| 'Give until it
heals,' Oklahoma bishop advises
Apr. 28, 2004 News media
contact: General Conference Newsroom * (415) 3256080* {GC04009}
By Suanne Whorl*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - When Bishop
Bruce P. Blake attended the funeral of the Rev. Tom Roughface, a
Native American leader in the United Methodist Church, the Oklahoma
bishop was struck by the Ponca Tribe practice of giving gifts to
friends and visitors.
A year later, the bishop returned
for the end-of-mourning ceremony where he again received symbolic
gifts. Inquiring about this tradition, he was told, "We believe you
can accept death better by giving than by getting." The Poncas find
healing in giving.
Blake shared that experience in an
April 28 morning worship service at the 2004 General Conference. He
suggested that the practice of "giving until it heals" was more
effective than following the age-old adage of "giving until it
hurts."
Bishop Blake explained that his
process of sermon creation is to do a critical analysis of the
Scripture, then to "exegete" the congregation and preach at the
intersection of the two. As he read all the resolutions and
legislation coming before General Conference, it felt to him as
though "we were coming to Pittsburgh with the agenda to protect what
is important to us in the budget rather than to focus on raising the
standard of giving."
"Our attitude is one of giving
until it hurts, rather than heals. Everything is focused on our
limited resources when in fact, if United Methodists would give
until it heals, we would have so much money to facilitate God's
mission in the world that conferencing would be a celebration of
sharing rather than our experience of divvying up a shrinking pie.
"Could it be that the crisis in
our family of faith is a crisis of faith, not of the pocketbook?" he
asked. He suggested United Methodists have somehow lost the
connection between grace and giving. "It has become more important
for us to protect our standard of living than our standard of
giving."
The bishop encouraged the
international assembly to follow the direction of Jesus Christ in
Matthew 23:23-26, when he says people must scour their lives and rid
themselves of gluttony and greed.
He challenged the delegates to
live a gospel of giving until it heals.
Blake presides over both the
geographically based Oklahoma Conference and the Oklahoma Indian
Missionary Conference, which is composed of United Methodist members
of several Native American tribes. This is the first time he has
preached at a General Conference.
The morning worship service opened
with praise music led by the Mass Choir and Dance Ministry of St.
James United Methodist Church in Alpharetta, Ga., and ended with a
dismissal in Choctaw by David Wilson of the Oklahoma Indian
Missionary Conference. The service included songs in English,
Nigerian and Zulu, a traditional hymn, praise choruses and African
tunes.
*Whorl is a correspondent for
United Methodist News Service.
********************
United Methodist News
Service
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