Response by Scott Glaze to the PastorŐs
Blog posted the week of March 28
The
Passover celebration/Holy Week. During the first Passover the Israelites
put the blood of a lamb over their doors so they would be spared the wrath of
the final plague in Egypt before the Exodus. Thank you Christ for your blood
that we can put on the doors to our hearts. A gift that I am
so thankful for and pray that all his followers will do before their Exodus
occurs.
Praise to Christ this Holy Week.
Scott Glaze
Response by Tim Van Noy to the PastorŐs
Blog posted the week of September 20
I take a little offense @ the blog concerning keeping
your children from becoming good Christians by participating in sporting events
on Sundays. Our family is very involved in our church activities:
Sunday school, church service, youth activities, and extra activities at the
church. We hate to miss when we have out of town games, but they are very
few throughout the year. I am teaching my children to be well rounded in
all areas of their lives from school work,to mannners,
ethical issues, world issues, and christian values. I think it is wrong
to make people feel guilty for occacionally missing church because of an event; especially if the family is together and having good
quality time together. I am the coach of my son's traveling team and
teach all of my players life skills such as respect,
team work, discipline, hard work, friendship, and have even tried to intorduce
religious topics and discussions with some. Several of my players are
from broken homes and this can be some added structure for them. We do
not practice on Wednesdays because of church and have come to early church to
be able to get to our games, or have changed in the church bathroom after
church to maximize our time at church and still be able to get to our
games. On our last trip home from a Winston game (that was on Sunday and
we were at church) another family rode with us and we listened to 106.9 the christian music station and my son and his teammate were
singing the words out loud. My daughter Lindsay has just joind FCA (the
fellowship of christian athletes) at her school and my son will when he gets
there. We do a lot with our children to encourage them and ourselves to
be better christians. If they or we do miss, it
is rarely because of sleeping-in or being lazy. Rather it is for doing
something they love and sharing time with family and friends(teamates).
My son and I pray when we have games that we will all be healthy and will
make it safely both to and from the event. Again that is my son
praying. I love it when my son prays(and he
prays about everything a lot) even if it is for a
sport.
Thank you for listening, Tim Van Noy
Response by Marjorie Wiggins to the
PastorŐs Blog posted the week of August 30
Chris, I commend you upon your response to the
current relationship between the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America
and The United Methodist Church. As you already know, I am deeply grieved
that our conference did not approve the amendment to our constitution
which states that all persons accepting the vows of membership are
eligible for membership in our Church. I am troubled that the Good News
Movement was allowed to hand out voting advice to delegates (outside Stuart
Auditorium). This advice was not identified with its proponents, but,
rather, presented as truth.
It is interesting that the Good News proponents put
all of their emphasis on the 'awfulness of welcoming homosexuals'. Our
mutual good friend and your fellow pastor Ed McKinney made an empassioned plea
for openness and love. His wonderful statement was ignored by so many.
You are also to be commended on your posture on
welcoming all professing Christians to our church. I beg our membership
to support you in this. I pray that we will welcome all, and that 'all'
will truly mean all.
And, I further pray that our relationship with our
Lutheran friends will continue and improve, whatever the orientation of any
clergy or member.
God bless you.
Marjorie
A response by Danny Reece to the PastorŐs Blog posted the week of
August 16.
I
appreciate your efforts to highlight these attacks on the body of Christ. What
should be our response? Obviously, we should pray. I also believe we should
pray in an organized fashion. Many local churches seem to be able to come
together for a national day of prayer. Would an international day of prayer
highlighting the plight of these communities be beyond us? I also believe that
physical & legal support for these Christian communities should be an
obligation for all other churches, including the United Methodist Church. We must
resist the inclination to re-fire the historic crusader mentality that has led
to so much violence in this area through out history, although I admit to
feeling the impulse. The more radical forms of Islam enjoy religious freedoms
in western civilizations while denying, or at least impeding, the same freedoms
in traditionally Islamic countries. That said, we must also remember that
blaming Islam for this persecution is akin to blaming Christianity for slavery
or anti-semitism. The entire topic is a witchesŐ brew of historic distrust,
monolithic over-simplifications, and suspicion bordering on paranoia.
We
must look to Christ for creative, love-driven responses. We must look to the
example of Christ in prayer and in scripture. I think we must prepare ourselves
to recognize and take advantage of any opportunities God may provide us for
more fully realizing the presence of his Kingdom, wherever it may be.
Peace,
Danny
A response by Lori Burke to the PastorŐs Blog posted the week of
April 5.
I
agree with your proposed new model of Methodism. I feel our church certainly
tries our hardest with most of those points, but it is so important to be
reminded, and to be put back in our place at times. First and foremost, Jesus
should be at the center of everything we do, and we should show a united front,
as simply being Methodists, sharing God's love with all people. And then go out
and share!
The
part about the worship service not being a "show" affected me the
most, however. Every time I attend or take part in a worship service,
that is what I am there for. To praise and worship
God. It is all about Him. When I do a special song or participate in
special music, I usually sneak out quickly afterwards before people can talk to
me, because the praise should not go to me. The praise should go to God. I sang
it for the people to feel somehow closer to Him. I was
given a gift, and I believe I have been called to use that gift to His service.
It is never about me or what glory I can receive. It is about how I can share
the word of God in the best way I know how. Through music.
Danny
shared that it isn't always easy to step out of your comfort zone to share the
love of Jesus with others. So try to find a way that IS comfortable for you.
The more you do it, the easier it becomes. You will find more blessings each
time you do.\
Thanks
for listening (reading...) and may God bless you, Love Lori
A response to the PastorŐs Blog posted the week of March 17, 2009 by
Susan Ringo (Sent to Chris Wilson on March 20, 2009)
I
love the idea of a Saturday Sabbath, and I love the ideas you presented in your
blog. Here is my thought: What if after the Sabbath, you had some
guest bloggers write about their experiences that day? We could all read
about how people felt and were affected by this experience. AnywayÉjust a
thought.
A response to the PastorŐs Blog posted the week of March 8, 2009 by
Danny Reece (Sent to Chris Wilson on March 12, 2009)
Good
morning,
I
like the idea of your blog and hope it elicits good response. Since this is my
hope, I suppose it would be appropriate for me to respond.
As
you know, IŐve given some thought and read some of the commentary out on the
web regarding the declining church. I could not agree more that the time for
analysis is long past. What prevents us from action? I believe one contributing
factor is good old fashioned fear.
We
fear losing the church of our childhood when we should be more concerned with
losing our children. We fear stepping outside of comfort zones. We fear
interacting with people we donŐt know. We fear upsetting the apple cart,
rocking the boat and any other clich you can come up with. We like helping
people we know and people far away from us, but we are wary of the person who
enters the church from the street or the neighborhood kids in the parking lot.
We need those kids.
(Just
last night we had a visitor inquiring about the Wednesday Knights. He said he
was from the chess club that meets at the library on Thursday nights and that
they currently had a child attending who might be more comfortable with our
group. He wanted to see what we did. He visited with us and we actually played
a game of chessÉbut the entire time I felt a little uneasyÉhere was Ňan otherÓ.
I did not know him. My internal dialogue went something like this: ŇIs he who
he says he is? Why does he want to stay with the children? I better be on
guard. Should I allow him to stay? Ó I managed to invite him to church
and also to give him a flyer for the parents of his club member, but I donŐt
think my demeanor was as welcoming as it should have been. He creamed me in the
chess game. Perhaps I digress, but you see the point.)
I
believe the theological and spiritual character of the United Methodist Church,
with its emphasis on both grace and holiness, reaching out to others and social
justice, the head and the heartÉis perfectly suited for a generation of young
people that will be coming into its own in the next 10-20 years. I believe
statistics show a significant percentage of this age are
turned off to ChristianityÉ(not JesusÉbut Christianity) because it does not
speak to them. They see their gay friends condemned to hell when pastors and
priests are caught in scandals. They see white congregations and black
congregations. They see professing Christians not resembling Christ in the
slightest. They view Christians as judgmental at best and hypocritical at
worst. They see smiling televangelists saying they can have it all and that
doesnŐt sound like Jesus. They see small cartoon pamphlets promising damnation
left on top of urinals and that doesnŐt seem like Jesus either. They see
congregations separating over what are basically political issues and that does
not appear to be the body of Christ at all. They can socialize elsewhere.
IŐm
certainly not saying anything that has not been said by countless others. We
have to be more vocal and visible about what we believe, about what
distinguishes us from other groups. This requires courage. We must identify and
nurture leaders among our young people (I think our church actually does a
pretty good job of that). We must establish new faith communities and continue
to evolve our own. We must act Éand we must engage..not
fearÉ our neighbors. Actually, I think we are supposed to love them.
SoÉthatŐs
my two cents. Happy Blogging!