Friday, April 23, 2010
Various Church Visits
For passion to reach our urban ceneters...Fairview, Grace, McKinley, and South Park.
For trusting God to raise up annointed leaders...all the churches receiving new pastors this year.
For great preaching and leading...Aley and Community (Dayton).
For working toward new vision...Clayton, Phillipsburg, and Tipp City.
For patience and the faith to work through life's challenges...several.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Church Visit, "The Power of Story," Dixon UMC
Friday, January 29, 2010
Church Visit, "Cross the Line," New Paris UMC
Went to visit one of our ministry candidate’s churches last Sunday and had to go to Indiana to do it! The GPS took me to the first exit off I-70 in Richmond, and then from there, tracked me back into Ohio. I called my wife right away to tell her. Thought it was funny. The Miami Valley District stretches far and wide, even in Indiana. Would their Conference even know if we tried to expand into their territory? Why not? Get to make a fireworks run next time I go. What lines do you need to cross to reach your mission field? Pam Weaver is doing a great job in that location. I thought her sermon ranked higher than someone with her formal level of experience. Her enthusiasm and love for her people above even that. She and her laity have connected to form a partnership for some pretty neat things. Around 90 in attendance, 30 of which are kids from the community that they are reaching. Formal education, age, experience level, geographic location, perceived leadership capability, perceived ministry potential etc., etc….what lines do you need to cross to take it to the next level for God? In your own mind and otherwise?
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Appointment Making, Part III
Began our Cabinet Retreat today. After opening worship, devotions, and prayer, the following was the very next thing covered…
Values the Cabinet Seeks to Uphold For Pastors and Churches When Making Appointments:
v Pastors are called and have vowed to serve the missional needs of congregations.
v Consultation and shared or mutual discernment between district superintendents and pastors lead to better appointments.
v Longer tenure is generally good for pastors and congregations because it allows for the possibility of healthy transformation and growth.
v Itinerancy is a key building block of the Methodist movement. it is the mechanism that enables the best available pastor to be quickly and efficiently placed where there is the greatest missional or strategic need.
v Prayer communal discernment within the cabinet is the thread that gives the appointment process integrity, authority and creativity.
v The missional needs of the congregation must drive the appointive process.
v The personal and family concerns/needs of pastors are important because “happy” pastors have longer and more productive pastorates.
Values the Cabinet Seeks to Uphold In Its Own Discussion When Making Appointments:
v Truthfulness
v Collective Responsibility
v Strategic Appointments
v Maximize Effectiveness of Pastors
v Missional Needs of Local Church are Priority
v Prayerful Discerning Process
Why Do We Bless Our Food?
The following was taken from an article printed in the Jerusalem Post by Dr. Dwight Pryor, scheduled to be on the District at Fairview UMC, 2/16 from 1-4pm...
[JPCE APRIL 2008]
Why Do We Bless Our Food?
Dwight A. Pryor
The Last Supper that Jesus shared with his disciples was a Passover Seder. Though some contemporary New Testament scholars question this, the evidence of Matthew, Mark and Luke is compelling.
As an example, consider that all three synoptic gospels preserve an obscure Hebrew idiom found in ancient Rabbinic literature: “eat the Passover” (Mt 26:17; Mk 14:12; Lk 22:11), a shorthand way of referring to a Seder, including eating the Passover lamb. “And when the hour came, he sat at table, and the apostles with him. And he said to them, ‘I have earnestly desired to eat the Passover with you before I suffer’” (Lk 22:14).
At that memorable meal, Jesus spoke words that have become institutionalized in Christian settings:
“And as they were eating, Jesus took bread, and blessed it, and brake it, and gave it to the disciples, and said, ‘Take, eat; this is my body’” (Mt 26:26 KJV, itals original).
Three important questions can be asked about this passage: 1] What was the biblical basis for Jesus reciting a blessing before eating? 2] Why is the word it italicized in the original King James translation? 3] How might this influence the Christian custom of “blessing the food”?
First, if we search Jesus’ Bible (the Hebrew scriptures) we find not a single command to give thanks before a meal. The closest parallel is found in Deuteronomy 8:10: “And you shall eat and be full, and you shall bless the LORD your God for the good land he has given you.” Notice however that the command stipulates a blessing after the meal, not before – a custom still honored today by observant Jews, in the Birkat Hamazon (Grace After Meals).
In fact, the basis of Jesus’ blessing before the meal is not biblical but extra-biblical. He honors a tradition started by the Sages and preserved by the Pharisees. Their thinking was: If we are commanded to give thanks afterwards, let us go beyond the letter of the Law and in our gratitude also give thanks before a meal.
Second, notice that the blessing commanded is directed toward God and not the meal itself. This God-focus is preserved in the blessing before the meal as well: Blessed art Thou O Lord our God, King of the Universe… who brings forth bread from the earth.
The seventeenth-century English translators were not privy to first-century Jewish traditions. Drawing instead upon the sacramental traditions of the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church before it, they assumed that Jesus took the bread and blessed it, and took the cup and blessed it.
The word it is italicized in Matthew 26:26 KJV because “it” is not in the original Greek but is an interpolation of the translators. Literally, “Jesus took bread and he blessed, he broke, and he distributed to the disciples.” The Greek text of this passage preserves the authentic Hebraic custom of our Lord – to bless or give thanks to the Lord for the food He has brought forth from the good earth.
We see this pattern paralleled in a number of NT passages. Acts 27:35 for instance: And when he had said this, [Paul] took bread, and giving thanks to God in the presence of all he broke it and began to eat.
Finally, the Jewish perspective that informed the New Testament should guide us as well. When we say grace before a meal we are in fact following a Jewish tradition (even a Pharisaic one!) that was commended to us by Jesus of Nazareth. As in the best of Jewish traditions let us be God-minded and King-centered in all that we do. Indeed the Sages recommend finding at least one hundred occasions daily in which to bless God as Lord and King. This mindset is reflected in the Apostle Paul’s admonition: “Whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him” (Col 3:17).
In our customary blessings before meals therefore let the focus be not on the provision but upon the Source. Let’s not “bless the food” but “bless the Lord” who supplies all our needs. Thereby we consecrate the meal and bring even mundane actions under the gracious sovereignty of the “King of the Universe.”
Dr. Pryor is Founder and President of the
Center for Judaic-Christian Studies
www.jcstudies.com
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Appointment Making, Part II
Appointment Making, Part I
It’s that time of year. The Cabinet will be meeting in retreat to begin the major appointment making season, though appointments have been made all throughout the year in my short tenure here in Miami Valley. We have received 27 requests for changes in the Miami Valley District, either initiated by the church or pastor, but in most cases both. How does the process work? Well, as I have experienced thus far with much prayer and discernment, at all levels. Every person and church that I have encountered really does want God’s best. Every church and person really does want to make things better. The governing missional opportunity in every location will be considered. When a request for a move is received, I send the church and pastor a profile template, one specifically designed for each scenario, helping them discern and outline needs, wants, expectations, strengths, and God’s call, etc. Those are then collated for the entire Cabinet and inputted into a database. Then we spin the roulette wheel…just kidding! (Wanted to make sure you were paying attention). I will update you on the process as I learn it more fully my first go around too. Stay tuned.
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
District News and Ministry Developments...January 6, 2010
To keep you abreast of District Ministry Developments…
1. Three churches merged recently in Springfield to form a “Faith UMC”: Central, LaGonda, and Story Hypes. Pray for them as they begin to live into new.
2. Have a District Revitalization team in development to assist our churches in turn around strategies.
3. Developing some neat partnerships across the district linking up churches for greater effectiveness in mission and ministry.
4. A large number of appointments are in process this year, 27 at last count. Pray that God will raise up just the right leader for each and every context.
5. District Trustees are forming and will be evaluating District Endowment investments.
6. Apportionments came in right at 80%, a strong showing as we climb out of the economy. Looking to pick back up this year as everyone mobilizes to maximize our dollars for true kingdom work.
7. Looking ahead to new District, website launch and opportunities for our local churches to get in on the fun too with platforms uniquely created for any size church.
8. Locking in key dates and first class growth opportunities for the New Year. Stay tuned.
Feel free to comment with a great God-Story from your neck of the woods…