- May 11, 2012
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...from Florida Annual Conference.
I'm tired.
I'm tired.

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...from Florida Annual Conference.
I'm tired.![]()
Dr Timothy Tennant spoke at a luncheon for FL UM evangelicals and that was encouraging (that we are organizing) but also discouraging (that a split is the only workable solution).
I'm sorry to hear that my seminary president is asserting that a split is the only workable solution. I'm not so quick to throw in the towel as I think there are other options.
I had an encounter recently that left me feeling dejected: at a gathering of clergy, a pastor poured out to me his frustration with his declining church. He could not get the congregation to change their behavior, even though they were on a path of steep decline. He was looking for some answer, some ray of hope. All I could do was listen and nod my head.
I went home and asked my husband, “What am I supposed to say to these people? Your church might die. Sorry about that.”
He looked at me for a moment, and then said, “Not today.”
“What?”
“They’re not going to die today,” he repeated.
It took me a second to get my head around that. My husband, a farmer, speaks from experience. This is a guy who works to keep animals alive every day. They get diarrhea and pneumonia and swallow pieces of metal. He is always injecting someone with penicillin or patching a sore eye or bandaging a hoof. When a heifer is gasping for life and he’s pumping her veins with electrolytes, he is saying, “You might die. But not today. Today, it’s my job to keep you alive in case you get stronger tomorrow.”
In his usual sparse way, he had said so much. If you are not closing your doors today, there is still work to be done. Any church that is worrying about the fact that they might close some time in the future is wasting time. There is important ministry to be done today. And I don’t mean cleaning the grout in the church kitchen tile. I mean, there is a mouth to feed, a grieving family to be comforted, a love to be celebrated, a story to be told, a cold body to be warmed.
I know this contradicts so much I have said about planning for a generous, faithful end of life for churches when that end seems inevitable. I still believe in all that. But at the same time, letting church decline sabotage whatever good ministry you are doing now is not the answer.
Just this once, forget about dying tomorrow. Keep being the church, alive, today.
The troubles we are facing in the UMC in the USA stem more from those who view their local position as that of being a country club for saints rather than as a hospital for sinners. Even we who claim to be conservative have not conserved our relationship with the vine. What fruit we have, if any, are dried up institutional raisins.
Third, doctrine has never been as important as praxis, not even to Jesus. His commentary on the Law was often, "You have heard it said ..., but I say to you...." When asked about the greatest commandment, he refused to stop at one and instead gave two, both of which were about actions more than propositional truths. In the end he called his disciples not to believe in him as much as to follow his example. So, even if the progressives "win", it wouldn't be as big of a loss for the truth that Jesus wants to see enacted as if the conservative position were to carry the day, and then everyone just went home to contemplate said truth.
Well I am looking forward to our Pastor(s) returning from the(I'm in California) Annual Conference to see if they have any interesting info to report.
I'm newer to the UMC has this been an on going issue for awhile?
Funny thing is if they split my Wife will want to go with the Liberals and I will want go with the Conservatives. So for that reason alone I hope they don't split. Lol
They think it's scripturally valid and that's why they have the point of view.
Therein lies the problem. Jesus' second commandment has become the catch-all scriptural proof like the "Commerce Clause" has been overused for decades to justify so many government overreaches.
I've done a lot of thinking on this since I got home from AC. I'm starting to believe that Wesleyan theology was something that worked in a time when being a Christian was the default, so the church could afford to have varying and competing scriptural validity since everyone worked from the same basic rules.
But, in a post-Christian nation, a Christian set of morals and the shared experiences of a childhood spent in Sunday school no longer exist so the variances between scriptural validity range from one end of the spectrum to the other.
I've always been strongly against Calvinism, but I am starting to believe that there really may be elect and non-elect. In a post-Christian society, there is a significant number of people who just won't/can't/refuse to "get it". Is their desire for rebellion so strong that they can deny the Holy Spirit for a lifetime or are they just not children of God?
but my point was less about why they think it's valid and more that they just do.
That was my point too. Their "why" requires a stretch of the imagination (just like the Commerce Clause in most cases). So, they have to rely mostly on "because I want to believe it." So, why do they want to believe it? Because they have identified a group that they feel is marginalized and they want to be part of a Great Civil Rights Struggle as we had in the 1950s and 60s.
Of course, that struggle was about skin color. This one is about choices and giving in to unnatural lusts.
They say that you can't "pray away the gay" so we must embrace it as an alternative lifestyle.
But, then the same people tell us that men should pray away heterosexual lusts in the form of porn, adultery, and fornication. Now, if something biologically unnatural cannot be prayed away, then why do they believe that something natural can be? (Yes, even porn is natural because men are hardwired for visual sexual stimulation.)
Simple: they don't want to offend two "victim groups", the women and the gays.
Many people (including myself, mostly) sincerely believe that the verses in question have to do with temple prostitution or pederasty or idolatry or sexual thrill-seeking or any number of things that are not the same as what we see today as the sexual orientation of homosexuality or a committed monogamous same-sex relationship (which themselves are quite different things).
I would like to believe that my favorite sin is not really a sin either.
Again; not asking you to agree with the progressive arm of Christianity; just asking you to extend Grace to them and understand where they come from. It's frankly not fair some of the rhetoric used. I don't like the rhetoric they use on Conservatives, either, by the way!