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Judith Gotwald

Adult Object Lesson: Colossians 1:15-28

Sing a New Song

We’ve discussed the Mary/Martha Gospel story before, so this week we are going to offer an adult object lesson based on the epistle lesson. 

This passage isn’t easy to read and realistically it will not resonate with your listeners when it is read in church. It’s all sort of “cosmic.” Complicated!

The letter is often attributed to Paul, but scholars suspect that a follower of Paul wrote it, (despite the claim in verse 23 and the opening verse of Colossians).

Part of the reason this passage does not easily connect with today’s listeners is that we are not in on a cultural “secret.”

The passage is referencing passages of scripture that would have been known to the first recipients of this letter. Among these passages is Proverbs 8:27-31.

I was there when he set the heavens in place,

when he marked out the horizon on the face of the deep,
when he established the clouds above
   and fixed securely the fountains of the deep,
when he gave the sea its boundary
   so the waters would not overstep his command,
and when he marked out the foundations of the earth.

Then I was constantly at his side.
I was filled with delight day after day,
rejoicing always in his presence,
rejoicing in his whole world
   and delighting in mankind.

Theologians today refer to the passage from Colossians as a “Christ hymn.”

It might help your congregation to understand it by examining well-known hymn that is more modern but similar in structure—Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation.

Calling this hymn “modern” is a bit of a stretch. The words date back to the 7th century, but they were translated and put to new music in the 19th century when so many of the hymns we use today were first sung. 

Your congregation is likely to know or at least have heard this hymn before. 

Read it with your congregation before your sing it. Point to the similarities in message and structure.

This hymn cuts to the chase without referring to the ancient scriptures proving he is the firstborn of all creation. This is already proved! So this proven belief takes the place of the first verses of this passage from Colossians.

Christ is made the sure foundation,
Christ, our head and cornerstone,
Chosen of the Lord and precious,
Binding all the Church in one;
Holy Zion’s help forever
And our confidence alone.

The second verse addresses relationship with Christ—similar to verses 19-23a in today’s Epistle.

To this temple, where we call You,
Come, O Lord of hosts, and stay;
Come with all Your loving kindness,
Hear Your people as they pray;
And Your fullest benediction
Shed within these walls today.

The hymn then moves to the “cosmic” and our long-term relationship with God and the hope of glory (like verse 25-31 of the Colossians text).

Grant, we pray, to all Your faithful
All the gifts they ask to gain;
What they gain from You, forever
With the blessed to retain;
And hereafter in Your glory
Evermore with You to reign.

As is typical in hymn structure, this ancient hymn closes with praise for God in all His forms.

Praise and honor to the Father,
Praise and honor to the Son,
Praise and honor to the Spirit,
Ever three and ever one:
One in might and one in glory
While unending ages run!

And so with this unending history of hymns in praise to God, your congregation will have studied three hymns today. The hymn from Proverbs, the Christ Hymn from Colossians and the more modern hymn, Christ is Made the Sure Foundation.

They can feel proud of themselves and sing with joy.

A Painting We Sent to Friends in Kenya

paintinglr

A “What If” Good Samaritan Story

You all know the story of the Good Samaritan—how the authorities of society, the priest and the Levite—passed by the man in need.

Here is a new —only slightly different—scenario to ponder.

What if the priest (the first to run away) was actually the person who robbed and beat the victim?

What if the Levite (the keeper of religious law) were the interdependent church entities of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA)?

What if the victim was a little church in East Falls?

We have one question for SEPA Lutherans (and the whole ELCA) on this upcoming Good Samaritan Sunday.

Who is your neighbor?

We know who our Good Samaritans are and thank them.

A Consistent Church vs A Remarkable Church

The Revival Is Coming to Town

There is a rhythm to congregational life. Those who are well-rooted in the Church understand and appreciate it. Church people like to start the week with an expected liturgy, a comforting quality of music, a familiar voice in the pulpit, the arm of a loved one around their shoulder.

All of this is good.

The problem is it is not remarkable. In other words, people won’t talk much about it, the Word will not spread beyond those already part of the fold.

Congregations need to create this discipline, but they also need to create experiences that will be remarkable.

Remember the days when the revival came to town. That was remarkable. People went out of their way to attend. They may still be talking about it years later.

Such events are rare today. The great revivalists are all on TV.

But congregations need the kind of energy that an unusual event creates now and then. It energizes the membership and creates buzz (evangelism) in the community.

A successful event builds the congregation’s confidence. It helps members become invitational.

It will soon be time to plan the 2014 calendar. Be intentional about planning some special events—at least one a quarter.

Special events give members something to work on together thereby strengthening community. It creates a sense of accomplishment and builds congregational self-esteem.

Holding special events forces everyone out of a rut. You’ll have something to publicize. You’ll have an excuse to ask for help from unusual sources, broadening your network.

Here are some ideas. (Add your own.)

  • Sponsor a local hands-on service project
  • Perform a play or cantata
  • Create a pulpit exchange
  • Get involved in church camping
  • Host a Vacation Bible School
  • Invite local school groups to sing
  • Have a sing off with other church choirs
  • Have dinner parties with a theme
  • Hold prayer meetings
  • Piggyback a neighborhood event (flea market or picnic)

Schedule events at times that will attract visitors and community engagement.

Give people something to talk about! Evangelize!

Branding in the Church

Do We Know Who We Are?
and if we don’t,
How Can We Expect Anyone Else to Relate to Religion?

Today, I’d like to link to a discussion published on the Grow Blog.

Two marketing experts and a rabbi discuss the meaning of brand in today’s society.

The foundational argument is that brand matters to people who want to belong. We proudly walk the streets wearing grungy t-shirts that advertise the causes—including commercial causes—we want people to know matter to us. In our minds we aren’t advertising the company (although we are). We are broadcasting that we somehow relate to this service or product, and we want people to know it.

The companies want people to know it, too!

Branding, the discussion suggests, addresses a fundamental need to belong to something bigger than ourselves.

That used to happen in church. Religion used to define a big part of our lives.

Not so much anymore. We worship at the altar of technology, beauty, comfort and fun and choose an occasional charity at our convenience. The Church gets this nod of convenience at Christmas and Easter.

Read the discussion.

How does this thinking relate to the community of believers? What are we going to do about it?

Art: The Good Samaritan

The story of the Good Samaritan has two scenes. Scene One takes place on the dangerous Jericho Pike. Most artists depicting the Good Samaritan parable focus on this scene. The Samaritan is kneeling over the victim or hoisting him onto a beast of burden. You can usually find the priest and the Levite in the distance with their backs turned toward the action.

Here are a few such renditions.

The first is by Van Gogh painted in 1890. The priest is in the distance, the Levite a bit closer. The Samaritan is actively helping the victim. Van Gogh is copying the work of Delacroix from 41 years earlier. Delacroix painted this topic more than once.

the-good-samaritan-after-delacroix-1890

Here are two works by Delacroix showing two moments in the scene. He painted the one Van Gogh was copying first (1850). The other was painted in 1852.

delacroix_samaritaan1852_grtimages-2Below are some more modern depictions of the same scene.

The colorful work by Paula Modersohn-Becker was painted in 1907—not long after Van Gogh’s.

the-good-samaritan-1907

Here is a surprisingly youthful depiction by 82-year-old English artist Dinah Roe Kendall. Looks very British! The priest and the Levite have their umbrellas to protect them from coming unpleasantness. Notice how different the Samaritan is from the other English actors in this scene.

how_the_samaritan1

At last we turn to Scene Two in the Good Samaritan. This scene takes place at the innkeeper’s door. Here is Rembrandt’s work from 1630 and a second, The Moon and the Good Samaritan, by contemporary artist Daniel Bonnell.

Rembrandt-The_Good_SamaritanTheMoonandtheGoodSamaritan

The final rendition is by Texas painter, James B. Janknegt. It is entitled Portrait of You as the Good Samaritan. Do you see yourself anywhere? (If not, why not?)

samaritan

Cartoon: Sunday School 101

Church land grabs

Signs of a Failing Church Structure

3eggsThe reason the Church is failing is because large churches are failing.

In today’s Alban Weekly post Steve Willis points out that even in the 1960s and early 1970s, when the Protestant Church was at its statistical peak in America, one denomination’s statistics showed 44% of all congregations had fewer than 100 members and 73% had fewer than 250 members.

Small churches have always been the backbone of the greater church.

Today, church hierarchies eye small congregations and label them “dying.” They’ve maneuvered their governing documents to make sure they are the primary, if not sole heirs. They even actively attempt to speed the death process along.

During the halcyon days of the American Church, the vision was that small will become big. This is America! There are only three sizes of eggs—large, extra large and jumbo. We worship at the altar of big. Big churches must be better churches.

Why are they still outnumbered by small churches?

In postwar America, Christian pastures looked to be forever verdant. Denominations which operated for decades with a president (now upgraded to bishop) and an assistant and secretary, began to grow staffs of eight, nine or fifteen. The support of booming suburban churches made this hierarchical growth possible.

In many cases, these churches were booming because of white flight from the cities. They were already benefiting from the assets of the small churches. Today they are returning for what they left behind.

Smaller churches were never large supporters of hierarchy. They could support a small denominational office, but never at the modern levels. Truth be told, they received very little attention or benefit from hierarchy, so it is easy for them to question benevolence dollars sent in that direction.

But now the big churches of the suburbs are struggling with dramatic drops in attendance and giving. Some have lost a third of their members. Some half. It will be a while before they can’t pay their own bills. Half of 1500 still leaves 750 supporting members—triple the size of an average church. Nevertheless, the dreams of unending growth and prestige are fading. In order to continue the same level of support for hierarchy, they have to sacrifice their own mission.

That noise you hear is the sound of the church imploding.

It is hard to let go of the flagship hierarchies we’ve created, even when no one really knows what they do! They are part of our brand! After all, we gave them power, and they WILL use it to survive!

How do we keep funding the system we thought would grow and grow back in the post-war boom?

We target the small churches—the churches that were always small, never planned to be very big, had carefully paid their own way, are probably debt-free, but now struggle to meet the expectations of hierarchy. They compete with larger churches for leadership talent, which now expects minimum salary packages that are similar in every church regardless of size.

In historic Lutheran polity (still practiced in places) a church that chooses to close can still determine what to do with their assets. But some synods—the ones with unwieldy hierarchies—have actively made sure that it never comes to that. They look for any opportunity to impose their administration (which under the founding documents is also supposed to be voluntary). They use all kinds of terminology that hoodwinks lay people.

  • You’ve been designated a “mission development” church. You think you are getting special help. “Mission development” status can give your regional office control of your assets. The lay people don’t see it coming.
  • You have an interim pastor. Those interim pastors report directly to the bishop.
  • The last resort: something that doesn’t appear in their governing documents except by incremental tweaks of their constitutions which are now in conflict with the founding corporate documents: involuntary synodical administration. This has become a euphemism for theft. Has ISA (as they cutely call it) EVER been about administration?

All of these methods are ways of diminishing the influence of pesky lay people. They are a means to control—first of the people, then of the people’s assets.

These methods are coming into play more frequently today. The big suburban churches can’t afford the hierarchy they have come to rely upon.

The Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America got by for almost all of its 25-year history by passing hefty deficit budgets—filling the gap with the assets of closed churches. It has been only the last couple of years that they were able to boast of a balanced budget. Even so, their projected incomes have been off by six figures. Only the spin has changed. They can boast of the balanced budget and soft-sell the shortage in funds.

They won’t be so beneficent when they analyze the budgets of the small churches whose assets they covet.

Small neighborhood churches are not necessarily dying. Our communal vision is clouded by greed. That faulty vision is keeping the hierarchies from doing their job in supporting the small churches.

From Willis’s article:

We see our situation through the same spectacles that the domi­nant, secular American culture views the world. The problem is not that we are getting smaller and more peripheral. The problem is a lethargic faith imagination and a graceless cov­enant love….

The small-church lament is not about being left behind. It was always behind, always out of step, and always at the margin. The small-church lament is that things are not as they should be. And that lament has a long, important tradition in the life of covenant people. Angry protestations about declining mem­bership rolls and budgets do not offer a prophetic word to the church. But paying closer attention to people and places and speaking out about who people are and what they are created for carry the potential for genuine transformation.

Today’s small church lacks professional leaders who can embrace their potential. The failing suburban model needs the assets of the cities and rural areas, the places from which they drew their members 40 years ago.

In coveting small church assets, church leaders are doing grave disservice to the churches they serve. Assets which are valued only to fill irresponsible hierarchical shortfalls are assets squandered. Properties in well-populated neighborhoods are sold to replicate a dying model in a new location for a few decades. In doing so, they have squandered the assets of the communities who provided them—at considerable lay sacrifice. In their struggle to control the assets of member churches, they violate the lay leadership — who are the source of all hierarchical wealth.

The Church is shooting itself in the foot.

Adult Object Lesson: The Good Samaritan

Caring for the Aliens in Our Midst

Today’s Gospel is one of the best-known stories from the New Testament. It bears repeating because its message is so easily forgotten.

It is the story of The Good Samaritan or The Care and Treatment of Aliens in Our Midst.

We relive this story in our own lives daily. Sometimes we play the Samaritan. Often, we play the priest and the Levite.

Your adults are likely to be well aware of aliens. Aliens are often in the news today. Many people in America want to keep them out, forgetting our shared heritage.

  • Aliens challenge our economy.
  • Aliens bring with them ideologies and values we may not understand.

It is not a greet leap from these fears to a common bottom line on the topic of aliens.

  • Aliens are a threat. Where there is one there is more—who knows how many?
  • What might be “given” to aliens is rightfully “ours.”

The story of the Good Samaritan is a common plotline in literature.

Use the movie ET as a focus of your discussion today. The story of ET is the story of an extraterrestrial—an alien life form. Use a photo of ET or perhaps you can find a vintage ET toy. Or you can just retell the story of Elliot and ET. Let your congregation remind you of ET’s greatest wish (prayer). ET phone home.

ET was an alien in trouble, caught without help in a land that belonged to someone else. He just wanted to go home.

The law wanted him.

Science wanted him.

He was an object to them. The word “alien” stripped him of his, well, we can’t really say “humanity.” But isn’t that what we are tempted to do to modern aliens—strip them of humanity? Sending them home is OK with us because sending them home is within our power.

In the story of ET, sending the alien home is not within human power and that frightens those “in charge” of order and safety. People like to think someone is in control. People in control like to think they have power! It is frightening when we realize we really don’t have as much power or control as we think we have. That’s what the priest and the Levite realized when they “passed on the other side.”

ET is befriended by a young boy who actually becomes one with the creature. He shelters him, feeds him, teaches him and cares for him to the point of sacrificing his life. Sound familiar?

Comparing the story of ET to the Good Samaritan will give you many points to discuss with your adult learners.

  • Who are the aliens in our community? The victims? The misfits?
  • Who are the authorities who pass them by?
  • Who are the Samaritans?

But remember the often forgotten last verses of this story. The Good Samaritan continues to care for the victim long after he drops him at someone else’s door. Being a Good Samaritan is an ongoing responsibility.

Remind your adult learners of the question that prompted Jesus to tell this story.

Who is my neighbor?

Tomorrow’s post will feature The Good Samaritan in Art.

Jesus Sends the Apostles Out 2×2

Today’s Gospel was the Luke version of the sending of the disciples or apostles into the world in pairs of two (Luke 10.)

The passage is the source of our mission’s name and so we take it seriously.

In the Luke version, there are 70 or 72. A discrepancy in early manuscripts leaves us wondering today. The Mark (Mark 6) version has no numbers. It has more of a sense of an ongoing mission.  Jesus “began to send them out two by two.

A little research reveals that there has been some attempt to name the original 70 or 72. (Note: They aren’t all male!). Heading the list is James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus, and eventually the bishop of Jerusalem. He is also the author of the book of James.

The book of James is noted for admonishing Christians to get off their duffs and do something. It seems his early experience as one of the original missionaries left a lasting impression.

The Book of James almost missed making it into the approved Bible. The idea that Christians need to roll up their sleeves and do more than pray rubs some theologians the wrong way.

Yet it makes perfect sense. The Scriptures are clear that Jesus expects his followers to represent him in the world in more than theory.

Why do we still fight the impulse to respond to God’s love, freely given, with selfless action?

  • There is the chance that the work will be difficult. Jesus promises this.
  • There is a chance the work will go unappreciated. Today’s Gospel lesson prepares us for that.
  • There is a chance our work will be unpopular. Christians like being liked.
  • There is a chance that we will fail—at least at first. Our definition of success is narrow indeed if all we measure is words and music.  

Without the book of James and Christ’s asking us to do this missionary work, the Church would mean very little. Maybe there’s something to be learned in that. When Christians go to work, there is something to talk about—a reason to share and widen our circles. Without work, it’s all talk. Without work, the talk gets stale fast.