| United Methodist
Assembly urged to forget 'I' and become 'we'
Apr. 28, 2004 News media
contact: General Conference Newsroom * (415) 3256080* {GC04010}
By Linda Green*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - United
Methodists will forever be involved in unchristian actions toward
one another if each person does not let go of concerns about "I" and
make an effort to become "we."
This was the premise of the
General Conference Laity Address by Gloria Holt, president of the
United Methodist Association of Annual Conference Lay Leaders.
The April 28 message "One in
Spirit, All in Ministry," was derived from Paul's letter to the
Ephesians. Holt asked the 998 delegates from throughout the world if
there is one body and one spirit, "What part of one don't we
understand?"
As some definitions of "one" mean
joining together, uniting or forming a whole, Holt said, "It is
still an action word implying to me, at least, that it takes some
work to make something either become one or remain one."
Holt said that church efforts
often create divisiveness rather than oneness in the faith community
and the world. "What is our problem?" she asked. "It is not about
us. It is about God."
She told the top legislative body
of the United Methodist Church that until each individual is willing
to let go of "me, myself and I" and make a concerted effort to
become "we, ourselves and us," church members will continue to be
involved in "power struggles, selfish decision-making, and
unchristian actions toward each other."
The most critical and troubling
concern about being one in spirit and all in ministry centers around
the "apparent unwillingness" of laity and clergy "to be partners in
ministry with one another--not senior partners and silent partners,
but equal partners," Holt said. While there is appropriate talk,
working partnerships within the United Methodist Church are still
lacking, she said.
"We state unequivocally that all
baptized Christians are called to ministry, but for the most part it
appears that we don't practice what we preach," she said.
Partnerships are not created overnight and are built on trust,
respect and a willingness to share with one another in a spirit of
cooperation, she added.
"If clergy are singing their own
song while the laity are dancing to their own beat, how in the world
are we going to get in sync with one another?" she asked. "Unless we
do, the church will not be creating the music for which God gave us
the notes."
Holt told an amusing story of her
grandson who stated that he played on Jesus' baseball team. She
encouraged delegates to also remember their team membership and that
regardless of where they are in the world, "it takes all of God's
people to do all of God's work." She noted that if United Methodists
could get the "one" thing down, then all can be in ministry and
working together to fulfill the ministry of the church.
In describing church work, Holt
said it involves a lot of busy stuff; it wears you out physically,
mentally and sometimes spiritually, and "keeping things as they
always have been becomes our number one priority."
But, she said, doing the work of
the church involves reaching out and is more fulfilling because it
involves making disciples and leaving comfort zones to share
Christ's love in tangible ways. "When we are doing the work of the
church, we are being the church. Ministry becomes our number one
concern; making disciples our number one priority. We are joined one
in spirit, all in ministry."
Holt reflected on how she learned
about doing the work of the church eight years ago when she helped
plant a new church. She said she was stuck in a
"it-just-doesn't-sound very-United-Methodist" mode until she
remembered that John Wesley focused the Methodist movement on people
who had been neglected by the church and society. That insight
helped her gain a new mindset about worship styles and ways to meet
the needs of young adults.
She encouraged delegates to return to their home congregations, look
around and count the number of children, youth and young adults
there.
"If those age groups are not there
(and in most churches they are not), then it's a given that your
church is not meeting their needs." She urged the international
assembly to move away from the "we-have-to-do-things-the-way-we've-always-done-them-or-people-will-leave-the-church"
mentality and realize that the absence of youth and young adults
could be because the congregation is not willing to change patterns
to ways that welcome them.
"How can we be one in the spirit
if we are not following the guidance of the spirit?" she asked. "How
can we be all in ministry if we are not bringing people to Christ,
growing people in Christ and sending for Christ?"
Holt reminded the delegates of all
of the things that can be done with a hand and reminded them that
God also gave them the ability to change hands to perform necessary
tasks.
"Our God is a God of change. God gave us the church that must be
ever-changing to meet the needs of today's world," she said. "God
expects us to have an innovative and ever-changing ministry based on
God's unchanging word."
Besides serving as president of
the Association of Annual Conference Lay Leaders, Holt is also the
North Alabama Conference lay leader and president of the
Southeastern Jurisdiction Association of Annual Conference Lay
Leaders. She is a founding member of ClearBranch United Methodist
Church, in Trussville, Ala., one of the denomination's
fastest-growing new churches.
Three women and three men, chosen
to represent the denomination's diversity, delivered the first laity
address at the 1980 General Conference. A competition has been held
every four years since then for a layperson to make the speech.
The Association of Annual
Conference Lay Leaders invited annual conference lay leaders from
around the world to submit written manuscripts, which were judged on
their own merit and without the names of the authors attached.
Holt's manuscript was selected for the 2004 assembly.
*Green is a United Methodist News
Service correspondent.
********************
United Methodist News Service
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