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Kevin M. Watson

Kevin M. Watson

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John Wesley’s Thoughts Upon Methodism

26 Tuesday Jun 2007

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In 1786, the founder of Methodism, John Wesley, looked back on the revival begun during his lifetime. He seemed to think that it was well enough established that it would not immediately vanish after his death. However, he was not content with the survival of a lifeless sect that hung around, but failed to renew souls in the image of their creator. He wrote in “Thoughts Upon Methodism” :

I am not afraid that the people called Methodists should ever cease to exist either in Europe or America. But I am afraid lest they should only exist as a dead sect, having the form of religion without the power. And this undoubtedly will be the case unless they hold fast both the doctrine, spirit, and discipline with which they first set out.

This passage is one that haunts me. It is as if Wesley continues to challenge all who call themselves Methodists to continue to have the zeal to “spread Scriptural holiness” that the early Methodists had. I can’t read this quote without asking myself the obvious question: Is the United Methodist Church in America a dead sect, does it have the form or religion without the power? Or have we held fast to the doctrine, spirit, and discipline with which we first set out?

I plan on looking at the three keys that Wesley lifts up in this passage in the days to come (doctrine, spirit, and discipline). Until then, I would be very interested in your reaction to the implicit question Wesley asks us today, Are we a dead sect, or do we have he form and power of godliness?

Kevin M. Watson teaches, writes, and preaches to empower community, discipleship, and stewardship of our heritage. Connect with Kevin. Get future posts emailed to you.

Saving Money in New York City

23 Saturday Jun 2007

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(Disclaimer: I am not a travel agent, or qualified to give advice like this at all… so read this, and follow in my footsteps at your own risk!)

My wife and I are going on vacation to New York City soon. I have been trying to wrap up all the details of the trip over the past few weeks. The last main piece that I needed to figure out was hotels. You may realize this, but hotels are expensive in the Big Apple! I looked at expedia and priceline, and hotels that didn’t have reviews about people getting bug bites while staying there were just more than I was willing to pay.

I found a solution that I was very happy with, one that allowed me to save a substantial amount of money and get a nicer hotel than I otherwise would have. Here’s the scoop… I have always been intrigued by priceline’s option to name your own price on plane tickets. In the end, I just wasn’t willing to live with the lack of control of the times that the flights would depart and arrive. But on priceline it looks like you can name your own price for anything: flights, hotels, rental cars. So I ended up deciding to see what you had to do to name your own price for a hotel room.

To make a long story short, I ended up getting a 3 star hotel for $100 a night that was advertised for $250 a night! I consider that to be substantial savings! (And, $100 a night was cheaper than any hotel that was listed under priceline’s published rates, so I got a much nicer hotel than I would have otherwise been able to afford for less than the price of a 1 star hotel.) I will let you know the final verdict after I have actually stayed there, but so far I would say I am very pleased.

Here is how it works. You pick the dates that you want to stay and you make an offer for how much you are willing to pay per night (this does not include taxes, the total including taxes will be shown on the next screen) . Then you have to pick what star hotel you want, 1, 2, 3, or 4 stars. When you click on each star it will tell you the average rate for that level hotel. Finally, and this is what gave me the comfort level I needed to take the risk, you choose a location. There is a map of Manhattan and you choose a specific area on that map that your hotel will be guaranteed to be within if you offer is accepted.

Here is an example: If you choose Midtown West (assuming you are somewhat familiar with Manhattan) your hotel will be in between 5th and 9th avenues going East and West and between 55th and 41st streets from North to South. (This is basically Times Square and the surrounding Broadway district.)

I am not sure how this would work in less dense cities, because what I really liked about this was that you could know within a few blocks exactly where your hotel would be, which from my perspective was the main risk associated with naming my own price on a hotel in NYC.

So, there is my insider information. If you are going to NYC in the near future, you should consider naming your own price on priceline.com. Have any of you had positive or negative experiences with priceline’s name your own price feature?

Sunday’s Sermon, Humbling

19 Tuesday Jun 2007

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This past Sunday I preached on Luke 7:36-50 which recounts the episode where Jesus is having a meal with Simon the Pharisee and a sinful woman begins to wet his feet with her tears and wipe them with her hair. This was one of those sermons where I felt God working on me as I prepared ther sermon. I was deeply struck by the differnce between Simon and the woman. The woman’s humility, and really Simon’s lack of need. The woman seems to find forgiveness and salvation in the midst of her humility and deep awareness of need.

I fear that most American Christians are not aware of how in need they are. We tend to look much more like Simon the Pharisee (except we often don’t take obedience to the law nearly as seriously as Simon does) than we do the woman weeping at the Lord’s feet. I don’t know about you, but it is all too easy for me to forget that I am in need of grace. I sometimes forget that if not for grace I would not even be able to stand. Reading and praying over Luke 7:36-50 was a helpful and humbling reminder that I need to be saved, that I cannot save myself.

If you are interested, you can listen to this sermon by clicking here or by clicking on the deeply committed sermons link on the right.

Another Year Older

18 Monday Jun 2007

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Today is my 26th birthday. 26 is an interesting birthday because it seems like a transition where you are just getting older each year, rather than gaining independence and responsibility. Even last year, I could easily rent a car and car insurance rates went down. But I am not aware of any advantage that you gain simply because you are 26 instead of 25. (If I am forgetting something, please let me know!)

But today I have mostly found myself thinking about how blessed I am to have so many people in my life who love me so well. I thank God for giving me the gift of life and for all the blessings of the past year. I hope and pray that I will be faithful to the grace given to me and that I will continue to grow in my love of both God and neighbor in the year to come. There is so much to be thankful for.

Reclaiming the Wesleyan Tradition: John Wesley’s Sermons for Today

15 Friday Jun 2007

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I mentioned receiving the proofs for Reclaiming the Wesleyan Tradition: John Wesley’s Sermons for Today yesterday, but I neglected to say very much about it.

This book is intended primarily to be a resource for small group study. It can be used in a variety of ways, but the most obvious way is for it to be used as a 13 week study with each week’s lesson explaining one key part of the Wesleyan Way of Salvation. (The first lesson is an exception, it is an introduction to John and Charles Wesley. ) After the first lesson, each lesson is designed to have participants read one of John Wesley’s sermons and then the lesson helps unpack and explain the main ideas found in the sermon. Each lesson has a suggested plan for reading the sermon as well as the lesson, in order to make it more manageable.

Each lesson contains both the original sermon by John Wesley, as well as the study materials for unpacking Wesley’s sermon. The lessons address key theological concepts of the Way of Salvation such as: Original Sin, Prevenient Grace, Justification, The New Birth, The Means of Grace, Sanctification, Christian Perfection, The New Creation, and others.

We created this resource because we are convinced that the most promising path to renewal for Methodism is through a renewed understanding and a renewed commitment to our Wesleyan heritage. This resource seeks to help people understand that heritage so that Methodist churches can once again live into it.

Reclaiming the Wesleyan Tradition is scheduled to be published in September 2007 by Discipleship Resources. You can view a promotional brochure of the book here. Please be aware that this link is to a file that is almost 2MB, so if you have a slow connection, it may take a minute to download.

If you have any questions, you are welcomed to post them and I will do my best to respond.

Reclaiming the Wesleyan Tradition Proofs are Here!

14 Thursday Jun 2007

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I am working on a book with Douglas M. Strong, Sarah Babylon Dorrance, Robert P. McDonald-Walker, and Ingrid Y. Wang. The book is called Reclaiming the Wesleyan Tradition. It is scheduled for publication in September of this year. You can see the cover here.

The proofs just got here, which means we have one more intense round of editing and then we are done with our work. Being a part of this project has really been an amazing experience, and I believe we have created a resource that has great potential to introduce people to John Wesley’s sermons and to help them come to know more profoundly what the basics are of Methodists beliefs.

I am sure I will write more about this later, but for now it is just exciting to see concrete progress and another step toward this idea becoming a reality.

Welcome to deeply committed 2.0!

13 Wednesday Jun 2007

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Thank you for finding the new site! I have been blogging now for just over one month. During that month, I realized that there were some things that I would like to be able to do with this blog that I could not figure out how to do with blogger. So, ultimately, I decided to move deeply committed here to wordpress.

I do want to remind you that if you want to continue your subscription to deeply committed, you need to subscribe to this site. Your old subscription will no longer bring you new posts. The right sidebar has links that enable you to subscribe to deeply committed 2.0 in a reader or as an email subscription. For you information, the feed address is: feeds.feedburner.com/DeeplyCommitted

Also, if you have included deeply committed in your blogroll, thank you! Would you be so kind as to update the url, so that folks will be directed here, rather than to the old site?

Because I am still new to the blogosphere, this transition was more labor intensive than I expected. I am glad to be here at wordpress, but even more than that, I am looking forward to putting energy into writing, rather than tweaking widgets and changing the color scheme (so it doesn’t look quite as much like a certain blog that I will not name… this one. Sorry Andrew…

Anyway, welcome to deeply committed 2.0.

In This Together

12 Tuesday Jun 2007

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This past Sunday was the first sunday of my third year here in Lamont. I tried to start this next year off by first taking a look back. I highlighted some of the ways that we have seen God at work in the past and drew attention to some of the areas where we have room for improvement. If you are interested you can listen to the sermon by clicking on the deeply committed sermons link on the right, or by clicking here.

The Scripture passage I focused on was Romans 12:3-8. This part of the passage really grabbed my attention:

For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others. We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us.

I believe that the best is yet to come for Lamont United Methodist Church and for the United Methodist Church in general if we take this passage seriously. To me, it says that we are not called to some generic form of Christianity where faithfulness will look the same for every one of us. Instead, it says that God has created each of us with a unique combination of gifts and grace. Each one of us can make a contribution to the church that no one else can match.

That means that we have a freedom to exercise our gifts with passion and enthusiasm. I think it also means that we don’t have to spend a lot of time pretending to have gifts that we don’t have. It also means that if we refuse to exercise our gifts within the church, the church will be missing a key contribution, the church will not be all that God is calling it to be.

Since Sunday, I have found myself wondering what the UMC itself would look like if we were all faithful in exercising the gifts that have been given to us. I sometimes wonder if we value certain gifts above others in the way things play out within the institutional UMC, and as a result we unintentionally encourage members and pastors to try to have these “ideal” gifts, rather than simply using the gifts that actually have been given to them, and trusting that God has given those gifts for a reason.

Derek Webb in Christianity Today

11 Monday Jun 2007

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In light of last week’s post about Derek Webb’s music, I thought I would draw attention to the article in the current issue of Christianity Today that discusses Derek Webb’s new CD, The Ringing Bell. You can read the article here.

I found this quote to be particularly insightful:

Webb is the rare Christian songwriter who calls us to conversation. Rather than merely reciting timeless scriptural truths, he asks listeners to use God’s Word to examine current events. More importantly, he does so without pushing an overtly political agenda. Rather, he asks questions.

By the way, as you might guess, I would recommend The Ringing Bell!

Blogger vs. WordPress

11 Monday Jun 2007

Posted by Kevin M. Watson in Uncategorized

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I am thinking about moving deeply committed to wordpress. I like the option that wordpress gives me to have pages and the ability to upload documents without having to include them in an immediate post. Advantages I see of this are being able to upload sermon texts or other documents.

I am looking for advice from those of you who have more experience than I do with either blogger or wordpress. What do you think are the advantages/disadvantages? Thanks in advance for your thoughts.

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