COS Lecture 1.2: The God Who Hears the Groan

published on Friday, July 17, 2009 by admin

Throughout the month of July I am teaching in the Course of Study for Ordained Ministry here at Duke. Twenty-one United Methodist local pastors (nearly all of them rural clergy) are taking part with me in "Course of Study 513 - Our Mission from God: Transforming Agent." The purpose of the course is to gain theological understanding for leading congregations to carry out the mission of the church as God’s agent of redemption and transformation in the world. Periodically I will be posting my lectures and lecture notes from the course on this blog. I hope that this will benefit my students: and perhaps a few other readers as well.

Who is this God Whose Heart is the Church’s Mission?

The church doesn’t have a mission. Instead, it is an expression of another mission: God’s mission. So in understanding the transforming, redemptive mission of the church, we must begin with God, with who this God is who has been revealed to us in Jesus, and with what it is that this God does to redeem.

I’d like to suggest some characteristics of the God of Jesus Christ as a framework for what it means for us to live for God’s mission as a fire exists for burning.

The God Who Hears the Groan

1. First, the God of the Bible is the God Who Hears the Groans of God’s creation.

In the 3rd Chapter of Exodus, God speaks out of the burning bush to Moses and says, “I have observed the misery of my people who are in Egypt. I have heard their cry on the account of their taskmasters. I know their sufferings.” God is the God who hears the cry of the oppressed, who doesn’t just sit stone deaf distracted and oblivious on a throne high in the heavens, but who hears the suffering groans of a fallen creation. Rob Bell says that the Hebrew word used for the cry of the Hebrew people in Exodus 3 is sa’aq, a word used all throughout the Bible as an expression of pain, the ouch, the sound we utter when we are wounded. He goes onto to say that Sa’aq is one of the most powerful words of the Hebrew language, the anguished cry of the oppressed and poor, the agonized pleas of the helpless victim. Walter Brueggeman calls this Exodus cry of sa’aq “the primal scream.”

At our parsonage, we used to live beside a cow pasture. At a certain time of year, the mother cows would be separated from the calves, and the cows would moan and cry out all night long for the ones that were missing, this plaintive, low wail. It was the cry. The groan.

If you listen closely enough, you can hear the cries, the groans that go up from the center of creation: the groaning of a hungry stomach, the sigh of a lonely soul, the cry of a patient on their hospital bed. Romans 8 even says that all creation is groaning, subjected to bondage and futility, sighing for redemption.

The God of the church is the God who hears these groans.

And this God not only hears these groans, but feels them.

Fred Craddock once preached a sermon where he imagined spending the night at God’s house.

At breakfast the next day, one of the angels asked how he slept.

“Terrible,” he said. “I just tossed and turned all night, because upstairs I just heard someone groaning and sighing and tossing and turning on their bed until the wee hours of the morning.”
“Who was that?,” Fred asked.

“That was God,” the angel said.

The God of the Bible is the God who hears the groan. A God who feels the groan. Even a God who groans with us. In the words of Romans 8, even as we “groan inwardly, while we wait for the redemption of our bodies,” the Spirit is interceding for us with its own groans, “sighs too deep for words.”

This is God: the God who, in Jesus, will come in response to a groaning world, and who will then groan and cry out from a cross at the heart of creation: “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabach-thani.”

The entire mission of the church can be found deep within that groan.

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COS Lecture 1: On a Mission

published on Friday, July 17, 2009 by admin

Throughout the month of July I am teaching in the Course of Study for Ordained Ministry here at Duke. Twenty-one United Methodist local pastors (nearly all of them rural clergy) are taking part with me in "Course of Study 513 - Our Mission from God: Transforming Agent." The purpose of the course is to gain theological understanding for leading congregations to carry out the mission of the church as God's agent of redemption and transformation in the world. Periodically I will be posting my lectures and lecture notes from the course on this blog.I hope that this will benefit my students: and perhaps a few other readers as well.

Below is material from our first lecture. I hope it might be a blessing.

Class Session I Lecture:
The God of Mission and the Mission of the Church

“The mission of the church is to serve God and neighbor by sharing the Gospel for the redemption of the world. Redemption is God’s holy activity that transforms individuals, societies, and all of life. When faithful to its mission, the church serves as an agent of God’s transforming redemption. Based on this understanding of the nature of the church and its mission, this course seeks to help pastors gain theological understanding for leading congregations to carry out the mission of the church as God’s agent of transformation.”

A Word About Mission

The church of Jesus Christ is the way that God gets what God wants. The Church is God’s vessel of transformation. The church of Jesus Christ is the primary way that God changes creation, creatures, communities, and countries. The mission of the church, as our General Conference has reminded us, is to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world.

And yet the church has no true mission of its own. The church has a mission, only because God has a mission.

The church’s mission begins in the heart of the God revealed to us in the Son and in Scripture as the God who is love. This God who is love is also the God we know as Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. A God whose truth is larger than our categories and our math, who is one, and yet at the same time a community of three. The church has a mission, the church exists, only because the love of this God who is love, who is Trinity, overflows, spills beyond itself to create and to invite in and embrace others beyond the circle of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. I have brought with me an icon that I keep on my wall that was painted in 15th century by the Russian artist Andrei Rublev. It is an icon of the Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit seated around a table. What is amazing to me about the icon is the way that the painting invites you in: there is a space for the viewer: you are invited to become part of the circle of love, to join the feast at the table. All are invited into the life of the God who is love, the God who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

The church is an extension of this God-offered invitation. In fact, the church is meant to function like this icon, as an image of this God who is beloved community and who created us in their image, as a kind of icon of God that invites others into God’s eternal life.

All this is to say, that the Church’s transforming mission , then, is not something we have thought of, or defined in the book of Discipline. In fact, it is not even something we do, but something God does, something we simply have the saving gift of participating in. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German Christian hung by the Nazis in a concentration camp, wrote something to the effect that Christianity is not primarily about a person’s own concerns or interests or mission: it is about becoming caught up, swooped up, in the way of Jesus Christ. It is as if, at Pentecost, not only tongues of fire but a giant tidal wave of grace began to spread over the world, and we have been swept along for the ride.

So the church does not have a mission of its own: it is a group of people whose lives have been swept up in the redemptive out-reaching love of the Trinity, a group of people following behind Jesus so closely that their mission in life has become Christ’s own, God’s own. They have become part of God’s love for the world.

This is somewhat different from the way many people think about the mission of the Christian. In “A Generous Orthodoxy,” Brian McLaren has a diagram that helps us think about the mission of God and the mission of the church, and why its important to keep remembering that they are one and the same. This is how many people think of the transformation we call salvation. (Draw diagram of GOD – ME – Church – World ). He writes, “In this diagram, the largest concern is me, my soul, my personal destiny in heaven, my maturity, and my rewards. Occasionally, after “winning” people based on personal self-interest, churches can entice people to care a little about the church- but is it any surprise that people “won to Christ” by self-interest come to church asking, ‘What’s in it for me?’”

“Is it any surprise,” he continues, “that with this understanding of salvation, churches tend to become gatherings of self-interested people who gather for mutual self-interest- constantly treating the church as a purveyor of religious goods services, constantly shopping and ‘trading up’ for churches that can ‘meet my needs’ better? Is it any surprise that it’s stinking hard to convince churches that they have a mission to the world when most Christians equate (only the) ‘personal salvation’ of individual souls with the ultimate aim of Jesus?”

McLaren then offers a different diagram, a radically different way of thinking about where we are in God’s mission. (Draw large circle of God, world within that circle, church within that circle, me within that one.) He says, “In this diagram, Jesus comes with saving love for the world. He creates the church as a missional community to join him in his mission of saving the world. He invites me to be a part of this community to experience his saving love and to participate in it . . . now every Christian is a missionary and every place is a mission field.”

This is the transformational mission of the church.

One image I have for the church is that Simon of Cyrene: the church is that part of humanity that has moved from being a bystander in God’s acts of salvation, to become a cross-bearer, carrying the cross, sharing physically in the mission of Christ’s salvation. And perhaps it is by becoming part of that mission of salvation that we ourselves are being saved: we find our lives by losing them in the Trinity’s saving mission, by taking up our corner of Christ’s saving burden.

When we talk about mission then, we’re not just talking about a committee in the church: the church doesn’t just have a mission, it is a mission, an expression of the mission, the desire, the dream, the love of God. As Leslie Newbigin as said, “The church lives for this mission of outreaching love as a fire exists for burning.” It is why we are here.

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Litany of Humility - A Dangerous Prayer

published on Wednesday, July 8, 2009 by admin

In my last post, I wrote of the seeming-obscurity that haunts some of us rural pastors.

I think that one of the ways we work through that insecurity-obscurity is through good, old-fashioned, self-emptying, Christ-like, Philippians 2-type humility: a topic I’ll write more about in future posts.

Beside the door of Professor Reinhard Huetter here at Duke you see displayed the “Litany of Humility” found below. It epitomizes the kind of humble self-abnegation that leads to true freedom in ministry.

Be careful in praying this prayer. It may result in severe injury to the human ego.

“Litany of Humility”
Rafael Cardinal Memy de Val (1865-1930)
Secretary of State to Pope Pius X

O Jesus! meek and humble of heart,
Hear me.
From the desire of being esteemed,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being loved,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being extolled,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being honored,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being praised,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being preferred to others,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being consulted,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being approved,
Deliver me, Jesus.

From the fear of being humiliated,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being despised,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of suffering rebukes,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being forgotten,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being ridiculed,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being wronged,
Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being suspected,
Deliver me, Jesus.

That others may be loved more than I,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be esteemed more than I,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That, in the opinion of the world, others may increase and I may decrease,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be chosen and I set aside,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be praised and I unnoticed,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be preferred to me in everything,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may become holier than I,
provided that I become as holy as I should,

Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.

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