeks from today. As I look forward to our “Presbyterian Class Reunion,” (so-called because pastors who attend invariably reconnect with seminary classmates with whom they have not spoken in years, as well as colleagues from previous pastorates), I do so with a combination of hopefulness, anticipation and dread: hopefulness because there are initiatives on the Assembly’s agenda that I think can suggest a new path for our life together that avoids dichotomous, win-lose conversations; anticipation because those who attend the Assembly are shown the many ways the God who is sovereign in love through Jesus Christ is at work to bring joy and justice, salvation and shalom; and dread because most people will only hear about the three or four (maybe one or two) most controversial issues and define the entire Assembly based on this limited view.
As I look forward with hopefulness, anticipation and dread, I would like to share the words of the Rev. Clay Allard from Dallas, who wrote an opinion piece for The Presbyterian Outlook. Clay’s counsel on engaging the Assembly also works for engaging one another in our congregations:
·         Stay connected when it hurts. The easiest thing to do is withdraw when the assumptions of the majority inflict pain on the minority. We can only hold on if we have committed time and attention from one another.       We must stay attentive to one another even when we know that attention will bring pain, discomfort and struggle.
·         Respect, even when it feels like respect is not due or returned. We can only be responsible for our own attitude and self; that said, others can call out of us disrespect and dismissal when they say things with which we adamantly disagree. Division is fed by disrespect; love is killed by it.       Make sure if there is a crucifixion occurring that there isn’t a hammer or nails in your hands.
·         Give up outcomes as a way to understand the path. God does not owe us a mapped route to where God wants us to be. Sometimes God’s call leads us to actions that seem frustratingly slow/counterproductive/useless. Remember that God’s ways are not our ways, and persist in the path you are called to be on – even when it seems to be counterproductive. God loves us – God doesn’t give a serpent instead of a fish, or a rock instead of bread. Trust that.
·         Work for an audience of One. If pastors are (as someone once said) dogs at a whistlers’ convention, we need to know God’s whistle best. It is difficult to make people unhappy, to disappoint them, to be rejected and disrespected. But if Jesus Christ is happy with me at the end of the day, I know I’ve done well, no matter what those around me may think or feel. I’ll have to live more intimately and eternally with Jesus Christ’s opinion of me than I will with anyone else’s – even my own.
When the saints go marching in I plan to march with ‘em,

Brad Munroe

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