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Kevin M. Watson

Kevin M. Watson

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The Church That Was Born Again

14 Sunday Dec 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Life, Ministry, Wesley

≈ 7 Comments

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Eldbrooke, Rebirth, United Methodism

Eldbrooke UMC

Eldbrooke UMC

Elbrooke United Methodist Church no longer exists, at least not as a community of faith that continues to gather together to worship God and serve others. My internship in seminary was at Eldbrooke UMC, where I watched the church yoke itself to Metropolitan Memorial United Methodist Church. The following year it was closed. I graduated from seminary and moved to Oklahoma before Eldbrooke was closed, yet I occasionally heard pieces of news as Eldbrooke was closed and then put up for sale. My internship at Eldbrooke was difficult because I came to love the people at the church, yet the church was obviously not moving in a positive direction. Attendance was low, the building was in disrepair, and people seemed to be fighting just to stay above water.

I saw so much potential for the church, as it was located in a growing neighborhood of Northwest Washington, D.C., within a block of a metro stop. From a strategic standpoint, there seemed to be every reason why the church should be thriving, not dying. Yet, die it did.

I heard that the church would likely ultimately be sold to the highest bidder, which most people thought would mean that the church would be torn down. But due to the church being designated an historical landmark, and other circumstances, it was ultimately sold to another church. And that is how Eldbrooke United Methodist Church became The City Church DC.

I made this discovery when my brother and I walked to Eldbrooke, reminiscing, and noticed that the lights were on and people were in the parking lot. I introduced myself and explained that I had been an intern at this church and was in town for the weekend and asked if there was any way that I could take a quick look around inside. I discovered I was speaking to one of the lead pastors. She seemed genuinely glad to meet me and show me around. She gave me a thorough tour of the church, and introduced me to her husband, the other lead pastor.

I have to say that seeing concrete evidence that a group of people were investing in this church made my heart sing. They have remodeled the sanctuary and the area where we used to have our soup suppers after worship on Sunday morning. And the work continues.

What particularly impressed me was how charitable they were in their discussion of the church. When I introduced myself to the second lead pastor and told him I was currently working on a Ph.D. in church history he immediately responded, “Well, there is a lot of history in this place.” Michael and Heather provided a wonderful example to me of how to work towards unity in the Body of Christ. The City Church DC is nondenominational and, therefore, not United Methodist. But there was not hint of gloating or dismay or judgment of what is, to be honest, a failure of the United Methodist Church. They seemed to see themselves as simply stepping into the history of this church, leading to its next steps of faithfulness and obedience to how they understand God to be at work.

And so Eldbrooke United Methodist Church, which was put to rest a few years ago, was born again. Eldbrooke, which was dead, is now City Church, which is alive and growing. (Michael told me that since they began worshiping in February attendance has grown fro 65 to 130.) I suspect that some United Methodists in the D.C. area may not care much about The City Church DC, but whether United Methodists notice or not, the kingdom is coming. Jesus continues to draw people to himself and he sends them in love to others.

I think this is a great story in and of itself. Yet, it seems to me that there is something in this story that United Methodists can learn from. It should not escape our notice that a church is growing in literally the same location and even in the very same building. In some ways, it seems that the main thing that had to die for the church to live was the United Methodist affiliation of the church. While in some ways that may not be that big of a deal, as the wellness of “the Church” is far more important than the wellness of “The United Methodist Church.” In other ways, Eldbrooke’s legacy may be, more than anything, to question United Methodism. What was it about Eldbrooke UMC, the district that the Church was in, and the Baltimore Washington Conference that made it unable to survive, while it seems to be doing very well with a new start? Was there a failure of the connectional system? Was there a failure of imagination? Of nerve?

Part of Eldbrooke’s legacy may be in the questions that it asks of United Methodists. My sense is that if we are willing to take a hard look at churches like Eldbrooke United Methodist Church, we will find some things that are not easy to acknowledge. We will be led to repent of the ways in which our church has not been faithful to our Lord. Yet, if we are unwilling to acknowledge our mistakes and our sins, how can we expect to move forward? For my part, I lament that United Methodists were not able to resurrect a vibrant ministry in that place, but mostly I praise God that the Church is present and Christ is still being proclaimed at 4100 River Road NW in Washington D.C.

Catching Up

11 Thursday Dec 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Life

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Life

Wow! These past few months have been amazing! My daughter is growing and developing. My wife continues to amaze me, and I truly love her more today than I did the day we were married. I finished my first semester of coursework for my Ph.D. at SMU Tuesday, relaxed with my family Wednesday, and flew to Washington, D.C. today. I am here for the weekend for a conference. I am looking forward to reconnecting with some friends I have not seen in a few years. I am also looking forward to spending this evening with my brother.

Many of you know that I went to seminary at Wesley Theological Seminary, which happens to be here in D.C. It will be nice to be back on campus this weekend, though I have been gone long enough that I feel much more like a visitor than I did last time I was here.

I have also been working on editing the proofs for Blueprint for Discipleship: Wesley’s General Rules as a Model for Christian Living. I have committed to getting any changes to the folks at Discipleship Resources by this coming Monday. This means I have a lot of work to squeeze in over the next few days, but it is also exciting, because it also means that the book is getting closer to publication. I have also been very pleased by the endorsements that Blueprint for Discipleship has received thus far. The book has been endorsed by Ted Campbell, Elaine Heath, Bishop Scott Jones, William Lawrence, Michael Slaughter, Doug Strong, and Lovett Weems.

In the next month I will spend some quality time with my family and study for my field exam in 17th and 18th century Church History, which I will take January 16th.

In short, life is good!

deeplycommitted.com

02 Tuesday Dec 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Yesterday I purchased the domain http://deeplycommitted.com! This means that if you are in the habit of manually typing the url into your browser you no longer have to type “wordpress”. The domain used to be https://deeplycommitted.wordpress.com, but it is now http://deeplycommitted.com. If you forget and type the old address, no big deal, you will simply automatically be redirected to deeplycommitted.com.

According to the folks at wordpress, if you have subscribed to this blog, your subscription should still work (either by email or to a reader account). However, they do suggest updating the subscription to be safe. I have updated the links on the top right of this page that allow you to subscribe in a reader or subscribe by email. So, you should be able to simply click on either of those to subscribe to deeplycommitted.com.

I don’t know about you, but http://deeplycommitted.com just seems so much more hip (and easy to remember) than https://deeplycommitted.wordpress.com! If you are just as excited as I am, consider it my early Christmas present to you. (And don’t expect anything else…)

And if you haven’t already subscribed to deeply committed, why not do it now? By subscribing you don’t have to come directly to the site to check for new content and it will be brought directly to you so you don’t ever miss it. All you have to do is click on the link to subscribe in a reader, or subscribe via email.

Thankful for Thanksgiving

01 Monday Dec 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Uncategorized

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Just a quick update to interrupt the consecutive days without posting streak…

I very much enjoyed a respite from the end of semester writing and studying this past week. Tuesday after class Melissa picked me up on campus with dogs and Bethany in tow. We headed straight to Norman to visit Melissa’s family. We had a wonderful Thanksgiving and I got to catch up on some sleep.

Friday morning we headed to Tulsa to see my folks. It was especially nice to get to see my brother, who was still in town. It was also great to get to see my grandmother, who I hadn’t seen since the end of May. Saturday we put up the Christmas tree and watched a very competitive football game between Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. It is always the hardest game for me to watch all year because Melissa went to OSU and I don’t like rooting against her team.

The best part of the whole week, though, was simply getting to share Bethany with both sides of our family. She is really growing and becoming much more interactive. Having Bethany in my life is an incredible blessing, and I am grateful that she has so many relatives who love her so well.

Today I am feeling rested and ready to finish the work that remains for this semester.

Peter Rollins at SMU

13 Thursday Nov 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Life

≈ 2 Comments

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Emergent, emerging, Peter Rollins

One of the things I really like about being back in academia is that you never know who is going to show up. Yesterday a friend told me that Peter Rollins was going to be at a church in the Dallas area on Sunday. I began digging around to try to find out if there was any way that I might be able to connect with him while he was in the area to get some guidance on my paper for philosophy of religion on the philosophical foundations of the emergent conversation… I discovered that he would be in a class at Perkins at 10am and he was gracious enough to meet with me for about thirty minutes afterwards to discuss my interests.

Rollins is nearly the perfect person for me to have met because he is a philosopher and he is a part of the emerging conversation. He also is the author of a book that several people had recommended to me as a very important book for me to read for my paper: How (Not) to Speak of God. He has subsequently written The Fidelity of Betrayal: Toward a Church Beyond Belief.

The timing of his visit, from my perspective, could not have been any better.

Here are a few of many arresting statements he made in his lecture this morning:

  • The rule of the leader is to refuse to be a leader. The priest refuses the priesthood so they can insist on the priesthood of all believers.
  • If you seek God becasue you seek meaning, you are seeking meaning not God.
  • Sometimes the things that we think are making a difference are the very things that keep us from making a difference. (This was one of the main ideas that he spent quite a lot of time fleshing out. He pointed to things like working at a soup kitchen as a possible way of allowing us to do some good which can actually serve to make us more comfortable with not actually changing. Or talking about how superficial fashion is, while nevertheless shopping for fashionable clothes.)

It must be Halloween

31 Friday Oct 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Life

≈ 2 Comments

I woke up this morning to hear the local news anchor say: “Did you feel the earthquake this morning? 911 operators were inundated with phone calls from Irving, TX reporting an earthquake.”

And apparently there was in a fact a 3.0 earthquake this morning. Given the weird enviornment that seems to be surrounding the Cowboys lately, maybe God was trying to take out Texas Stadium…

And even closer to home, as I was walking to the bus stop this morning the sprinkler system came on for about two blocks. I was walking on a sidewalk that had a busy street on one side and a park on the other (that had more sprinklers going on). So, there was no where to run and no where to hide. I got soaked. Which was humbling when I got on the bus all wet (on a completely otherwise beautiful sunny morning). This guy on the bus gave me a look that seemed to say, “Dude, I can understand getting out of the shower and rushing out of the house so your hair is wet, but why were you wearing your clothes in the shower?”

Hopefully I can dry off before the next earthquake comes…

Are Christians Really Good Liars?

30 Thursday Oct 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in links

≈ 3 Comments

In a previous post I vented about my frustration with the slanderous emails I received about one of the Presidential candidates. Today I noticed that Adam Hamilton has posted about receiving similar emails. He makes a very interesting (and disturbing) observation that he consistently receives these emails from Christians, not from folks from another religious background, or from people who do not believe in God. Are Christians particularly good at spreading lies, or are we particularly lazy, or uninformed? I appreciate Adam’s post on this topic, and the reasonable response he occasionally offers to the emails he receives.

Steve Rankin has recently posted about a similar trend, except through campaign ads. His disgust at the way that Christians have been influenced by distortions and lies is palpable. And, I must confess I identify with his frustration. I can see how people could come up with good reasons to vote for McCain or Obama. Yet, the reasons Christians offer far too often are not good reasons because they are based in fear or lies. (For example: It is not a good reason to vote for McCain because Obama is a Muslim. In fact, Obama is a professing Christian, which is why that would not be a good reason… it is really pretty straight forward.)

It seems to me that we have a tremendous opportunity in being able to voice our opinion in the political process by voting. This year it has been particularly obvious that with this opportunity comes great responsibility. I believe that Christians have an obligation to be informed and to take the time to separate the truth from lies, and then vote based on the real issues at stake. We should be a city on a hill, or salt and light in an often putrid process… but too often we seem to be the ones that are keeping the rumor mill going and perpetuating misinformation. God help us.

Good thing the election is almost here, maybe I can stay off this soapbox for awhile…

“I’m Kevin and I approve this message.”

Updates to Wesleyan Resources Page

29 Wednesday Oct 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Uncategorized

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I have added a few resources over the past few days to the Wesleyan Resources Page. If you are interested, I have listed a few resources under the headings of “Wesley’s Works,” “Wesley Biographies,” and “Wesleyan Theology.”

I will continue updating this page in the days, weeks, and months to come.

On another note: I would like to be able to have a table of contents at the top of that page so that all of the headings could be listed at the top, and then people could click on, say “Wesley Biographies,” and it would take them to the list of Wesley Biographies. The only problem is – I don’t know how to do that. If you do and are willing to help me, please shoot me an email at deeplycommitted (at) gmail (dot) com, or bless me with your wisdom in the comments.

What’s New at Deeply Committed

26 Sunday Oct 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

I have made a few changes to deeply committed. The most obvious change is that I have changed themes. This allowed me to have a header with a bit more interest. (Bonus points to the first person who correctly identifies what the header is a picture of.)

Another significant change is that I have deleted the “Documents” page and I have added a “Wesleyan Resources” page. The purpose of this page is to provide links to some important Wesleyan Resources. I will try to update this page periodically. I started by providing links to the two different versions of Wesley’s works that are currently in print. I will also add works on Wesley biographies, Wesleyan theology, Methodist history, and more. You can go to the Wesleyan Resources pages by clicking here, or click on the Wesleyan Resources tab at the top of this page.

I also have updated a few things here and there throughout the blog. I updated the “About Me” page, and cleaned up a few other things. I hope these updates are helpful improvements.

By the way, if you have any suggestions about how to improve this blog, or comments about what you would like to see in the future, please feel free to give your input in the comments.

Cool Links

22 Wednesday Oct 2008

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in links

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links

Matt Judkins writes about Misconceptions about mega-churches.

Will reveals his controversial question, which generated some discussion.

Dr. Wright shares an interesting table that reveals the gender gap in the United States and other countries.

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