See ‘enemies’ as allies, bishop says
May 5, 2004
By Jeneane Jones*
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A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey.
Bishop Beverly J. Shamana preaches during morning worship
at the United Methodist General Conference. |
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) –– Bishop Beverly J.
Shamana used a New Testament “mystery” to urge General Conference
delegates to partner with those who seem their least likely allies.
Speaking at a May 5 morning worship service at the 2004 General
Conference, the episcopal leader of the California-Nevada Annual
(regional) Conference said Acts 9 has all the components of a good
mystery — enemies, murder and mayhem.
“Mayhem and malice are already on the scene as Paul carries papers
that authorize his reign of terror,” said Shamana. “Sounds like
another biblical plot just waiting to be translated on the big
screen.”
She introduced Ananias as Saul’s enemy. He was a man whose obedience
to the Spirit led him to become an unlikely partner with Saul,
helping remove the scales from Saul’s eyes and leading to his
spiritual conversion as Paul. After knocking Saul to the ground, God
tells him, “Get up, brother. I have sent you a partner. . . Now you
know him as enemy, but I have sent him to show you a better way; and
he is going to help you out of your distress.”
In a sermon interrupted several times by applause, the bishop told
the assembly that the Holy Spirit also gives people today divine
partners who “just show up. . . . And usually they’re the ones we
call enemy, misguided, thorns, wrong, single-issue; and they just
keep a’coming.”
“You know, conference, if you love God, you’ve got to love those
whom God loves,” said the bishop. “We cannot chase people down with
threats and persecution and then finally say, ‘And God loves you,
too.’”
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A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey.
The Rio Grande Conference Choir sings during morning
worship on May 5. |
“Now I know some of you are thinking,
‘Well, this bishop is just talking about that homosexual issue
again,’” said Shamana. “Well, I am; but it’s not the only thing I’m
talking about.”
“We are not a single-issue people. What about society? I believe
somebody ought to lay hands on the system of military secrecy that
is so intent on winning public support for a war that’s over but not
over that it won’t let the nation grieve,” she said. The bishop
described as an “unconscionable theft” the right of people to
“grieve for those families and folks who continue to lose their
loved ones in this non-war...”
“Now, you know the litany,” said the bishop. “We’ve been calling it
all week: the penal system, the justice system, education, fairness
for workers. We need a church called ‘Ananias’ to lift the scales
from our systems that oppress.”
Shamana reminded General Conference delegates and guests that the
church is listened to, not only by its members, but also by the
world. General Conference, the denomination’s top legislative
assembly, is meeting April 27-May 7.
“Folks outside of the church have been listening,” Shamana said.
“They’ve heard our message that a Savior named Jesus has been sent,
who proclaimed in himself there is no east or west, in him no north
or south, but one great fellowship of love throughout the whole wide
earth; and they believed it. We’ve got to keep preaching it.”
The Rio Grande Annual Conference choir provided the morning’s music,
and the Rev. Roberto Gomez of that conference briefly explained the
Cinco de Mayo tribute that honors the time when constitutional
democracy was restored to Mexico.
“More profound than Cinco de Mayo is the resurrection of Jesus
Christ and the celebration of the living Christ,” Gomez said.
*Jones is communications director for the United Methodist Church’s
California-Nevada Annual Conference.
News media contact: (412) 325-6080 during General Conference, April
27-May 7.
After May 10: (615) 742-5470.