Tag Archives: Church

Praying over Bagels

For ten years I regularly saw a family at the bagel shop I frequented many mornings; a mother, two daughters, and a son, the son being in the middle child with an older and younger sister. I assumed the mother was home-schooling her children given the time of day I saw them and the fact that they often drilled academic subjects together. By the long dresses, lack of makeup or jewelry, and uncut hair of the mother and girls, I also assumed they are a part of a holiness tradition.

I admired this family. They were happy and had fun together, sometimes too much fun for the pastor dosing on caffeine in the next booth. I had at times wanted to pull out my hair on hearing another Latin verb congregated with enthusiasm! They behaved lovingly to each other and polite to everyone in the bagel shop. And they were devout, often discussing biblical subjects and always praying over their bagels.

I also admire their holiness tradition. Courageous willingness to live out radical distinctiveness (to be holy, separate) based on biblical convictions provides an important critique of society’s values that we all should note carefully. Holiness tradition invites all Christian traditions to consider the dynamic balance of being, “in the world but not of the world.”

There came a day, however, when this family changed in a way that saddened me profoundly and still weighs heavy on my heart when I recall the moment I realized what had happened. I had watched two older children reach adolescence. The oldest left behind her childish look and took on the striking appearance of a young teen-aged woman. The middle child, the son, began having a hard time determining what octave would come out when he opened his mouth. But these physical changes were not what caused my sadness. It was this. One morning as I was listening to the son’s awkward falsetto-basso warble I realized he was praying over their bagels. The mother had always led the children in prayer; often times having the children recite some blessing along with her. The son praying alone was a change. After a few mornings of confirming that this was the new pattern I knew that the son had reached some milestone in their religious tradition that required his mother and his sisters to be spiritually subordinate to him. Now he prayed and the three women with him, two of them older, sat in silence. Three female voices were muted before God because a teenaged boy was now over them in their spiritual hierarchy.

This family did get points for consistency. If Paul’s letters are interpreted to demand that a woman be silent and have no authority over a man, even to the point of a mother not praying in front of her son, then one should also interpret those same scriptures as forbidding the women jewelry and haircuts which this family did as well. They faithfully expressed their conviction of how to be separate from an unholy world and for that, even in my sadness, I continued to respect them for their devotion, sincerity, and commitment to live out faithfully their understanding of God’s will for their lives.

But what is the nature of the world that I want to be holier than and to separate from if I want to be faithful in my devotion to God? For me,  “worldliness” would include perpetuating by participating in our patriarchal, sexist, society where men hold a vast majority of the power, and in which women are too often victims of that power; where women are more likely than men to be poor and to be kept poor by receiving less pay for the same work; where roles in family and church are assigned according to gender instead of ability, giftedness, or calling. Would not a holy, distinctive, in-the-world-but-not-of-the-world, position be to follow the example of Jesus? Our Lord ignored the gender-determined rules of his patriarchal culture. Jesus drew men and women into his circle of believers, defying  the sexist norms of his society. Jesus treated everyone with the same dignity and love. Should not we do the same?  I think so. I want the church to be holy, different from this world, by living out the equanimity of the gospel. That is the critique of the unjust, unholy, sexism that I want us to provide by our holiness.

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Filed under Bible, Blessing, Breakfast, Church, Holiness, Jesus, Sexism

Responding to Haiti

We are still struggling to grasp the enormity of the tragedy engulfing Haiti after a magnitude 7 earthquake hit the Caribbean island capital of Port-au-Prince, just a short plane ride away from our front doors. Remember this as we contemplate the loss of life in Haiti: while the earthquake may have been the immediate cause of the loss of life, most of those who died or will die, die from poverty. It is poverty that drives desperate people into densely populated urban wastelands of inadequate structures and almost no government infrastructure. It is poverty that will kill many injured people who will not have adequate food, water, or medical care. Poverty drives crime that interferes with relief work. Poverty is a condition that robs all of health, wholeness, and hope.

Remember this as well, Christians are called to minister to the poor. “Whatever you do for the least of these you do for me,” Jesus said of the poor, oppressed, sick and imprisoned. To help those who are hurting is one of the most Christ-like thinks we can do. I believe that addressing the dehumanizing curse of poverty needs to be one of the highest priorities of any Christ-honoring people. Haiti provides a dramatic test and a pressing opportunity to see just how much we realize this calling in our lives and our churches.

What can we do? Let me offer three things.

PRAY specifically for the relief workers who are right now on the front line of responding to this disaster. Pray for the churches of Haiti. Pray for people who are searching for loved ones, not knowing if they are alive or dead. Pray for the injured that they might receive adequate treatment.

GIVE. Money, more than anything else, is needed for relief agencies to do their work. Through First Baptist Madison you can designate a gift to “Haiti” and your contribution will go through a network of missionaries and state disaster relief organizations that Baptists coordinate so well. If you do not attend First Baptist see that such an opportunity is available at your church or find ways to give at work or personally to relief organizations.

GO. Yes, you! While it will be weeks or months before any but trained relief workers will be able to go, the plans are being made now for the thousands of volunteers that Christian response to this tragedy will require. At First Baptist we will facilitate our participation in these efforts as you live out our calling and go help “the least of these.”

These things we must do to respond to Haiti in a manner led by the Spirit of Christ. One other thing I would suggest, however. One of the greatest redemptive results of the crisis in Haiti could be an awaking of our responsibility to address the issues of poverty in our own community. While the scale is much different, the results of poverty are just the same. Our call right now is to mobilize for ministry in Haiti but our call always is to minister to “the least of these” wherever they found.

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Filed under Church, Haiti, Making a Difference, Poverty, Religion

On 125 Years

Sunday, November 1, we at First Baptist Church of Madison, AL, celebrate our 125th anniversary. In 1860 the Liberty Baptist Association, now the Madison Baptist Association,  hired a missionary to be an itinerant preacher and church planter. Madison Station, a small community around a railroad stop was one of the sites where the association planned to start a new church. With the turmoil of the Civil War and the hardships of recovery it is not surprising that it took years of faithful work by the association to see that dream come about. Finally, in 1884,  a group of believers began meeting every Sunday two blocks from the railroad station, right were we are today. A new church was born, now called First Baptist Church of Madison, Alabama.

As I reflect I am reminded of some aspects of our history that provide important signposts for the future. The beginning of First Baptist Church was intentional. A group of believers decided on a plan, provided the needed resources, an implemented their plan to start a church in Madison. While here is always room for the serendipitous in the unfolding of God’s will, the church is always at its best when it is intentional. Envisioning an outcome, planning a path to its fruition, provided what is needed, all theese things, an important part of who we must do as we move into our future.

The beginning of First Baptist was also missional. First Baptist was started because the Liberty Baptist Association had a mission and used that understanding to direct what they intended to do. Providing places for believers to worship, for the gospel to be proclaimed, and for ministry to extend the work of the kingdom all were what those early Baptists accepted as their mission. They not only intended to start a church in Madison, they intended to do so because it fulfilled their mission.

The beginning of First Baptist contextual as well. The clustering of settlers around a railroad station, the difficulty of travel to the nearest church, Mt. Zion Baptist, the needs of the small but growing cummunity, all these were a part of the context that framed the beginning of First Baptist Church. The context of ministry is always changing. The church as its best is able to adjust quickly to new circumstance, new challenges, and new opportunities as it constantly response to the context of ministry in which we find ourselves.

Intentional, Missional, Contextual – Three words that describe our beginnings 125 years ago. Intentional, Missional, Contextual – Three words that will serve us well as we move into our future.

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Filed under Church, Contextual, History, Intentional, Missional, The Future

“You need to lead now. You know where we are going.”

This week has been a great mass of emotions all clustered around one significant event. Last Sunday Wesley, my middle child, and I left for Waco, Texas to get him moved and ready to begin his seminary education at the Truett Theological Seminary of Baylor University. Every parent knows the mixture of emotions such an event evokes; sadness, joy, grief, pride, loneliness, and others. All these feelings are a part of the process of letting go of our children as they make their own way into an adult world.

One moment was particularly poignant for me, however, and unique, as Wesley not only goes off to graduate school, but takes an important step in following his calling into the ministry. We left for our long trip with two carloads of Wesley’s worldly possessions. Since Wesley had never driven to Texas, having flown in for his campus visits, I was in the lead with Wesley following behind as we made our way from Madison through Memphis, Little Rock, Texarkana, Dallas, and on to Waco. But I had never been to Baylor’s campus. So as we neared our destination I telephoned Wesley and said, “You need to lead now. You know where we are going.”

Almost immediately I began reflecting on my words not as a practical tactic for taking the right exit off the interstate but as a statement of faith. I believe that God calls new leaders for the church from each generation of believers and enables those leaders to envision new directions as we minister to an ever-changing world. “You need to lead now,” is my blessing that I give to Wesley and all other young men and women that God is calling to be the leaders of the church in a dynamic future. “You know where we are going,” is my pledge to always listen carefully to the ideas of young ministers who understand the future better than I do.

God bless you, Wesley, and God bless all your colleagues. You need to lead now. You know where we are going.

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Filed under Blessing, God, Parenting, Religion, Seminary, The Future