Bishop Robert E. Hayes, Jr. Is Coming to Lamont

Bishop Hayes will be preaching here in Lamont tomorrow at our regular worship service.  I am very excited to have him in worship with us.  To my knowledge, a bishop has not come to Lamont all that frequently, so this is an exciting opportunity for us to introduce ourselves to him and get to know him a little bit better.

I am amazed that with all of the preaching and traveling that Bishop Hayes does, that he is able to consistently preach inspiring, Spirit-filled messages.  We are blessed by the leadership and vision that Bishop Hayes brings to our conference.  I look forward to seeing the ways in which God uses him to revive and renew our conference during the rest of his episcopacy.   But for now, I especially look forward to hearing the message that he will bring to us tomorrow.

One Thing Is Needful

I actually posted last Sunday’s sermon to my podcast several days ago, but I forgot to post here about it. That means that if you are already a subscriber to my podcast, you probably have already gotten the sermon. If not, now you know that it is available. As always, you can click on the “deeply committed sermons” link on the right or click here to go directly to the podcast.

The Scripture Reading for Sunday’s sermon was Luke 10:38-42, where Jesus is a guest at Mary and Martha’s house. In life, we are often distracted by many things. As a result, we can forget that nothing is more important than our relationship with Jesus. Martha was reminded of that in this Scripture passage, and through retelling the story – so are we.

Simple Church

Simple Church

Simple Church reveals the results of research comparing growing and vibrant churches to nongrowing and struggling churches. Thom Rainer and Eric Geiger’s research showed that “the vibrant churches were much more simple than the comparison churches” (13-14). Here is the essential conclusion they come to based on their research:

The significance is that, in general, simple churches are growing and vibrant. Churches with a simple process for reaching and maturing people are expanding the kingdom. Church leaders who have designed a simple biblical process to make disciples are effectively advancing the movement of the gospel. Simple churches are making a big impact.

Conversely, complex churches are struggling and anemic. Churches without a process or with a complicated process for making disciples are floundering. As a whole, cluttered and complex churches are not alive. Our research shows that these churches are not growing. Unfortunately, the overprogrammed and busy church is the norm. The simple church is the exception, yet our research shows that should not be the case (14).

Here is how they define a simple church:

A simple church is designed around a straightforward and strategic process that moves people through the stages of spiritual growth. The leadership and the church are clear about the process (clarity) and are committed to executing it. The process flows logically (movement) and is implemented in each area of the church (alignment). The church abandons everything that is not in the process (focus) (67-68).

One of the motivations for writing this book is the conviction that the church should be making disciples, not just converts. The church should help people be transformed and grow in their faith. The authors write:

We are talking about people not being transformed. Week after week, year after year, many people are the same. The building project of people’s lives is stalled. Stagnant believers and congested churches go hand in hand.

Sadly, in many churches people are stuck in the same place spiritually. And there is no intentional process to move them.

The Bible paints a different picture of spiritual growth. According to Scripture a believer’s life is to be transformed more and more. People are not supposed to be the same. There is to be progression, movement.

Our churches should be filled with people who are becoming. Becoming more like Christ. Becoming more loving and joyful. Becoming. Being transformed (136).

The problem then is that many churches are not clear about what they are trying to accomplish. They have many programs that they want everyone to come to, but they are not clear how each program is contributing to the overall mission of what the church is trying to accomplish. Rainer and Geiger want church leaders to realize that “Discipleship of new believers does not just happen. It must be intentional” (157). As a result, the most important thing for a church to do is to design a simple process for making disciples and to focus all of the church’s energies and resources on that process.

One strength of the book is that they have done quite a bit of research and they share the results of that research, but they also use case studies as a way of helping their research come to life through concrete examples. The model example of a Simple Church is a church that they discuss whose mission and process is exactly the same. It is to love God, to love our neighbor, and to serve. That is what this church is all about. The broadest level is loving God which they see happening through the weekly worship service. They then ask people who are committed to coming to the worship service to join a small group, which is where they focus on the love of neighbor. And then the deepest level is serving where they ask for people who are in small groups to join a service group which either serves within the church or outside of the church.

I found this book to be a very interesting read. Their ideas made a lot of sense to me. I feel like I have observed several churches who have fallen into the trap of being busy for the sake of being busy. The hope seems to be that if we just keep doing things, something that we do will be the magic program that causes people to find what they are looking for. It makes a lot of sense to turn this upside down and start with, what is it that we believe we are here for as a church, what do we have to offer that people are looking for? And how can we offer them that most effectively?

The other idea that really resonated with me was the stubborn refusal to accept that the church can tolerate the sad reality that in many churches people are able to stagnate in the pews for decades without experiencing any transformation. How is it that we have come to a place where it is part of the culture of the church that God accepts our refusal to change? I agree strongly with what I perceive to be one of the main motivations of Rainer and Geiger in writing this book, the church exists primarily to initiate people into the life of faith and then enable them to grow in that faith. If the church is not doing that, it is fundamentally failing.

I want to air one minor criticism that I had and then discuss some thoughts that I had as I read this book on how the ideas in this book are connected to the Wesleyan tradition.

The first chapter begins as follows:

Relax. This book is not about another church model. If you are a church leader, you have been exposed to plenty of models. Most of them are on your shelf. Or worse, you have blended a bunch of models into one schizophrenic plan. If that is the case, neither you nor the people in your church are really sure what your church is all about. We see it all the time.

Go ahead, let down your guard. No new program is going to be pushed. There will be nothing new to add to your calendar. If anything, you will be encouraged to eliminate some things, to streamline. This book will help you design a simple process of discipleship in your church. It will help you implement the model you have chosen. It will help you simplify (3).

I think this beginning is a bit deceptive, or at least an oversimplification. The authors seem to really want not just the idea to be simple, but also the application for local church leaders to be simple. Moreover, they want it to not just be simple, but also easy. I think that their thesis is profound, but I am certainly not convinced that implementing it in a local church with much of any history would be easy. In fact, I would guess it might be one of the hardest things that a church would ever dare to do. (Definitely worth it, but very difficult.) Ultimately, I also think they are offering another church model. I think it is a very good one, but I am not sure how it avoids being a model for doing church.

For this vision to become a reality the visionaries would have to invest a significant amount of time casting their vision with key leaders in the church. They would have to invest time listening to the concerns of those leaders. Time would have to be spent discussing what the simple process would be that the church would implement. In the long run (once the process is fully in place) the load on one’s calendar would certainly be lightened, but getting there would seem to take a lot of time and effort. Ultimately, I think the effort would certainly be worth it. However, the expectation that is initially set just seems a little unrealistic. (It may be that they are aware of this and it is simply a ploy to hook you and grab your attention.)

Concerning application, and this is where I found myself getting really excited, my first impression is that there are some very strong applications between the ideas in this book and the early Methodist movement. Early Methodism was built on a simple process for making disciples, for helping people to become deeply committed Christians. John Wesley wanted Methodists to be involved in the society meeting, the class meeting, and the band meeting. The expectation was that participating in these three levels helped one to enter into deeper and deeper commitment and experience increasing transformation and renewal in the image of God. Many Wesleyan scholars have noticed how the society, class, band structure could be compared to the three ways that grace operates in our lives. The society meeting related to preventing grace (where people experienced a spiritual awakening). The class meeting related to justifying grace (where people experienced the awareness of the forgiveness of their sins and the new birth). The band meeting related to sanctifying grace (where people grew in holiness and became more and more like Christ).

I found myself wondering if John Wesley would have read this book and said, “Duh. That is what I have been talking about all along. You have just discovered the method behind Methodism!” (Not to take anything away from Rainer and Geiger at all with this comment. In fact if that is true, Methodists should thank them for the reminder!)

Ultimately, I would absolutely recommend this book! I am confident that it will challenge you to think more carefully about what your church is (or should be) all about.

Is your church a simple church? Are people who are members of your church expected to experience transformation by the grace of God? Is there a process in place to encourage that to happen?

The Wrong Question

Click here to listen to this past Sunday’s sermon. The title of the sermon was “The Wrong Question” and the Scripture Reading was Luke 10:25-37. I tried to remind myself and all who were present of how radical this story is. Though we all think we know all about the story of the good Samaritan, this story reminds us that we are called not just to love those whom we know and love. Rather, we are called to a way of life that isn’t interested in restricting our sphere of responsibility. If the wrong question is “Who is my neighbor” or “Who do I have to help?,” a much better question is “How can I help” when we are confronted with need. This is the radical love that Christian discipleship calls us to and frees us for.

A Good Definition of Accountability

I recently came across a definition of accountability that I found helpful. It is from Dr. James B. Scott and Dr. Molly Davis Scott’s book Kingdom People:

Accountability is not judgment, nor judgementalism. Accountability is an attitude of love and care about self and other people we love and trust. Accountability is the commitment to self and other loved ones to encourage, teach, build up, and sometimes to correct each other in order to be Kingdom People doing Kingdom Living. Accountability with this attitude and in this context is love assuring salvation. One tangible place where there needs to be accountability is in the finances, but the intangible areas, like connecting with God, must be held accountable also. Simultaneously evaluating every ministry of the Church tells us where we are succeeding and where we need to re-evaluate and improve.

This definition helps us to see that the central goal of accountability is to help each other grow in our faith. The goal is not to gleefully point fingers, but rather to help each other to take steps forward in faith. This kind of accountability, as Wesley put it, involves “watching over one another in love.”

Signs of Life by Steve Rankin

I just posted the sermon Steve Rankin preached here in Lamont on July 1st. Steve is a campus minister and professor at Southwestern College in Winfield, KS. He is also an ordained elder in the Kansas West Conference of the United Methodist Church. Steve has been an immense blessing to me personally as he has been willing to meet with me periodically to encourage me and hold me accountable for growing in my own faith as I seek to help others grow in theirs. It is always a gift to have someone fill the pulpit whom you know and are excited to have preaching in your absence. Although, it can tend to raise the bar and make it difficult to follow in their footsteps!

You can listen to Steve’s sermon by clicking on the “deeply committed sermons” link on the right of this page, or you can click here to go directly to the podcast.

The title of the sermon is “Signs of Life” and the Scripture Reading is John 6:25-34.

John Wesley’s Thoughts Upon Methodism (Part IV)

Thoughts Upon Methodism (Part IV)

I have been discussing John Wesley’s Thoughts Upon Methodism in a few previous posts. You can read them here, here, and here.

I have focused on Wesley’s essay, which reads:

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.

The last two posts discussed whether Methodism in America has managed to hold fast to the doctrine and the spirit of the early Methodists. The goal of this post, then, is to seek to answer the question: Has Methodism held fast to the discipline that Wesley set before the first Methodists?

In order to answer this question, we need to first answer another, more basic, question: What was the discipline with which the Methodists first set out?

The basic discipline was the structure that Wesley created to ensure that Methodists would grow in holiness of heart and life. In other words, the discipline was the means by which Methodists expected to become holy. This discipline consisted of three key levels of organization: the society meeting, the class meeting, and the band meeting.

Today we can best understand the society meeting as being very similar to Sunday morning worship. It was the largest gathering where Methodists came together to sing songs of praise and worship, to hear the Scriptures read and preached upon, and to pray.

The center of early Methodism, perhaps surprisingly, was not the society, but the class meeting. There was even a period of time where you could not go to the society meeting if you did not go to the class meeting. At the class meeting you were given a ticket that would be used in order to get into the society meeting.

The class meeting was a group of about 12 people that was led by a lay person. Every person in the group would be asked “How is it with your soul?” Through the class meeting lay leaders were able to monitor Methodists and ensure that they were making progress along the Way of Salvation. It is also interesting to note that people often came to experience justification through the class meeting.

The next level was the band meeting. This was the most intense level of the Methodist discipline. Everyone who was a Methodist was expected to be at the weekly society and class meeting. However, Wesley did not consider the band meeting to be mandatory for all Methodists. The band meetings were smaller than the class meetings (about 7 people) and they were divided between men and women.

The band meetings asked very direct and intimate questions, like: “What known sins have you committed since our last meeting?”

Some scholars have compared this structure to the three major areas of the Way of Salvation. The society meeting related to prevenient grace, the class meeting to justifying grace, and the band meeting to sanctifying grace.

Now that we know what the general outline of the Methodist discipline looks like, we can answer the original question: Has Methodism held fast to the doctrine with which it first set out?

Answering this question is sadly easy. The answer is clearly no. We have not maintained a Wesleyan discipline in the United Methodist Church in America. My feeling is that for most Methodists discipline means either: not much, or a book (as in The Book of Discipline). But for Wesley, the Methodist discipline was a commitment to a process that enabled Methodists to grow in holiness. It enabled them to experience transformation. Far to many Christians today are not being transformed. They are no different today than they were 12 years ago. (There are of course always exceptions to the rule, and thank the Lord there are still many people who have been deeply changed by their relationship with Jesus Christ.) However, wherever people are not being transformed and renewed in the image of God, it would seem that Methodism has the form, but not the power of godliness.

To bring this discussion to a close: I think that the area of discipline is clearly the area where United Methodists in America have strayed the farthest from their Wesleyan roots. I think the area of discipline is the area where John Wesley today would be the most discouraged were he to “ride the circuit” in United Methodist churches. My guess is his question would be, where is the discipline? John Wesley knew that discipleship does not just happen, it is first the result of God’s grace and secondly the result of committing to a process that has born fruit in the past. This does not mean that the process must be static and stay the same throughout time. By no means! But it does mean that there must be a process. There must be an expectation that people actually grow in their faith.

One of the things that always amazes me in Wesley’s writing is his willingness to ask people directly about where they are in their faith. He was not afraid to ask people to give an account of their walk with the Lord. In my experience, very few United Methodists today are willing to ask those questions. We are typically afraid we will offend someone. Wesley seemed to be more afraid of offending his Lord than offending someone who was unwilling to live out their faith.

If we were to commit to resurrecting a Wesleyan discipline in United Methodism, well, honestly, I think it would be incredibly difficult. Some people don’t want to be disciplined, some people don’t seem to want to grow in their faith. But on the other hand, I think there are many people who do want to grow in their faith, but they are not sure how and they do not have anyone who is willing to invest in their lives enough to help them take a few steps forward. I believe there is power in small group accountability (which is the essence of Methodist discipline) and I get excited when I think about what might happen in United Methodism if we covenanted to be accountable for one another for actually living our faith.

There is an unfortunate amount of baggage surrounding the ideal of being held accountable. Christians are often better at being judgmental than they are at helping people to take positive steps forward in their faith. In other words, sometimes we are better at pointing out the mistakes people have made in the past, rather than helping them to see the hope of a future that is marked by faithfulness.

Recommitting to a Wesleyan discipline would definitely require a willingness to take a risk. We would have to risk trusting one another. We would have to risk being more involved in the messiness of each other’s lives. It would not be easy. However, looking back at our Methodist heritage, it seems clear to me that the Spirit of God was powerfully at work. If the risk of being accountable to one another comes with the possibility of reclaiming some of the spiritual vitality that the early Methodists had, then it is a risk that I am willing to take. What do you think?

Thirsty for God

Here is the sermon I preached on June 24th. I know what you are thinking, but hey at least I got it posted before a month had gone by! I have recorded the sermons from Steve Rankin, and Richard Knight, our guest preachers from July 1st and July 8th and will be uploading them to my podcast soon, so stay tuned.

The Scripture reading for “Thirsty” was Psalm 42 and it discusses our thirst for God and challenges us to put our hope in God, even when it seems like it would be easier to hope in the things of this world. You can listen to this sermon by clicking on the “deep sermons” link on the right column of this page, or you can click here to go directly to the podcast.

Disciple Training

Today I am at Boston Ave. United Methodist Church in Tulsa, OK. I am attending the one day training for Disciple Bible Study. I am impressed with the training so far. Sometimes training events like these are very tedious. So far today, the time has passed quickly and it has been helpful. I have a fair amount of familiarity with Disciple, but have not actually gone through the class or taught it. After learning more about it today, I can now more personally say that it does seem to be a very helpful resource for helping folks to be transformed through Bible Study.

I am curious if any of you have experience with Disciple. If so, what has you experience been? How do you feel about Disciple?

The Harvest Is Plentiful




The Harvest Is Plentiful

Originally uploaded by deeplycommitted

When we got home from our trip to New York City, there were many vegetables waiting to be harvested. In fact, some of them were desperate to be picked. If you look at the yellow squash, they are much larger than they ideally should be. Typically, I would pick squash when they were about half the size that the largest ones are in this picture.

There are also green beans, also many of them larger than is ideal, carrots, potatoes, banana peppers, cayenne peppers, bell peppers, and one okra that looks like it was on steroids. My garden also had lettuce, strawberries, and raspberries that are all done bearing fruit. I also have tomatoes that are not ready to be picked yet.

I have really enjoyed gardening the last two years. It has been an entertaining hobby. It gives me something to do with my hands, to give my mind a breather, and it makes me feel a connection to my family roots – I have very fond memories of going to my great grandmother’s farm in Michigan and picking raspberries. Even more, I remember helping my grandfather with his garden when I used to visit every summer in Tulsa. One of my favorite pictures from my childhood is of me and my grandfather kneeling down next to a much bigger and much more impressive harvest.

So, it was nice to come home to some good fresh food. On the other hand, my grandfather shielded me from the world of bugs and pesticides. With the humongous squash, I also discovered humongous squash bugs. So I spent today spraying the plants. Hopefully these squash won’t be the last.