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From the Covenant Network Conference


Worship provides a vital core of the conference

Preachers offer lively images for the future


by Doug King
11-4-00



The worship services were once again a strong feature of the Covenant Network Conference. Music was led and performed by an impressive array of musical groups: soloists, choirs, organ, piano, drums and guitar, and to add a note of joy and strength to the closing worship, a brass quintet. The music itself covered a wide range, from Taizé chants to gospel songs to classic hymns. The communion service on Friday evening was closed with one of the "anthems" of the More Light movement, "We Are Marching in the Light of God."

Thursday evening's worship included a time of prayer for healing and wholeness, with anointing and laying on of hands for the hundred or more worshipers who chose to go forward. It was a moving moment of prayer for the healing of our church, of our world, blended with awareness of the individual needs for healing that many carried with them.

The four sermons preached, taken together, provided creative images for the work of the Network.

A red tulip

The sermon for the opening service was preached by the Rev. Angela Ying, formerly on the staff of Seattle Presbytery and now serving as pastor of Bethany United Church of Christ in Seattle. Starting from the text of Ruth 1:1-18, she spoke of the "complicated dance of life," full of tension, among Naomi and her two alien daughters-in-law, Ruth and Orpah. Observing that this book may well have been written during the period after the Exile, when the Hebrews were struggling with the issue of boundaries, "who's in and who's out," she compared the Jewish need for "nice, neat, nailed-down boxes" to an experience she had during a tulip festival in Seattle.

The fields of tulips were all laid out a separate plots, each with its own single color. "White here, yellow there, with signs warning any wanderer to stay on the path." Then, she said, "we found it. Buried deep in a neat field of white-and-yellow tulips was one bright red tulip, standing tall and boldly different." So, she said, can we be in the church, standing tall with those who are different, and helping them to stand tall too. And so we might help our church to be a true community of God's love, reaching beyond the neat boxes. So, she concluded, "my friends, stand tall and let the spirit of the red tulip live in us."



Coming home

On Friday morning the preacher was the Rev. Agnes Norfleet, pastor of North Decatur Presbyterian Church in Decatur, Georgia. She too dealt with the Exile, beginning from Isaiah 55:1-13, the prophet's hymn of joy as he contemplates the coming end of the Exile. Quoting Walter Brueggemann she said "Yahweh is an exile-ending God." Turning to the conference theme of the authority of scripture, Norfleet pointed to Isaiah's proclamation that "the bridge between the Exile and the return is the highway of the Word of God." This invitation for everyone to "come to the waters ... [to] buy and eat" is not some "liberal, left-wing invitation," it is not some kind of secular response to a "gay political agenda." This invitation to "everyone," said Norfleet, "is not in spite of Biblical authority, it is because of it."

As she closed her sermon she said "Yes, exile-ending God, we are coming home." Coming home from exile -- another powerful image for the conference.



Coloring outside the lines

Friday evening's communion service included a sermon by the Rev. Thomas Tewell, pastor of Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York City. Before he began his sermon, Tewell introduced Doug Nave, a trustee of the congregation and a practicing attorney, to give "a word of witness." Nave, as an out gay man, spoke of the power of Jesus words to the woman taken in adultery: "Go and sin no more." He did not give her the easier, more limited command to stop her adultery, said Nave. Instead he commanded her with exactly the same command that comes to all of us: "God and sin no more." It's not just sexual behavior that concerns Jesus here, but something deeper and more universal than that -- something for all of us.

Nave also commented that Matthew 1, the genealogy of Jesus, is one of his favorite passages. (Maybe it takes an attorney to appreciate that list?) What he finds in that list of widely assorted people, he said, is the affirmation that "everyone has a place in the family of God. That is the first word -- and the last word -- in the Gospel of Jesus Christ."

Tewell's sermon, based on the account of Peter's encounter with the Gentile Cornelius in Acts 10, began with an acknowledgment that we all prefer a "God in a box," safe, predictable. That's what Paul wanted, too, but the Spirit drove Paul to get beyond his boxes in order to deal with Cornelius. "God is always coloring outside the lines," he said -- pushing Paul to deal with a Gentile in a new way, announcing the birth of Jesus to outcast shepherds, and Jesus' resurrection to women.

Tewell went on to recount his own movement, something like Paul's, from a general uneasiness about homosexuality, through close acquaintance with lesbian and gay couple in his former congregation in Texas, to the influence of people like Doug Nave. Through such experiences, he said, "I believe God's doing a new thing -- to make us a truly inclusive and welcoming church -- as inclusive as the love of God."

He closed with the story of two GI's who, near the end of World War II, were in France and were trying to find a place to bury a dead comrade. They found a Catholic church, sought out the priest and asked his permission to bury their friend in the churchyard. The priest sadly but firmly told them that, since their friend was not a Catholic, he could not be buried within the fence that surrounded the consecrated ground. "But," he offered, "you can use any of the ground just outside the fence."

The two GI's sadly took their comrade's body outside the churchyard, walked around the fence to find the best place they could. They dug the hole, buried the body and covered it neatly, and went away. The next morning they returned with a plaque to mark the grave. But the grave was nowhere to be found. They walked around the fence, searching over and over for the grave of their friend, and found nothing.

Finally, reluctantly, they entered the church again to ask the priest what had been done with their friend's body. The priest responded, "After you left, I spent half the night worrying about what I had done. And I spent the rest of the night moving the fence."

"May we always move fences," Tewell concluded, "and may we color outside the lines."



New hearing, new speaking

For the closing service of worship on Saturday, the sermon was preached by Scott D. Anderson, former co-moderator of More Light Presbyterians, a pastor who laid aside his ordination because he is gay, who is now serving as Director of the California Council of Churches in Sacramento. His text was Isaiah 65:17-25 -- the promise that God will create "new heavens and a new earth," and Acts 2:1-13, the account of Pentecost.

Anderson began by telling of a time while he has still serving as a pastor, when he was asked to help lead a five-day workshop for youth on homosexuality, along with another pastor whose views differed strongly from his own. As the event approached he was told that the two of them would be rooming together. "Not my idea of a good time," he added. But those are the kinds of efforts that are need if we are really to talk with one another.

Anderson told briefly of his own coming out as a gay man, relating it to Mary's experience at Jesus' tomb. She was afraid to go in, fearing the stench of death after the body had lain so long in the tomb. "Something was rotting in my soul, too," he said. "But Jesus call us, as he called Lazarus, to 'come out' of our own tombs, to be free of the stench, to be fully alive again."

Turning to the "miracle of Pentecost," he asserted that it's a two-fold miracle. One miracle was that people heard the Gospel in their own languages, just as African-Americans and now gays and lesbians have had to learn to hear the Gospel not as a word of oppression, but of liberation. But the second miracle is equally important: that people learn to speak the Gospel in new ways.

To do that, he has learned that he has to set aside his own anxieties and resentments -- the feelings that well up when he goes to General Assemblies and hears himself and his friends described in such negative, hostile terms. He's trying to learn, he said, to speak the Gospel to evangelicals in language that might make sense to them: the "language of boundaries." And he urged that evangelicals might try learning to speak to others in the "language of justice." "I believe this Pentecost is waiting for us -- the miracle that happens when some courageous person reaches across the divide."

Anderson closed by returning to that youth workshop, which turned out to be five days during which the young people talked non-stop and wouldn't quit. As the ground began to disperse, one 16-year-old girl came up to him, gave him a big hug, and said "We don't talk this way in my church." Anderson then charged the conference as it prepared to disperse: "Don't you think it's time the adults started trying?"

 
 

A major
Ghost Ranch event this summer!

July 28 - August 3, 2008

Paths toward Peace and Justice:

Spirituality, Earth-Care, and the Prophetic Word in a time of Violence

More info >>

 

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An index of our reports from

 

 

 

BECOMING NEIGHBORS:
An Invitation
to Global Discipleship

A Witherspoon conference
on global mission and justice

September 16 - 19, 2007
Louisville, Kentucky

 

Check out our report from the Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security

 

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