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"And Jesus came and said to them, "All authority in heaven and
on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples
of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey
everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with
you always, to the end of the age."
Matthew 28:18-20
"You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot
be hid. No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel
basket, but on the lamp stand, and it gives light to all in the
house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so
that they may see your good works and give glory to God your
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:14-16
"I believe the message in the Bible is that God welcomes everyone,
with no exceptions. It follows than an inclusive congregation
is a faithful reflection of God's love. There is too much pain
and destruction in the world caused by intolerance and hate.
God's church must be the place where love and acceptance are
found and from which they can spread.
It's a joy to be part of a loving community that welcomes everyone as they
are whoever they are, without reservations.
Marjorie Parker,
(member Church of the Good Shepherd, UCC, Carbondale, Illinois)
There's something new and exciting going on at Bethany ! The Holy
Spirit is working through us to bring a new dawn to our small-in-numbers-but
large-spirit family of faith. Thanks in part to a new initiative
of the New York Conference of the United Church of Christ and in
part to the efforts of some of our own members, we are answering
Christ's call to be fishers of people and casting our nets into
the water seeking not simply to attract new members, but to be
transformed in our own discipleship as we work together to follow
Jesus' commandment to let the light of God's love that is so much
of what this congregation is about, to shine in our neighborhood,
in our community and maybe even our world with a new evangelism
effort.
Of course the word "evangelism makes some of us a little nervous
and probably rightly so. The idea of shoving tracts at people or
pushing them to make doctrinal declarations under the threat of
eternal damnation doesn't sit right. It's disrespectful, unloving
and probably a blasphemous presumption and we recognize that Jesus
calls us to display our faith by the way in which we live, in service,
worship, mission and in loving community. That's exactly what Casting
Your Nets is all about. It's about fulfilling the Great Commission
precisely as the people we are called to be, in service, in worship,
mission and blessed community.
On the weekend of January 27-28, Pastor Mark and Richard Eaves
went on a retreat as part of the Casting Your Nets initiative
in which we learned that fulfilling Christ's Great Commission to "make
disciples of the nations" is not about embracing some new marketing
strategy as much as it is about understanding who we are as a community
of faith, what our gifts are, and how we can share them with those
around us, many of whom are hungering for the light of Christ but
whom we have somehow failed to reach. It's about looking at what
we do and how we do it, removing the barriers we may have erected
(without even realizing it) to God's people in our community. Just
as importantly, it's about understanding who our neighbors are,
what their needs are, and how we can serve them in Christ's name.
At the same time, through the leadership of our Stewardship and
Evangelism Committee, we have embarked on the Open and Affirming process;
a process of congregational discernment that we hope will lead
us to declare ourselves a congregation open and affirming of all
God's people, especially of those whose sexual orientation has
caused them to be unjustly excluded from Christ's church for far
too long.
Like any transformation, like our faith itself, this one will
require a lot of hard work, some courage, and above all, faith
and trust that while Jesus is leading us into some previously uncharted
waters, he will not abandon us, that the Holy Spirit is with us,
that there will be struggles ahead, crosses to carry, and new life
at the end of the road. We have a congregational retreat ahead
here at Bethany , and we are being asked to send 5 lay people,
people who are willing to work with me as servant leaders, to attend
two more weekend retreats: one in late April and one in June. As
the saying goes, "To believe is to care, to care is to do." Right
here on Long Island is a mission field composed of those who have
never heard the Gospel, and perhaps even more of those who have
been alienated or turned off by churches whose judgmental, unloving
message and/or hypocritical behavior has betrayed the Gospel of
Jesus Christ, or has chased away those who need that Gospel the
most.
There is no question that our preconceived notions, our tried
and true ideas about just what "church" is, indeed our faith itself
will be tested just as they were in the first century when Jesus
called upon his people to see their faith, their lives and their
relationships to God in new ways. When Jesus broke with the social
taboos and prejudices of his day to honor women as equal to men,
when he reached to the hated Samaritans, even to Roman pagans,
he called upon his disciples to do the same, just as Paul did when
he declared that "all are one in Christ Jesus." People, though,
even the first disciples, are uncomfortable with such inclusiveness.
It is hard for us to find the courage to be as open as our faith
calls us to be- to be the blessed community that Rev. King spoke
of. Discipleship itself is journey toward that kind of openness,
a journey of sacrifice, self-discovery, repentance and transformation
that takes a faith deep enough to live with the tension of new
and as yet uncharted waters. But it also a journey filled with
the promise of new and unexpected blessings and new beginnings.
Most importantly, we are making that journey together, hand in
hand, the Holy Spirit leading us, Christ calling us forward. As
we work together to discover and embrace the faithful and blessed
community of Christ that we are, and to build on that, bring it
forward to the church we can and will be, a true community of Christ.
In His Love,
Pastor Mark Lukens
Bethany Congregational, East Rockaway
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