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Notes from the October 15th Workshop on Collaborative Ministry at St. Clare’s Pleasanton.  If you were there please add your comments to this post.

No, we are not wandering in the wilderness!

It was a wonderfully sunny autumn day in Pleasanton, California as we pulled into the parking lot at St. Clare’s Episcopal Church for a workshop on Church Growth in the Dougherty Valley.  Rector Ron Culmer was decamped in a folding lawn chair at the cashier’s table for the parish rummage sale to raise money for youth ministry.  He had not slept much overnight while the “lock in” of kids took place in the church.   But he called our workshop crowd of 20 people from across the Diocese to prayer with his call to the Holy Spirit to fill us up and send us out to roll up our sleeves and get to work out in the vineyard.

It was altogether a wonderful day.

Bringing people together in community is our first step in sharing the Good News.  That was the message Shelton Ensley the project manager for the three congregations, St. Clare’s Pleasanton, St. Bartholomew’s Livermore and St. Timothy’s Danville, reported as he explained the task before them.

Bishop Marc has asked these three congregations to not only define the mission and ministry needs of this vast developing area at the edge of the Diocese of California but also to model collaboration ministry as a great ‘lab experiment’ for the vitality of our church future.

Collaboration is the current day term for what Jesus might call discipleship.  Ron Culmer reminded us that the common mistake today is to think of the church as being in the membership business and even our own church growth program talks about growing average Sunday attendance, membership and pledge units—-but instead we should see ourselves in the discipleship business and invite others to join us.

You’ve Got Questions, We’ve Got Questions

We laughed about that line as the project team described the rich multicultural nature of the Dougherty Valley area with a large Asian population from many nations, many languages, many faith traditions.  But that is the challenge the church faces in our future.  How do we reach out to many different cultures and communicate in ways that is welcoming and open, respectful yet transparent about our own faith journey testimony.

How do we ‘do church’ in a geography spread out in valleys and beyond the next hill where small Episcopal congregations live at the boundaries of old growth and new growth, old ways and new ways, and minister to such diverse needs as three generation households where the oldest generation may not speak English, may not drive, may not have a support system like they once had.  How do we minister to the needs of kids who often are the translator bridge between generations yet are growing up in an American culture vastly different that their grandparents could have imagined.  How do we reach out to working parents leading busy lives with competing demands for their time.

You have questions, we have questions

The Dougherty Valley project is designed to find ways to be in community with this new community.  To reach out and talk to people, to listen to their views and needs, to find ways to bring the message of Jesus to those who are open to hearing it without turning off those who are not yet ready.  The Dougherty Valley project is designed to get three congregations and the Diocese to work together outside their comfort zones to try new things, explore new ideas for doing church, and focus on building community beyond church that keeps the conversation going.

You have question, we have questions

We do know this—God has given us this wonderful opportunity to be disciples.  He has set before us a “project” that is not like anything and or anyplace we have tried before to serve.  He is challenging us to be open and transparent about our own personal testimony about why Jesus is important in our lives.

He is calling on us to be the Body of Christ and invite others to join us and do it in the ‘languages of the people’.

The Dougherty Valley project is our Pentecost—-how will we respond?

Here are some resources we learned about at Saturday’s Workshop:

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Jesus

Image via Wikipedia

Help me discover Jesus in my life and support me on my personal faith journey.

Help me give my kids a good faith foundation that will guide their lives.

Give me options to pray, worship and serve others on my terms, in my time available.

Help me be in community with others who share my faith and welcome me as I am.

Spare me from church politics and the hassles that get in the way of my faith journey.

These simple yet powerful messages are the hope of the church. They symbolize the deep spiritual faith of people who love God and seek Christ but often see church practices as out of touch and in the way of true community.

We did not just dream this stuff up in the Church Growth Program.  There are many surveys and studies on why the church is in decline.  The words are often evasive or designed not to offend but the messages are clear.

The younger we are the more turned off we have become by the old ways of doing church.  The people of the church are ‘not like me’ you often hear it said.  The people in church are judgmental and don’t want to hear anything different.  I don’t feel welcome there.

Instead of becoming the Body of Christ are we turning into the Pharisees instead?

Think about the plaintive yearning of the messages above—think about what the people are telling us.

“Let me in!”

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Evangelism is kind of a dirty word in the Episcopal Church.  We don’t use it much.  We don’t teach much about it and what it meant to Jesus and why it should mean something to us today. Evangelism is not politically correct.

But spreading the Good News is what Jesus set out to do and why He gathered around Him a group to multiply His efforts.

Matthew 28:16-20

16 Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. 17 When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. 18 Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Growing the church again after years of steady decline in membership, attendance and pledge support is a challenge facing every mainline denomination. For the Episcopal Church in the United States the decline has averaged -3.3% per year in the key metrics. For the Diocese of California, the implications of this are profound.

At that current rate of decline, the Episcopal Diocese of Caifornia will have one-half the pledge units (<5000) in 2022 than it had in 2000. Similar decline in membership and average Sunday attendance means the Episcopal Church faces an existential threat to its relevance let alone vitality.

The reasons for decline are varied ranging from changing demographics, changes in family religious traditions as secularization pushes faith out of the public square, our schools and other places. And there are the self-inflicted wounds of churches who still believe they have a monopoly on people’s religious faith experiences. Then there are the endless conflicts of church politics, religious strife and other bad press that make church seem less inviting, less safe, less home.

The church has a big problem, but the Holy Spirit is calling us to trust Him with these burdens and follow our own Great Commission to go out there and make disciples of all the nations—starting with our neighbors. This is not a message we hear very much in the Episcopal Church because we have not had a theological tradition of being evangelists.

What is it about evangelism that turns us off?

Maybe evangelism threatens our sense of safety?  We like it in our congregational silos where we go through the motions and feel comforted by the sameness of the ritual.  Most congregations I have belonged to have the same blinders on seeing themselves as unique and the idea of collaboration with others is something we assign to outreach performed safely from a distance.  We’d rather send money than roll up our sleeves and work in the vineyard ourselves.

Growing the church is about growing community—and being in communities that thrive on faith, and love and the joy of being the Body of Christ means doing His work in the vineyard we are given to tend. It is Jesus calling us to live into our own Great Commission as disciples inviting others to join us. To do God’s work we have to put aside some of the old ways of the church that divide us, separate us from our mission in the vineyard and remember that we are sisters and brothers of the body of Christ.

Matthew 10:40-42:

“Jesus said, “Whoever welcomes you welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes the one who sent me. Whoever welcomes a prophet in the name of a prophet will receive a prophet’s reward; and whoever welcomes a righteous person will receive the reward of the righteous; and whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones in the name of a disciple—truly I tell you, none of these will lose their reward.”

‘Whoever welcomes you welcomes me’ probably was not designed to mean shaking hands at the church door each Sunday and calling it quits for the week.  Could it be that the church is no longer growing because we are no longer growing as the true Body of Christ?  Are we guilty of just going through the motions?

Evangelism is not electrifying our sanctuary adding movie screens and professional bands like the Evangelicals have tried.  Oh it brought in a crowd alright, but they only stayed as long as you kept on entertaining them.  The current research suggests that the half-life of that approach to church growth may be short as the growth rate of the megachurches on average is now flat after years of big increases. Why?  Probably for a lot of the same reasons mainline churches has declined—we lost sight of the real reason we showed up in the first place.

1 Corinthians 14:26

“So here is what I want you to do. When you gather for worship, each one you be prepared with something that will be useful for all: Sing a hymn, teach a lesson, tell a story, lead a prayer, provide an insight.”

Get the message?

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The Great Commission

The Great Commission via Wikipedia

Jesus said, “Listen to another parable.  There was a landowner who planted a vineyard, put a fence around it, and dug a wine press in it, and built a watchtower.  Then he leased it to tenants and went to another country. When the harvest time had come, he sent his slaves to the tenants to collect his produce.  But the tenants seized his slaves and beat one, killed another and stoned another.  Again he sent other slaves, more than the first; and they treated them in the same way.  Finally, he sent his son to them saying, ‘They will respect my son.’  But when the tenants saw the son, they said to themselves, “this is the heir; come let’s kill him and get his inheritance.’  So they seized him, threw him out of the vineyard, and killed him.  Now when the owner of the vineyard comes, what will he do to those tenants?”  They said to him, “He will put those wretches to a miserable death, and lease the vineyard to other tenants who will give him the produce at the harvest time.”

Jesus said to them, “Have you ever read the scriptures:

‘The stone that the builders rejected

Has become the cornerstone;

This was the Lord’s doing,

And it is amazing in our eyes’?

Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people that produces the fruits of the kingdom.  The one who falls on this stone will be broken to pieces; and it will crush anyone on whom it all.”

When the chief priests and the Pharisees heard his parable, they realized that he was speaking about them.  They wanted to arrest him, but they feared the crowds, because they regarded him as a prophet. (Matthew 21:33-46)

Have you ever noticed how of often the lessons appointed each Sunday has a message for you that you don’t realize until you are sitting there in the pews and it hits you between the eyes?  This happens to me often and it happened again today when I least expected it.  The gospel reading warns us to be faithful to God.  OK, I’m doing my best to be faithful, what’s the problem?

As the homilist interprets the Gospel reading from Matthew I realize that the message is that God’s redeeming grace is enduring but that to receive it we must live the lives of redeemed people.  That is—our weekly corporate worship is not designed so that we can just go through the motions of being part of the Body of Christ, we are expected to actually follow the way of Christ!  YIKES!  That means we can’t just coast we have to work for our share of the product of the vineyard, not be complacent but go out there and work the vineyard like you mean it! Right between my eyes, OK, Jesus I get it. 

Is the church growth program Jesus’ call to us to respond to the long slow decline in church attendance, membership and pledging?  Is Jesus telling not only the Episcopal Church but all the mainline religions that we are wicked slaves forgetting whose we are and taking advantage of an absentee vineyard owner?  Otherwise why would we be so neglecting of the church to let it run out of gas and into the ditch?  

Every major denomination has the same problem and is struggling to find the same answer—how do we keep the inheritance?  The people in the pews are voting with their feet and the message is clear—we don’t feel the institutional church is meeting our needs nor helping us find Jesus in our lives so we are searching for new ways to ‘do church’ that will meet our hunger to be part of the body of Christ.

After twenty years of steady decline, something amazing happened in the Diocese of California Up from the pews the faithful began to ask what are we going to do to get the church growing again?  The Holy Spirit must have been cheering because in a relatively short period of weeks that questioning and prayer, confession and hope for renewal had worked its way from the pews to the Bishop of California.

When Bishop Marc came to the August meeting of the Executive Council he told us he felt it was time to place our faith in God’s call to the faithful and to ask the collective wisdom of the laity to go to work in the vineyard to get the church growing again.  He was neither conditional nor tentative, he asked the Executive Council to take charge of this church growth program initiative and run with it. 

We are a little more than one month into the church growth program and the Pharisees are after us.  The church growth program empowers the laity to try new ways to do church.  It invites us to question programs that don’t work as planned, that do not get desired results.  It encourages us to take initiative on our own without waiting for permission.  But change is hard in the church just as it is in other parts of our lives.

Church Growth Program causes trouble by asking hard questions.  It gives us permission to challenge conventional thinking.  That was apparent to me at the Contra Costa Deanery meeting as I described the upcoming workshops of the membership growth team.  When I said the November meeting would discuss the issues of East Contra Costa County I got hit between the eyes by the concerns of several of the congregations in that area that the real agenda of the Diocese was to consolidate them into one bigger congregation, but that they felt the needs of the area were too diverse, the geographic too distributed and the communities of interest too different to work together.  Really?

Change is threatening and so is the church growth program, just like the Pharisees felt threatened by the preaching of Jesus and the disciples.   But if the church growth program is the laity’s attempt to be the Body of Christ and do the work we are called to do by the Great Commission, questioning is going to happen.

  • Empower the Laity. The change envisioned in the church growth program shifts the responsibility for improving attendance, membership and pledging from the Diocesan staff and clergy to the laity.
  • Set Measurable Results for Growth. The church growth program encourages a new focus of Diocesan congregational development to work on our best opportunities to grow the church rather than its current mission effectiveness focus on our least effective ones.  We do a poor job of measuring results and facing realities that we can no longer afford to keep supporting programs, missions and congregations that are not sustainable.
  • Encourage Collaborative Ministries. The church growth program embraces collaborative efforts to work with struggling congregations to try new ideas to help the congregation pursue its best opportunities to thrive without subsidies.
  • Invest in Growth instead of Subsidizing Failure. The church growth program promises to shift the spending priorities of the Diocese from top down Diocesan programs to bottoms up support for congregational efforts to grow by matching the investment and time commitments congregations are willing to make in a mission or ministry program with matching support from the Diocese on a competitive basis across the Diocese.

I do not know what the right answer is for the East Contra Costa County area is.  But I do know this, the Diocese of California has a big opportunity in the changing demographics and growth patterns emerging over the last ten years that are now being documented in the 2010 Census.  The rapid growth and now stalled economy of East CoCo has given us a new diversity of multicultural richness layered into the underlying fabric of the community.  The Episcopal missions and parishes in Contra Costa County working together are well positioned to respond to those needs with the help of the Diocese.  But alone none of them is able to deal with the size, complexity and diversity of the need.  Some congregations are thriving, others are struggling but few work together in any meaningful way to do the work of the church in this area.

Out of the Pews and Congregation Silos into the Vineyard

Our challenge is to bring together the missions and congregations serving the Contra Costa County deanery area to explore ways they can work together to do God’s work in this part of the vineyard and to define the Diocesan support needs to make it happen.  The difference in the approach to this program with and without the church growth program makes this a perfect laboratory for experimentation with new ways to do church in this part of the vineyard.

The traditional congregational development and misson effectiveness approach is to wait for the Diocese to decide what to do.  The church growth program approach turns that strategy on its head and calls upon the lay leaders of the area to come together, work together, develop a plan to ‘plant a vineyard, put a fence around it, dig a wine press and build a watchtower’ as Matthew described it in the parable—that is to develop a plan and invest in doing God’s work then tend it faithfully until the vines take root and bear fruit and offer it to God, the owner of all of our vineyards.

Do you see the power of this different approach?

The traditional approach to church growth through congregational development and mission effectiveness is to sit in the pews and wait for the Bishop, Diocesan Staff and clergy to tell us what to do.  The truth of our church decline problem should be telling us —-this is not working!

Why?

Jesus is calling us to get up from the safety of our pew to work in the vineyard.  Jesus wants us to work up a sweat by doing the work He gave us to do.  The ‘build it and they will come’ approach to church planting has not worked for a long time.  The buildings of the church are NOT the church.  The church lives in the hearts of the faithful whose lives are touched and transformed by the unconditional love of Christ in our lives and across our community.

To grow the church we must not be afraid to throw open the doors —and our hearts to those who love God and seek Christ and be working in the vineyard where these new seekers and faithful live, work, struggle and pray.  We are wicked tenants because we have failed to follow that call and church decline is part of “putting those wretches to a miserable death” and warning us that God will “lease the vineyard to other tenants who will give him the produce at the harvest time”  if we don’t get up and get out of the pews and do some honest and holy work in the vineyard he has been calling us to do.

The challenge for the Church Growth Program will be to survive the action planning phase and speak to the hearts of the lay leaders across the congregations to roll up their sleeves and do God’s work in the vineyard.  But the absentee owner promises to come for his produce.  What will he want?

Jesus wants the vineyard to thrive and produce good fruit

He want the laborers in the vineyard to see the Kingdom as one of abundance not a zero sum game where when the landowner gets more the laborers in the vineyard get less. 

God’s economy is NOT a zero sum game and neither is the church growth program.  But it does require honestly facing up to the issues in getting the church growing again.  It does call us to throw open the doors and welcome the faithful from many nationalities, many cultures and languages who love God and seek Christ.  It does call us to stop doing things that no longer work, do not help the church grow or empower us to be the body of Christ.

The consequence of not facing the church growth issues is also clear—-by 2022 the Diocese of California will shrink to a point that it becomes largely irrelevant  from the steady -3.3% decline each year in attendance, membership and pledge units from business as usual.

That is the lesson from the vineyard—be faithful to God, listen to Jesus call to us to make disciples of all nations, and to know that as we do that work in the vineyard, Jesus will be with us until the end of the ages.

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Growing the church again after years of slow steady decline in membership, attendance and pledge support is a challenge facing every mainline denomination.  For the Episcopal Church in the United States the decline has been a steady -3.3% per year in the key metrics.  For the Diocese of California, the implications of this are profound.

At that current rate of decline, DioCal will have one-half the pledge units (<5000) in 2022 than it had at the beginning of this new millennium in 2000.  Similar reductions in membership and average Sunday attendance are forecast and the result is that the Episcopal Church faces an existential threat to its relevance let alone it vitality.

The reasons for decline are varied ranging from changing demographics, changes in our religious traditions as secularization pushes faith out of the public square, our schools and many other places.  And there are the self-inflicted wounds of churches who still believe they have a monopoly on people’s religious faith experiences and act like lords rather than worshipping our Lord.  Then there are the seemingly endless conflicts of church politics, religious strife and other bad press that make church—every church— seem less inviting, less safe, less home.

This is a message of renewal not dispair

The church has a big problem, but it also has the Holy Spirit calling us to put aside these burdens and follow our own Great Commission to go out there and make disciples of all the nations—starting with our neighbors. This is not a message we hear very much in the Episcopal Church because we have not had a theological tradition of being evangelists.  Instead our congregations are often silos that shelter us from an outside world we fear rather than unite us with a wider community we should embrace. The fact of church decline is testimony that this strategy is not working.  That we are coming to recognize church decline as the #1 problem facing the church today is the Hold Spirit at work guiding us to fix it.

Over the past several months, the diocese of California has been working in the vineyard trying to assess this problem of church decline right here in the Diocese of California and listening for God to show us what we can do to fix this problem.

This is what we are hearing in the Church Growth Program:

  1. Help me discover Jesus in my life and support me on my personal faith journey.
  2. Help me give my kids a good faith foundation that will guide their lives.
  3. Give me options to pray, worship and serve others on my terms, in my time available.
  4. Help me be in community with others who share my faith and welcome me as I am.
  5. Spare me from church politics and the hassles that get in the way of my faith journey.

These simple yet powerful messages are the hope of the church.  They symbolize the deep spiritual faith of people who love God and seek Christ but often see church hierarchy and bureaucracy as out of touch and in the way just as Jesus found the Pharisees in his own time.

The lesson is The Good News is still good news and people still want to hear it. The graphic above is a new way to see church the way we are—-in community with each other.  This is a simple —and far from complete representation of two growth opportunities for the Diocese of California waiting for us to discover ways to meet them.  In East Contra Costa and Southern Alameda amazing changes are taking place.  The rapid growth of new communities in the last boom market followed by the rapid halt to that growth in the current recession and slow recovery is transforming the Diocese of California demographically, geographically, and economically.  Yet the Episcopal Church has a fragmented and weak presence in these new centers for Diocesan growth.

How will we respond?

That is the big question and the big answer to our church growth problem.  God has laid before us a canvas rich in multicultural and ethnic diversity.  The current economic hardships see people hungry for a community of faith where they can find hope, renewal, support and love when they need it most.  The question for the church is—are we going to sit in our congregational silos and wait for all these people to find us—or are we going to reach out and invite them to be part of our communities of faith?

Growing the church is about growing community—and being in community.  It is Jesus calling us to live into our own Great Commission as disciples invites others to join us.  To do God’s work we have to put aside some of the old ways of the church that divide us, separate us from our mission in the vineyard and remember that we are sisters and brothers of the body of Christ.

On October 15th at St. Clare’s Episcopal Church in Pleasanton, the membership growth team workshop will focus on the Dougherty Valley growth opportunities for church growth brainstorming with St. Clare’s, St. Bartholomew’s and St. Timothy’s members about new ways to ‘do church’ and build community to be the Body of Christ in truth as well as in name.  Join us 9am to noon.

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Robb Harrell is a Lutheran Pastor in Florida and he writes a very interesting blog called Praying with Evagrius.  A recent post was on the subject of church marketing and getting your message right.  It is a good read and I recommend it to you

http://prayingwithevagrius.wordpress.com/2011/08/29/church-marketing/

I’m now involved in the Diocese of California Church Growth Program and issues to marketing and communications are front and center as a strategy for getting the church growing again by broadening the base and reaching out to the unchurched and underserved.

But what is the church message? 

Father Robb offers some good advice to consider:

“About once a week or so I get a postcard from some local mega church advertising their programs or sermon series. These programs and sermon series are supposedly meant to meet the needs of the consumer. There is one problem with this approach: I don’t think people really know what their own needs are.

Let me say it one more time with clarity: I don’t think most people know what they need. Yet we have an entire church marketing machine that is based on fulfilling consumer needs. The trickle-down effect of this is that smaller mainline churches feel the need to compete with such efforts as a matter of survival. We begin to ask what people want out of church instead of asking what people need from the church.

I was watching Religion and Ethics Newsweekly a couple of weeks ago when they interviewed Eugene Peterson, who is a retired Presbyterian pastor and prolific author. In the course of the interview, Peterson said, “The minute the church and pastors start saying what do people want and then giving it to them, we betray our calling. We’re called to have people follow Jesus. We’re called to have people learn how to forgive their enemies. We’re called to show people that there is a way of life which has meaning beyond their salary or beyond how good they look.”

I was really struck by the statement. The prophet Jeremiah (as translated by Peterson in The Message) says that, “The heart is hopelessly dark and deceitful, a puzzle that no one can figure out.” How can we structure the church on the basis of what the human heart desires when we know that the human heart is capable of deceit? The truth is that this following of Jesus and forgiving of enemies is hard stuff. Who wants to do hard stuff?

Thomas Merton once said that the world is in need of a revolution, one that only Christianity can provide. Churches need to better discern who they are and what their core message happens to be before entering the fray of engagement with the world and culture around them. So often churches become nothing more than a reflection of the culture around them rather than a threat of revolution.”

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Lord's Prayer in danish in the Pater Noster Ch...

The Lord's Prayer in Danish from Pater Noster Chapel in Jerusalem via Wikipedia

This version of the Lord’s Prayer was used at St. Timothy’s the week of August 21st as part of our exploration of new ways to hear old lessons looking for new insight into God’s word.  This version was written by St. Timothy’s parishioner Jean Crane:

Our Father who dwells within—All in All,

In you I live and move and have my being.

Wholeness is your name—

Your kingdom is here and now.

Give us this day our daily bread—

and help us let go of all grievances—as we

extend our love to others.

Lead us not into illusions of separation—

as you help us transcend our ego thoughts.

Surround us with your healing light—for you

are eternal truth and love.

Forever.

Amen

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The Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI

Image by Catholic Church (England and Wales) via Flickr

The Jews Did Not Do It!

That is the essential take away from a new book by Pope Benedict XVI parts of which were leaked to the press in Rome.  In the book entitled Jesus of Nazareth-Part 2, the second in a series written by Pope Benedict scheduled to be published March 10, 2011, says that Benedict finds no biblical or theological basis in Scripture for blaming the Jewish people as a whole for Jesus’ death—and to prove it he takes the reader through a passage by passage journey to prove his point.

This isn’t really new news since the Roman Catholic Church has “taught” for more than half a century that it was not fair to collectively blame the Jewish people for the persecution of Jesus.  But that sentiment was often used in anti-Semitic statements and actions targeting the Jews themselves.

The Second Vatican Council document “Nostra Aetate,” published in 1965 fundamentally altered the Roman Catholic Church teaching by pronouncing unambiguously that Christ’s death could not be attributed to Jews as a whole at the time or today.

The Pope’s new book reinforces the same conclusion as Nostra Aetate, but Benedict goes through a Gospel-by-Gospel analysis to make sure the faithful get the message that he “really means it.” Benedict says that the truth is that only a few Temple leaders and a small group of supporters were primarily responsible for Christ’s crucifixion, and whole Catholic Church owes the whole Jewish population a clean an unambiguous pronouncement that the Jews did not do it.

 

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My corporate worship habit every Sunday is to find a moment to pray to get myself centered.

This is not a leisurely undertaking since, as a choir member, I have a lot to do to get ready for the service to start.  But I find if I don’t take time to center myself I feel something is lacking all throughout the service.

My usual centering prayer starts something like this:

Lord, thank you for bringing me to this happy place where in this community of faith I can learn to know you and follow you more clearly.”

Sometimes I add other stuff or pray for specific people but mostly, I confess, I am trying to get ready to be part of our corporate worship so most Sunday’s it feels “good enough.”

That works to prepare me most Sunday’s, but today’s lesson was from Matthew 5:21-37 and it was four of the six antitheses from Jesus Sermon on the Mount.  You know what’s coming don’t you.

Prepare to get right with me, you dirty, rotten scoundrels. The words are harsh and the message to the disciples is that Jesus knows they have sinned in their hearts and broken virtually all the commandments—as He is interpreting them– and it is time to come clean, live right or get ready for the fire.

Wow!*%  BAM!@#  POW #@&! Can’t we just go back to the Beatitudes?

Jesus is telling his friends that he is going to start “unfriending” them if they don’t quit misinterpreting the law Moses spoke about to conveniently fit the circumstances.  In essence, you slackers are skating on the edge of the truth instead of living the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

Oh, Oh—busted!

You mean we not only have to follow the laws of Moses, but we have to get our minds, and hearts and souls under control so we resist the temptations we only imagine committing?

Jesus is telling us that God’s law means we have to obey the intent and spirit of the law by living right and doing right and ‘sinning in our hearts alone is still sinning’.

I think my centering prayer next Sunday is going to be a little longer.

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“At St. Timothy’s, anyone and everyone seeking to experience God’s love, mercy and power to heal is welcome, and all who love God and seek Christ are invited to share at the Lord’s Table where we celebrate our unity and find sustenance, consolation, and hope.” —-Mission Statement of St. Timothy’s Danville

These simple words express the mission that is part of our parish DNA.  Don’t take my word for it—ask anyone “why did you become a member of St. Timothy’s?”

If you have been at St. Timothy’s for a while you know what I mean.  At every newcomers meeting this question gets asked of old and new alike.  More often than not the answer is a variation on the theme:

  • I felt comfortable here from my first day.
  • The priest remembered my name on my second visit!
  • People were friendly and made me feel at home.

We want everyone who crosses our door to feel God’s presence in their life.  We want them to feel at home—the first time and every time, to feel God’s love, to feel wanted —just where they belong.

I have called it the ‘Virginia Woy Effect” to honor the woman whose skill as a greeter is indelibly stamped in our parish DNA.  Almost everyone who read that post told me they knew exactly what I meant.  If we could bottle it we’d have a endowment full of riches.  But Jesus taught us to give it all away–and so we do.

And that has made all the difference!

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