Archive for Uncategorized

God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on July 9th, 2009

Editor’s note: The following sermon was delivered by Tori Butler at the July 8 worship service in the Simpson Memorial Chapel in the United Methodist Building in Washington, D.C. Butler, a student at the Duke Divinity School, is serving as a Peace with Justice Intern at the General Board of Church & Society this summer. She has been coordinating the weekly chapel worship services. Several other summer interns participated in the July 8 service as well.

The gospel lesson for the service was Mark 6:1-13.


In today’s gospel lesson we encounter Jesus reentering his hometown of Nazareth, after a long stint away. He is returning as a known healer, exorcist, prophet, and even one who has the power to raise the dead back to life.

As a minister, he has produced much fruit and now he returns to the desolate land of Nazareth. A place that is unidentifiable on the map. The Ghetto of Galilee. It is the place of the despised. Even one of Jesus’ chosen disciples, Nathanael asked, “Can any good come out of Nazareth?” After a personal encounter with Jesus, however, Nathanael knew he had met the Son of God.

But those in Jesus’ home church, the people who equipped Jesus for the ministry, could not see what Nathanael, what the other disciples and even the crowds who followed him could see: that Jesus was the Messiah, the anointed one.

Yes, the people of Nazareth were amazed at Jesus’ knowledge and wisdom. Yet, they could not get past that Jesus was Mary’s son, that he was a carpenter, that he was common just like them.

They could not see that God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary.

Think about it: God chose Jacob the trickster, the one who stole his brother’s blessing to become Israel; God chose Moses who had a stutter to go before Pharoah to demand freedom for his people; God chose David, a little shepherd boy, to slay Goliath, a giant who tormented Israel.

Brothers and sisters, I stopped by to tell you that God even chose you, the intern, the lay leader, the pastor serving in extension ministry to carry on Jesus’ ministry of healing the sick, exorcizing demons, and speaking truth to power, on Capitol Hill and in your everyday lives. Jesus promised us that we would be able to do greater things than even he did.

But, as we go out into the world spreading the gospel, fulfilling our callings, it is important to remember that not everyone will receive our message. Jesus himself said, “Only in his hometown, among his relatives and in his own house is a prophet without honor.” Meaning it does not matter if we calmed the sea, or healed a woman who suffered for 12 long years, or advocated for legislation to end the war, or taught the Social Principles in a far-off land, there are just some people in our lives who cannot understand the call. They cannot imagine that God could possibly use us to preach, teach, evangelize, organize over a 1,000 people to support health-care reform, or even have the boldness to be the voice on Capitol Hill of those who cannot speak out for themselves.

We, like Jesus, become perplexed at the unbelief of those who have set the foundation for our faith. Our text for today encourages us, however, to press forward even when people do not have ears to hear or hearts to receive the message of repentance and the call to discipleship we are required to offer.

When Jesus gives the disciples the commission to go out to village to village, he tells them to expect rejection. He cautions that some will openly receive them, offering bread and a place to rest; but there will be some who will not heed their message and for those they must dust their feet off and keep on moving.

Brothers and sisters, as disciples we should expect rejection and opposition. That is a sure indication that we are walking in the will of God.

But, I do want to caution you to be careful when you decide to dust your feet. Sometimes we want to dust our feet and walk away when God has not told us to move. We want to dust our feet off at reconciliation ministry. We want to dust our feet off at ministry to the homeless. We want to dust our feet off at legislation that is not moving in the direction we want it to go.

Brothers and sisters, we must realize that sometimes God calls us to stay in the muck. The muck is not pretty. It is messy and discouraging. But God never told us the call would be easy.

The Lord beckons us to trust that God will never leave us nor forsake us, but be there in the midst. Brothers and sisters, as you return to your respective duties remember that no matter the opposition God has anointed and appointed you for such a time as this.

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts [ 6:39m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (97)
| Comments | *****(1 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary      newsvine:God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary      del.icio.us:God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary      Y!:God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary      reddit:God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary      furl:God can do something extraordinary with the ordinary



Just one thing beautifully

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on June 1st, 2009

I love to read, and I use a number of reading approaches and styles.

Sometimes I want to zip right through what’s before me, gobbling up a fun who-done-it by Patricia Cornwell or P.D. James, or a grabber of a story by Dan Brown or Lemony Snickett.

Amory Peck

Other times I’m in the mood to learn something, and I read studiously. I have Marcus Borg’s The Last Week, and I’ll read it that way.

Sometimes I want to sink into the beauty of words, cherishing each image. I approach Frederick Buechner and Madeleine L’Engle in that way.

I’ve come to the new Social Creed Companion Litany to the United Methodist Social Principles in all three ways. I’ve read it as a wonderful, zestful statement, the tune ringing in my ears. I’ve thought about what each item might mean: How should I understand “justice and mercy embrace”? And, I’ve been living in the beauty of “that we may be one in divine love for the world.”

We: each of us individually. One: all of us together. Professing, living out and creating “divine love for the world.” Individuals, groups and organizations, working for the common good.

As I wondered about all that, I listened with new ears to Holly Near’s song, “Planet Called Home.” In it, she gives the history of the world, up to the time that our “planet called home” was at the threat of decline. The lyrics tell us:

They moved as one being, even though each would arrive here alone. They promised to work in grace with each other to save the beautiful planet called home. There was no promise that they could save it, but how exciting to give it a try. If each one did just one thing beautifully, complex life on earth might not die.

Two ideas to think about. First, each person was called to do “just one thing beautifully.”

Star struck

I don’t want to make myself sound too much like a kid in from the country, but I was star-struck when I attended my first meeting as a member of the Board of Directors of the United Methodist General Board of Church & Society (GBCS) last fall.

There I was, meeting Jim Winkler, the famous, influential, sometimes controversial Jim Winkler. There were the other staff members, with their amazing portfolios. There was Fred Brewington, one of my heroes from General Conference 2008. There was Faith Fowler, an incredible force in the Detroit area, a woman whose reputation for good works I know well. Bishops, clergy, incredible lay people gathering from all over the world.

That was a foolish worry.

Many were returning for their second four years as a board member. They were moving through the process with ease and confident assurance. It was both daunting and exceedingly exhilarating. How could I ever live up to what each of those would bring to the board?

But, of course, that was a foolish worry. I’m not to live up to what all the other board members bring. I’m not called to “be them.” I’m called to “be me,” to bring to this group those small, individual things that are mine to do.

The Bible reminds us often of the necessity, the importance, of each piece of the body, and the need for all to work individually for the whole. The Message tells it this way:

So since we find ourselves fashioned into all these excellently formed and marvelously functioning parts in Christ’s body, let’s just go ahead and be what we were made to be, without enviously or pridefully comparing ourselves with each other, or trying to be something we aren’t.

If you preach, just preach, just preach God’s Message, nothing else; if you help, just help, don’t take over; if you teach, stick to your teaching; if you give encouraging guidance, be careful that you don’t get bossy … keep a smile on your face (Romans 12).

Do one thing beautifully

Or, in the words of Holly Near, do one thing beautifully. Amory, don’t worry about Jim’s thing, or Fred’s, or Faith’s, do your one thing beautifully.

Holly Near’s song has two prescriptions: one, each of us is to do “just one thing beautifully,” and, two, we are to “work in grace with each other.”

We are to ‘work in grace with each other.’

I also had a mighty bout last fall of the-work-of-this-board-is-overwhelming syndrome: Alcohol and Other Addictions, Economic and Environmental Justice, Human Welfare, Peace with Justice, United Nations and International Affairs. Phew! Oh my goodness, phew!

But, easy, Amory. We’re doing this together. Staff and board, each working in grace with each other, to tackle these concerns of our hearts.

The Message, in Ecclesiastes 4: 9-10, says:

It’s better to have a partner than go it alone. Share the work, share the wealth. And if one falls down, the other helps … by yourself you’re unprotected. With a friend you can face the worst. Can you round up a third? A three-stranded rope isn’t easily snapped.

There we are: a board committed to the work and to each other, a multi-stranded rope that certainly cannot be snapped!

U.N. Commission on Status of Women

Despite being so new on the GBCS board, I have already been so blessed by my membership here. The first two weeks of March I stood as a representative of the board at the 53rd gathering of the United Nation’s Commission on the Status of Women (CSW). A functional commission of the United Nations Economic & Social Council, CSW is dedicated exclusively to gender equality and advancement of women.

That theme … opened up a realm of related topics.

CSW is a principal global policy-making body. Every year representatives of Member States gather at the U.N. headquarters to evaluate progress on gender equality, identify challenges, set global standards and formulate concrete policies to promote gender equality and advancement of women worldwide.

Linda Bales, who directs GBCS’s Louise and Hugh Moore Population Project, and I were among hundreds of members of non-governmental organizations there to witness worldwide deliberation on the priority theme: “The equal sharing of responsibilities between women and men, including care giving in the context of HIV/AIDS.”

That theme, while it sounds fairly narrow, opened up a realm of related topics: sex trafficking, prevention of parent to child transmission, religion and sexual reproductive rights, female and male condoms, etc. Those topics were explored through a series of parallel events throughout the ten days.

Awe at the process

Holly Near’s prescription — working in grace with each other, with each one doing just one thing beautifully — was surely vibrantly alive at the United Nations.

It’s a refreshing process to see the member from the smallest of countries having equal status with the U.S. member.

I am in awe of the process, women from all the Member States, one voice for each country. It’s a refreshing process to see the member from the smallest of countries having equal status with the U.S. member.

As messy as it is, and as many compromises that need to be made to have it happen, the consensus process gives me hope for the world. It also caused some mighty reflection on the polarizing nature of our voting at the United Methodist General Conference, our denomination’s highest policy-making body.

I can’t think of any place that more represents “each one working in grace with each other” than the United Nations. Messy and contentious as it might be from time to time, “each one working in grace with each other.”

Church Center at the United Nations

I can’t think of anything that gives me more pride than the Church Center at the United Nations, a 12-story building, directly across from the delegates’ entrance to the United Nations. Prophetically built in the 1960s by the Women’s Division of the United Methodist General Board of Global Ministries, it is a proudly labeled beacon of ecumenical pride and activity. The Rev. Levi Bautista and Joe Kim are housed there to conduct GBCS’s United Nations and international affairs ministry.

It is a proudly labeled beacon of ecumenical pride and activity.

The CSW session was surely a time of people doing just one thing beautifully. The U.N. building was a beehive of activity. The body as a whole, doing the work to be done. Individuals staking out their “one thing”: staffing information tables, faxing and texting messages to delegates, crafting morning worship. And meeting one another. I’ll never forget the incredible gift of having conversation and shaking the hand of a woman from Iraq.

I’m not intimidated any longer. I’m fired up, ready to live out with all of you the Social Creed Litany call “that we may be one in divine love for the world.” However I read it, it’s a life changing message.


Editor’s note: Amory Peck of Bellingham, Wash., is Lay Leader of the denomination’s Pacific-Northwest Conference. This article is based on her remarks at the closing worship on March 22 at the spring 2009 meeting of GBCS’s board of directors, which was held in Washington, D.C.

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (55)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:Just one thing beautifully      newsvine:Just one thing beautifully      del.icio.us:Just one thing beautifully      Y!:Just one thing beautifully      reddit:Just one thing beautifully      furl:Just one thing beautifully



A chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on February 20th, 2009

Message for Wednesday, February 11 at The United Methodist Building (12:10 pm) Scripture - Mark 1:40-45

Rev. Anna BlaedelThe story is simple. A leper comes begging. He is unnamed. Unclean. Untouchable. He is known, before and above all else, for being dirty. And diseased. He is begging. Desperate. Jesus, Jesus! “If you choose…” Do you dare? If you are willing. Might you be moved? And Jesus hears the need. And responds.

Frederick Buechner reminds us of call—where the world’s deep hunger and our deep gladness meet. The Greek word willing, is the same as delight. If it will make you glad, the leper asks, his hunger for healing, deep. If it will bring you delight. The leper is calling Christ. And Jesus, moved with compassion, so delights. Without hesitation. Without consulting religious authorities or doctrinal statements. Immediately. Jesus, this one of kingdom connection and beloved community, so desires. Jesus reaches out his hand, we are told. When the rest of the world recoils, Jesus reaches out. Touches the untouchable. And because connection is made, healing happens. Boundaries are broken. This man, set apart, isolated, is restored to community. He comes alive. Proclaims the good news of this one who embodies Love.

After these past 60 hours or so together, the world’s deep needs have me feeling dazed and confused. Filled to overflowing. Statistics and stories swirl. Exhausted and cracked open, I wish I could stay. And I don’t know if I could absorb any more. Restoring our connection. Recommitting to justice. Remembering our calls. Here are a few snapshots tucked away for my further examination. Remember: Clayton Childers calling us into God’s rebirth. Anothen. Torn apart, top to bottom. Never to be the same. Remember: Neil Christie’s Simple Sentence Call. That which is impossible, and will not let us go. Remember: O’Donnell. His witness at the Vietnam War Memorial. His story. His struggle. His call for solidarity. Remember: Steve, formerly Big Daddy, crying out: If you so choose, God, let me die. Bury me in this hole I have dug. “God threw dirt on me,” he said. “But God being God, God didn’t bury me. God planted me.” Remember: Emanuel Cleaver, finding grounding in God by placing himself at he center of the chaos. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste, he said. Remember: John Hill connecting us with Jeremiah, standing at the crossroads, seeking rest for weary souls. Remember: the photographs from Palestine; remember those who are dislocated, without food and water, living in violence; Remember: the senseless violence and utter human disconnection in BumFights. Will we have the sense to blush? Remember: looking at each other across the room, facing our difference, then gathering at table, somehow, still. Remember: Standing in circles, face to face, sharing stories and faith. Remember: “If you so choose…”

God so chooses. So desires. So delights. For us all, every one. Deep gladness, restored.

To follow this call, we need each other. And we need God. And God needs us. Every one of us. And every one of our sisters and brothers.

To restore and resurrect. Until the hurt is so deep we share it. Until the fears are so sharp we name them, and lay them to rest. Until the shame shivers away, and we laugh our way, together, toward becoming whole. Until we are delivered from just going through the motions, and wasting everything we have: a chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call. Thanks be to God. Amen.

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (65)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:A chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call      newsvine:A chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call      del.icio.us:A chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call      Y!:A chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call      reddit:A chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call      furl:A chance, a choice, our creativity, God’s call



Nakba Photo Exhibit

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on February 9th, 2009

Nakba Exhibit opening remarks February 3, 2009 Jim Winkler

The photo exhibit that brings us together tonight commemorates 60 years of the Nakba, or catastrophe, that has befallen the Palestinian people. The very notion of a ‘Nakba’ is disputed by some and, of course, there are those who continue to deny the reality of the Holocaust. There was and is a Nakba and there was a Holocaust. This exhibit reminds us of the reality of the Nakba. Hundreds of Palestinian villages were completely and deliberately destroyed by Israel and hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have lived in refugee camps lo these many years.

This exhibit does not negate the terrible suffering of the Jewish people over the ages. I would remind you that each and every exhibit need not be comprehensive and all encompassing. For example, an exhibit portraying the tragedy visited upon Native Americans by my people need not include a depiction of the centuries of autocratic rule in Europe experienced by my ancestors to be authentic or complete.

We also gather in the wake of a horrible invasion of Gaza by the Israeli Defense Force in which hundreds of Palestinians died and thousands were wounded and is in the midst of continuing violence.

Today’s New York Times reports:

Palestinian militants on Monday fired two mortar shells from southern Gaza at Israel and Israel carried out an air strike against what the military said were members of the launching squad as they tried to flee in a vehicle, further straining the tenuous two-week-old Gaza truce. At least one militant was killed and three others were wounded in the strike, according to news reports from Gaza. The mortars directed at Israeli territory fell in an open area, causing no casualties. After the rocket attacks, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel signaled the Israeli bombing raid with a warning of a “sharp” and “disproportionate” response. The United Methodist Church desires a safe and secure Israel. The only way to accomplish that is for there to be a safe, secure, viable, and contiguous Palestine next to it. The Occupation must end, the settlements must be dismantled, the right of return must be addressed, Jerusalem must be a shared city. Occupation never works anywhere, anytime. It never promotes peace, harmony, and understanding, only bitterness and hatred. We are friends of Israel and of Palestine, but we are not uncritical friends. Uncritical friends are not true friends.

I have been invited to pray a ‘Christian prayer’ tonight. Please join me in prayer.

O God, grant us peace. Strengthen us as we stand for peace and justice. We come today, O God, amid the clamor of our nation’s capital, noise to which we have grown accustomed, to see a new vision, one that moves beyond killing fields and tanks, one that recalls feeding the hungry and giving drink to the thirsty, clothing the naked and liberating the prisoners. A vision that embraces the least and last, a vision of generosity and open hearts. In these moments of silence and dedication, O God, help us not only to catch the vision but to forsake the ways of argument and anger, the ways of divisiveness and backbiting, of slander and arbitrariness. Bring us back to the vision of Jesus of Nazareth. Make us peacemakers and cheek-turners who possess enough humility and enough courage to stand for truth. We pray in the name of all that is Holy. Amen.

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (168)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:Nakba Photo Exhibit      newsvine:Nakba Photo Exhibit      del.icio.us:Nakba Photo Exhibit      Y!:Nakba Photo Exhibit      reddit:Nakba Photo Exhibit      furl:Nakba Photo Exhibit



Bishop Kiesey

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on January 5th, 2009
Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts [ 15:49m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (53)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:Bishop Kiesey      newsvine:Bishop Kiesey      del.icio.us:Bishop Kiesey      Y!:Bishop Kiesey      reddit:Bishop Kiesey      furl:Bishop Kiesey



Bishop Stith

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on November 5th, 2008

Bishop Stith

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts [19:31m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (78)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:Bishop Stith      newsvine:Bishop Stith      del.icio.us:Bishop Stith      Y!:Bishop Stith      reddit:Bishop Stith      furl:Bishop Stith



Molly Vetter

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on November 5th, 2008

Molly Vetter

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts [10:57m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (83)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:Molly Vetter      newsvine:Molly Vetter      del.icio.us:Molly Vetter      Y!:Molly Vetter      reddit:Molly Vetter      furl:Molly Vetter



Jim Winkler’s Address to the Board of Directors

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on November 4th, 2008

Greetings in the name of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ!

This board embodies three important streams of United Methodist social concerns. One stream is represented by what was once known as the Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals. That board, along with organizations such as the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union and the National Anti-Saloon League, campaigned successfully for an amendment to the United States Constitution outlawing the manufacture and sale of “intoxicating liquors.”

The church believed then, as it does now, that our bodies are holy temples. As Paul said in his second letter to the church in Corinth, “Let us cleanse ourselves from every defilement of body and spirit, making holiness perfect in the fear of God.” (2 Corinthians 7:1)

The old Board of Temperance also advocated for Sabbath Day observance, expressed concern for the influence of the Roman Catholic Church, worked against immigration, prize fighting, gambling, tobacco, narcotics and salacious literature, among other things.

Our denomination’s Social Creed, first written in 1908, grew out of concern over the miserable lives many people experienced in tenements and company towns while working in factories and mills. Insistence on a better life for working people is a second stream of social concerns represented in this board. The Social Creed called for an end to child labor, the principle of arbitration in industrial disputes, a livable wage, an end to sweatshops, and protection from dangerous working conditions.

We believed then, as we do now, in the example of Christ as the supreme law of society and the sure remedy for all social ills.

The third stream of social concerns we embody today is world peace. Following World War I, in which more than 15,000,000 people died — the greatest death toll in human history up to that point — many Christians were horrified by the disaster and the failure to avoid it. The church established a world peace board in 1924 and over these many years we have proclaimed that war is incompatible with the teachings and example of Jesus Christ. Today, we work for an end to the unjust war in Iraq.

Over time, our consciousness has been raised on many other important matters including health care, civil and human rights, and economic and environmental justice. In fact, over the past half century, the world has been transformed by great moral and spiritual movements for equal rights for women, for environmental and economic justice, for an end to the nuclear arms race, apartheid and the Vietnam War, for civil and human rights for all people.

Often, the church has had to be dragged kicking and screaming to the table, but today we are one of the pillars of these movements — as we should be.

Our ministry is biblically based:

Jesus proclaimed he was anointed to bring good news to the poor and in that spirit we advocate for the Millennium Development Goals, eight measures embraced by 189 nations to eradicate poverty and hunger, achieve universal primary education, promote gender equality, reduce child mortality, improve maternal health, combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases, ensure environmental sustainability, and create a global partnership for development.

Jesus said he was called to bring release to the captives. In that spirit, we seek a legal system based on restorative justice and not retributive justice.

Jesus announced he came to heal the sick and bring recovery of sight to the blind. In that spirit, United Methodists not only operate hospitals and health care clinics, we also advocate for health care for all people.

Jesus said he was anointed to free the oppressed. In that spirit, we stand up for the last, the least and the lost.

Some time ago, a United Methodist youth choir from St. Louis visited the United Methodist Building. The Rev. Clayton Childers, our director of annual conference relations, met with the group and asked how they would define justice. One young person said, “Justice is working to make the world look like the way Jesus would want it to look if he were here.”

I remember a meeting early in the previous quadrennium in which the general church budget-building process began. I pledged to my colleague general secretaries that I would share with them the financial realities the General Board of Church & Society faces. Traditionally, the budget process has been competitive with each agency trying its best to increase its share of the world service pie.

This time around, we all agreed not only would we be transparent with one another, but that we must carefully consider what we need to focus on together in the coming years. Through an intensive process involving the Council of Bishops and the Connectional Table, four areas of focus emerged. They are leadership development, new church starts, ministry with the poor and a global health initiative.

GBCS is committed to all four. We offer expertise in the areas of global health, ministry with the poor and leadership development. And, we stand ready to assist the agencies and annual conferences involved in new church starts to ensure United Methodist faith communities are scripturally grounded and committed to the Social Principles.

GBCS’s commitment to the global health focus is evident: We are working with the Global Health Initiative on the eradication of malaria. We will be involved in the launch of an ambitious plan to address the need for increased availability of reproductive health services for men and women around the globe. The U.S. government will be urged to increase its level of funding for family planning. The Global AIDS Committee will continue to receive support from GBCS to help stem the spread of the HIV virus. A partnership with the U.N. Foundation will mobilize support for the “Campaign to End Fistula,” a condition faced by millions of women in poor nations who give birth before their bodies are fully developed.

These efforts will help eradicate the spread of AIDS, allow families to space the birth of their children, will save women’s and children’s lives and will help reduce the spread of disease.

We are committed to the wellbeing of women and children as we work to eradicate oppression and marginalization. Our Louise & Hugh Moore Population Project has identified domestic violence, HIV & AIDS, reproductive health and child marriage as high priority issues.

Next April, GBCS will co-sponsor with the Virginia Conference, a day-long seminar on family violence. The seminar will have an emphasis on how the clergy can be instrumental in tackling this pandemic in which one of three women faces abuse. We know, too, that violence equally impacts children.

These numbers should prevent us from being deluded into believing domestic violence doesn’t exist in our local churches. Raising this issue during this board meeting is particularly timely because October is Domestic Violence Awareness month.

Alcohol, tobacco and drug addictions run rampant. These addictions have taken the lives of countless people. Yet, many of our congregations barely acknowledge this reality.

We are in the midst of the development of a global strategy on alcohol with our alcohol prevention coalitions. The Rev. Liberato Bautista, assistant general secretary for our United Nations Ministry, has been instrumental in assisting with the work in Geneva as we prepare for public hearings related to the World Health Organization resolution on alcohol. We believe this will lead to a global treaty on alcohol similar to the global tobacco treaty that places strict limits on the tobacco industry, especially as it relates to advertising and marketing targeted to children and youth.

This year, the STOP Act (The Sober Truth in Preventing Underage Drinking Act) passed the U.S. Congress. It put into place the beginning steps for curbing and combating underage drinking. We are now at work on the second stage of crafting language for legislation along with allies in Congress to be introduced in the 111th Congress to enact additional recommendations in this report next year.

We have laid the foundations for biblical and theological dialogue for providing health care around the globe. In particular, biblical and theological grounding assists us in understanding health and healing from brokenness apart from political rhetoric. It also strengthens our understanding of God’s intention for the world. Such grounding will help church members enter through the lens of their faith experience a dialogue around various policy prescriptions to provide health care.

I believe at its best this board serves to help the church understand the interconnectedness of God’s Creation.

There’s a parable I like:

A mouse looked through a crack in the wall to see the farmer and his wife opening a package: What food might it contain? He was aghast to discover that it was a mousetrap!

Retreating to the farmyard, the mouse proclaimed the warning: “There is a mousetrap in the house. There is a mousetrap in the house.”

The chicken clucked and scratched, raised her head and said: “Mr. Mouse, I can tell you this is a grave concern to you, but it is of no consequence to me. I cannot be bothered by it.”

The mouse turned to the pig and told him, “There is a mousetrap in the house.” “I am so very sorry, Mr. Mouse,” sympathized the pig, “but there is nothing I can do about it but pray. Be assured that you are in my prayers.”

The mouse turned to the cow, who replied, “Like wow, Mr. Mouse, a mousetrap, am I in grave danger, duh?”

So the mouse returned to the house, head down and dejected to face the farmer’s mousetrap alone.

That very night a sound was heard throughout the house, like the sound of a mousetrap catching its prey. The farmer’s wife rushed to see what was caught.

In the darkness, she did not see that it was a venomous snake whose tail the trap had caught. The snake bit the farmer’s wife.

The farmer rushed her to the hospital. She returned home with a fever. Now everyone knows you treat a fever with fresh chicken soup, so the farmer took his hatchet to the farmyard for the soup’s main ingredient.

His wife’s sickness continued. Friends and neighbors came to sit with her around the clock. To feed them, the farmer butchered the pig.

The farmer’s wife did not get well: in fact, she died. So many people came for her funeral the farmer had the cow slaughtered to provide meat for all of them to eat.

So the next time you hear that someone is facing a problem and think it does not concern you, remember that when the least of us is threatened, we are all at risk.

Another focus area of our agency is leadership development:

One of the premier leadership development models is the United Methodist Seminars on National and International Affairs program. For more than 50 years, youths, college students and adults have been participating in our United Methodist Seminars on National and International Affairs program here in Washington and at the Church Center for the United Nations in New York City. This is near and dear to my heart because the first ministry I participated in at GBCS was the seminar program.

Earlier this year, about 400 United Methodist college and seminary students and campus ministers came here to Washington for the Student Forum. Our seminar staff designed immersion experiences for them all across the city.

One of the journeys was to the National Museum of the American Indian to discuss the matter of team mascot names. Another was to the Anacostia River to discuss pollution. A third included a meeting with a tenants’ organization working for equal housing for all people.

The seminars we prepare for our people include Bible study and worship, meetings with decision makers, and opportunities for direct service. We hope every seminar will lead to action. We encourage critical thinking skills to explore ways to resolve major social concerns.

Two weeks ago, three of our staff and one of our board members, Dr. Leonard Kabwita, were in Kenya in East Africa facilitating a Social Principles seminar. Following a worship service in a local church, 15 women met with GBCS staff in a small UMC located in one of the poorest slums in Nairobi. They talked about what it meant to be a woman in the Kenyan society.

The issue of violence came up. One of the women said: “If I was being beaten by my husband, I could call the police. They may or may not show up, and if they did, it might take as long as five hours. And once they arrived, the policeman would demand to have sex with me, and then do nothing about my own personal abuse by my husband. It’s a no-win situation for women.”

This story is not unusual in countries where women’s rights are almost non-existent and corruption runs rampant. We, as a board must stand in solidarity with these women and say “no more!” This is not acceptable.

In 2008 we led Social Principles training workshops in Mozambique for United Methodist Women and young adults, in Cote d’Ivoire for young adults and clergy, for the European Conference of Lay Workers in Germany.

The training event in Kenya included meetings with the U.S. embassy and with nongovernmental organizations to discuss the role of the church in post-conflict situations.

We are committed to being actively present in Africa, Europe and the Philippines. In December we will be in Uganda, and then in February in the Southern Congo Conference, and in March in Sierra Leone.

We train 12 interns each summer for eight weeks in full time placements as Ethnic Young Adult Interns. In 2008 we had interns from the United States, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cote d’Ivoire, Gambia and the Philippines.

We train seminary students. In 2008 we trained one from Duke Divinity School, six from Wesley Theological Seminary, and students from American University and University of the Pacific. These students work side by side with GBCS staff tracking issues, writing devotional materials to interpret the issues, leading our Wednesday noon worship service, doing research on what is going on in local churches and conferences, and creating resources.

We facilitated the drafting and approval of a new “Companion Litany to the Social Creed” that the General Conference has recommended be read alongside the Social Creed in our churches. This was a three-year collaborative effort with input from every Episcopal Area in Africa, Philippines and Europe.

Our staff travel very regularly across the annual conferences to teach and preach. For example, I preached and taught in Philadelphia earlier this month, in Nebraska last week, and will be in Charlottesville, Virginia, next month. We work closely with annual conference Church & Society leaders, and coordinators of peace with justice, drug and alcohol concerns, and environmental justice.

Next month we will welcome to the United Methodist Building a group of young evangelical clergy we have invited to join us for worship and conversation. Throughout recent years, we have invited district superintendents, conference lay leaders, directors of connectional ministries, and directors of communication to come here to Washington to spend time becoming more familiar with the ministry of the board.

GBCS will be working in partnership with other agencies to eradicate poverty. The Rev. Ed Paup, general secretary of the General Board of Global Ministries, said last week, “We have the responsibility to work toward the kind of world where poverty can be eliminated.” We wholeheartedly agree and will work alongside GBGM to attain that goal.

We are in the midst of a global financial crisis the depths and complexities of which are increasingly uncertain. What we do know with certainty, however, is that those living on the economic margins of our world will be hurt first and the hardest. The churchwide emphasis on ministry with the poor could not come at a more critical time.

Ban Ki Moon, secretary general of the United Nations, recently said that we face a “development emergency,” referring to three crises: a food crisis, an energy crisis and a financial crisis.

Believing that work should keep you out of poverty, not keep you in it, we succeeded in the last quadrennium to raise the minimum wage for the first time in a decade. Our job now is to build on that success and live fully into our vision of a living wage in every industry — a call our church has made for 100 years.

Just this year, after another decade-long struggle, we succeeded in passing the National Housing Trust Fund, a landmark piece of legislation that will provide resources to expand affordable housing in communities across the United States. Our task now is to protect these funds as budget deficits swell to record levels. If the past is precedent, the last indeed shall be first: first on the chopping block for devastating cuts.

We have worked and will continue to work to help the U.S. Congress understand that the federal budget is a moral document: It is a reflection of what and who we value as a society. Unfortunately, the present budget values war over peace, the rich over the poor, polluters over God’s good earth. These policies are incompatible with the teachings of Christ and we must proclaim a different vision.

Last month, the United Methodist bishops in Africa met at Africa University and issued a communiqué. I share these excerpts with you:

“The denomination’s focus on the eradication of poverty is expressed thus: ‘As an expression of our discipleship, United Methodists seek to alleviate conditions that undermine quality of life and limit the opportunity to flourish as we believe God intends for all. As with John Wesley, we seek to change conditions that are unjust, alienating and disempowering. We engage in ministry with the poor, and in this, we especially want to reach out to and protect children.’

“Over the past two years, we, the Bishops of the United Methodist Church in Africa, have taken the eradication of poverty as our highest priority, meeting annually to reflect on our progress, share ideas, encourage each other and develop action plans for implementation in our various Episcopal areas.

“Poverty robs people of hope and the gospel of Jesus Christ is a call to hope, salvation and abundant life. In Africa, we see poverty manifesting itself in environmental degradation, disease, hunger and malnutrition, inequitable access to education and even, the exposure of some of the most vulnerable among us — the girl child, for example — to sexual and economic exploitation.

“In our discussions at this meeting, we went more deeply into the issue of poverty, exploring such topics as climate change, youth migration and corruption and how they contribute to a rise in the number of communities living in dire poverty.

“Knowing as we do, the material richness of Africa and the ingenuity and energy of its people, we feel a righteous indignation at the current plight of our continent. It is our belief that Africa has all that it needs to build a future with peace, greater prosperity and hope.

“We call our brothers and sisters in United Methodist congregations worldwide and on the general agencies of the church to a renewed partnership of equals towards resourcing the denomination’s ministry to the poor in Africa in ways that ensure that it is relevant, sustainable and truly transformative.”

Our own Bishop Jose Quipungo is the leader of the Angola East Area. Africa, the Philippines and other parts of the Third World face enormous challenges each and every day. This board has worked hard for debt relief for the world’s poorest nations so they may concentrate on education and health. A fraction of the money spent on war and preparations for war can provide lunch for school children in the poorest nations as well as primary education for them and basic health care for them and their parents. What we lack is the will to care for our neighbors.

Just immigration reform is a major concern of GBCS. We have sponsored conferences on immigration in Arkansas, Illinois and Ohio in recent months. We helped create the Kentucky Faith Communities Immigration Coalition, which collected signatures for a petition calling for immigrants to be welcomed and supporting legislation upholding their dignity.

We were instrumental in the passage of the Second Chance Act and our own Bill Mefford was among the few faith-community representatives invited to the signing ceremony at the White House. Bill has also co-authored the Christian Companion book to the Not on Our Watch campaign against the genocide taking place in Darfur.

This board must continue to work hard to connect with annual conferences and local churches. Each week we send our electronic newsletter, Faith in Action, to some 23,000 people. When we began Faith in Action, it went to 17,000 people. We have also developed action networks, all of which continue to grow. These ten networks range in size from 3,500 people to more than 12,000.

We work hard to help our people join justice and mercy together in their own lives, congregations and communities. United Methodists are excellent at feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless and clothing the naked. Freeing the oppressed, confronting the systems that perpetuate hunger, racism, violence, and poverty is always the hard part. In many ways, that’s where GBCS comes in.

Our primary task is to seek the implementation of the Social Principles through a wide-ranging ministry of witness, education and action. Tonight, I’ve cited but a few examples of the ministry of this board.

I am grateful to each and every one of you for your willingness to serve the church as a director or staff of this agency. One of our directors, Richard Hearne, wrote me earlier this month and said, “You will find I am not afraid to voice an opinion — to stir the pot so we can bring the love and grace of Jesus Christ to ALL.”

An end to war, racism and poverty is possible. If I did not believe that I would not be a follower of Jesus Christ.

In 1870 the Methodists in Indiana held their Annual Conference on the campus of a local college. The president of the college addressed the assembled Methodists and said, “I think we’re living in an exciting age. I think we’re going to see things happen in our lifetime that right now are just unbelievable!”

The presiding bishop was so intrigued that he stopped the president by asking, “What do you see? What kinds of things do you mean?”

And the president of the college said, “Well, all kinds of things, Bishop. I believe we’re coming into a time of great inventions. Why, I believe, for example, that one day we’ll be able to fly through the air like birds!”

“You what?” said the bishop. “You believe that one day we’ll be able to fly?”

“Yes sir, I do,” said the college president.

And then the bishop expounded, “Why, that’s heresy. Just heresy. The Bible says that flight is reserved for the angels and for the angels alone. We’ll have no such talk here.”

When that conference was over, that same bishop, whose name was Wright, went home to his wife and his two small sons, whose names happened to be Wilbur and Orville!

In 1903, Orville and Wilbur Wright sent a telegram from Kitty Hawk where they were carrying on their flight experiments. The telegraph was sent to their sister in Dayton, Ohio, and read, “First sustained flight today, 59 seconds. Home for Christmas.” Their sister took the message to the Dayton newspaper and the next morning a brief news item appeared under the headline: “Popular local bicycle merchants will be home for the holidays.”

It has been 100 years. The old bishop is dead, but not his kind. I do not know what happened to that Dayton newspaper. It probably died also, but there are still newspapers that miss the point.

Dr. King once said: “This hour in history needs a dedicated circle of transformed non-conformists. The saving of our world from pending doom will come not from the actions of the conforming majority, but through the creative maladjustment of a dedicated minority.”

In a broken and hurting world, may we be a dedicated circle of the creatively maladjusted!

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts [ 33:41m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (88)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:Jim Winkler's Address to the Board of Directors      newsvine:Jim Winkler's Address to the Board of Directors      del.icio.us:Jim Winkler's Address to the Board of Directors      Y!:Jim Winkler's Address to the Board of Directors      reddit:Jim Winkler's Address to the Board of Directors      furl:Jim Winkler's Address to the Board of Directors



Molly Vetter Sermon

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on November 4th, 2008

The following is the audio recording of Rev. Molly Vetter’s sermon at the 2008-2012 GBCs ORganizational Meeting. Molly spoke at the morning worship service on Saturday October 25, 2008.

icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts [ 10:57m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Hits (13)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:Molly Vetter Sermon      newsvine:Molly Vetter Sermon      del.icio.us:Molly Vetter Sermon      Y!:Molly Vetter Sermon      reddit:Molly Vetter Sermon      furl:Molly Vetter Sermon



GBCS Luncheon - Rev. Emanuel Cleaver

Posted in Uncategorized by gbcs on June 9th, 2008

Cleaver at GBCS luncheon

Walloping the poor By Kathy Gilbert, United Methodist News Service

Rep. Emanuel CleaverU.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver addresses delegates and guests at the General Board of Church & Society luncheon held in conjunction with the 2008 United Methodist General Conference. Cleaver is also a United Methodist clergyman. (UMNS photos by Maile Bradfield)

FORT WORTH, TEXAS — “We are walloping the poor” and blaming them for their problems, said U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II during a luncheon sponsored by the United Methodist Board of Church & Society during the denomination’s top policy-making meeting here.

“Poor people are being blamed for being poor people,” said Cleaver, a United Methodist clergyman, who serves a congregation in Kansas City. The April 28 luncheon was held at the start of the second week of the 2008 General Conference, the denomination’s top policy-making assembly that meets every four years.

Citing an estimated 700,000 people adversely affected by Hurricane Katrina, Cleaver said New Orleans’s Ninth Ward is still in ruins three years later.

“If you think Beverly Hills would still be in ruins, you must be on crack,” Cleaver declared. Mississippi and Louisiana have the highest poverty rates in the United States, he pointed out and added that the rich would not be treated that way.

Cleaver was elected to Congress in 2004 from Missouri’s 5th Congressional District. He said soaring gasoline prices, the home mortgage debacle and the staggering cost of the Iraq war are hurting the nation’s poorest the most.

“Christians can’t separate themselves from their faith,” Cleaver said. “When something is wrong, people of faith must set it straight.”

Introducing the speaker as a “pastor in Congress,” Jim Winkler, the Board of Church & Society’s top executive, said Cleaver has dedicated his public service career to economic development and social concerns.

Cleaver was born in Waxahachie, Texas, and lived in a slave shack for eight years before his family moved into public housing. His father worked three jobs to earn enough for the family to get out of the projects and buy a home.

“Having your own home used to mean you were a real citizen,” Cleaver said. Today, however, he said 20,000 people are losing their homes every week in the troubled mortgage market, and are being blamed for making “stupid decisions.”

At the same time, Cleaver pointed out that the Iraq war is costing $341 million a day and has killed more than 4,000 U.S. soldiers and many more thousands of Iraqi people.

“Take a guess at how many of those killed have families belonging to country clubs or Congress,” Cleaver said.

“The United States claims to be a Christian nation,” he said. “But God is not showing through.”

Listen Now:


icon for podbean  Standard Podcasts [51:24m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download | Embeddable Player | Hits (88)
| Comments | *****(0 ratings)  | Email it

      digg:GBCS Luncheon - Rev. Emanuel Cleaver      newsvine:GBCS Luncheon - Rev. Emanuel Cleaver      del.icio.us:GBCS Luncheon - Rev. Emanuel Cleaver      Y!:GBCS Luncheon - Rev. Emanuel Cleaver      reddit:GBCS Luncheon - Rev. Emanuel Cleaver      furl:GBCS Luncheon - Rev. Emanuel Cleaver




« Previous entries ·