Thursday, March 6, 2014

Service=Fruit; Fruit=Success?

This year, I am privileged to participate in co-mentoring a group of individuals considering God's call to ministry within the United Methodist Church.  We had a gathering tonight, and I asked them several "curious questions" to provoke discussion.

The first question was "Explain your agreement or disagreement with the following: Service = Fruit.  What does fruit look like?"

The second question followed: "Explain your agreement or disagreement with the following: Fruit = Success. What does success look like?"

Finally, I asked this question:  "Explain your agreement or disagreement with the following: Sacraments = Service.  Describe your understanding of the Sacraments."

The resulting conversation was indeed stimulating, provocative and wide ranging.  I thoroughly enjoyed the range of perspectives and varying agreement and disagreement of one's responses.  I asked these questions because they are one way of articulating the quandary of the United Methodist Church.  Particularly in the United States, United Methodists are trying to figure out how to measure fruitfulness and how to define success.  More pressure is being placed on all levels of the church to expand membership, worship attendance, and offerings.  We seem to be defaulting to an ideology that can be defined in a simplistic formula:

Service = Fruit; Fruit = Success

A church is deemed successful if it's growing.  It is growing because it provides a service.  From the opposite perspective, churches that aren't growing aren't providing service to their community.

While there are obviously churches that fall into the above patterns, I don't think we can lump ALL churches into one camp or the other.  In fact, all attempts to do so are dangerously close to minimizing the gospel of Jesus Christ and maximizing a worldly perception of what makes success.

When we explore what Jesus did during his earthly ministry, he wasn't all about service and growth.  Yes, he attracted huge crowds.  Yes, he fed them - 5000 and 4000 at a time, according to Matthew.  So there was service, and there was growth - but did those really express success?

According to John's gospel, the people followed Jesus looking for more bread after he fed the 5000: “Very truly I tell you, you are looking for me, not because you saw the signs I performed but because you ate the loaves and had your fill." (John 6:26)

There was no success with that service because they hadn't really accepted Jesus' message.  They only wanted more free food.

Going back to Matthew 13, we get a parable that better describes Jesus perspective on fruit and success:

That same day Jesus went out of the house and sat by the lake. Such large crowds gathered around him that he got into a boat and sat in it, while all the people stood on the shore. Then he told them many things in parables, saying:“A farmer went out to sow his seed. As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up. Some fell on rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the soil was shallow.But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root. Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants. Still other seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop—a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown. Whoever has ears, let them hear.”

If we accept this parable as an analogy for our ministry efforts, then some service will never be fruitful, while other service will be exponentially fruitful.  But the fruitfulness has very little to do with the one offering the service - the sower is sowing seed indiscriminately.  The difference in fruitfulness is dependent upon the soil in which the seeds of service land.  Therefore, my understanding of the service=fruit=success formula is based on what GOD does more than what I do. 

So it's important to take measurements.  That's how we know some fruit was 100x, 60x, or 30x what was sown, and that other seed bore no fruit.  But even as we count, we must be careful not to become conceited or confused about the source of fruitfulness or lack thereof.  Our faithful response to God is to sow everywhere and anywhere we can.  But then allow God to take over from there! 

Therefore, in this season of Lent, I pray that I can be a better seeder, and that I may also be better soil!

What do you think?

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Should United Methodists Observe Lent? What Difference Does It Make?

Today is Ash Wednesday, the beginning of the Christian season of Lent.  I've committed myself to re-engage this blog during this season in order to further pursue holiness!  Since that's the point of this blog, it only makes sense to do so.

There are many reasons for allowing this site to languish in the internet dustbin for the past two years, but I sense a need to shake off the dust, throw a little spit and polish onto it and generally get it in gear again!

Journaling has long been a means of spiritual discipline; and quite frankly, I've only had marginal success in using it in that manner. As Lent is a season for greater intentionality in faith formation, I am praying that God will indeed use this effort as a "means of grace" to more fully form the image of Christ within me.  And if it brings others into a deeper or more expressive experience with God, that's a double blessing!

Interestingly, I found this blog entry earlier today:  United Methodist Worship: Wesley on Lent: "At Present Answering No Valuable End"

Taylor Burton-Edwards, director of worship in the General Board of Discipleship of the United Methodist Church, opened a view of Methodist history that I didn't know: John Wesley edited OUT all references to Lent in his version of the Book of Common Prayer prepared for the American Methodist societies.  He goes on to describe potential rationalizations for Wesley's actions, as well as possible responses for us as modern United Methodists.

It's an interesting thought for the beginning of Lent 2014.

How does Lent impact you?  Do you participate in the "giving up" or "adding on" aspects of it?  What differences has a Lenten discipline made in your life?  Have we as modern United Methodists lost something fundamental that Wesley assumed would remain core to who we are as the people called Methodist?