Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Bible in 90 Days--Yes, We Can!

I might regret this, but I've challenged our little congregation to read the Bible in 90 days. The bee was put in our bonnet by Ashley--that powerhouse of a youth pastor who joined us at the beginning of 2009, but only stayed a short while. Her contacts from Houston put her onto this. I think sometimes that that's the way the Holy Spirit works--someone experiences power and transformation, and it infects someone else...and so on, and so on... What will happen we don't yet know, but the Bible is something that has 'happened' to people for a long time. Yet, in our day, so few people actually know what it says, and many of those who do know seem to use it in abusive and destructive ways. Is the Bible inherently ugly? or is what Christians call 'the word of God' only an ancient piece of literature, without any relevance for modern or even post-modern, people?
I don't know what will happen by encouraging people to read the bible straight through, like a novel. I hope that what will happen to us is that some infection, some curiosity will be awakened. I hope that we will begin to take it seriously and joyously as an amazing revelation of what God is doing in human life.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Faith and Work

How nice to find friend David Miller continuing his great work at Princeton now, moved over from a similar effort Yale in the past five years. I remember meeting David in Miami when I was contemplating seminary, having nearly severed my own business career ties with Arthur Andersen & Co in 1988. He told me about his prior experience and that he was contemplating seminary, too. When he told me his passion for integrating faith and work issues, I jumped up and said "YES!" Our paths have diverged, but still I admire his passion. My work is much more routine--where the rubber meets the road in the local congregation. I get to cheer him on from the sidelines. Check out his new digs in New Jersey. http://faithandwork.princeton.edu/

Monday, September 14, 2009

outdo one another in showing honor...

Romans 12.10:love one another with mutual affection; outdo one another in showing honor. It certainly seemed like a "I'm nicer than you are, so there!" contest last Friday night. I visited the 2-person panel discussion sponsored by Emmanuel Presbyterian Church, a new church that meets in Arlington on the campus of George Mason U on Fairfax Drive. Pastor Scott introduced the church as one that provides a 'safe place' for people to bring their doubts, something, he said, he was not encouraged to do growing up in church. The church got Fred Edwards, of the American Humanist Association, and Jim Martin, of the International Justice Mission to speak to the audience of about 150 people and to each other on the question of "Why Do Good?" I heard them both passionate advocates of individual and group efforts to "do good" in the world. Their reasons were so different, but they both were so completely determined to show respect and civility that the discussion seemed a bit bland.
The question "What is Good?" was the first they tried to answer. The Mr. Edwards, the humanist rep put forth a two-fold definition: 1) enlightened self-interest, plus 2) compassion, which yields The Golden Rule. He pointed out that all major religions and many other cultures have something similar. Mr. Martin, a self-confessed Christian (as indeed IJM is identified), didn't really have anything to add, except agreement. I was disappointed not to hear anything about people being "created in the image of God" or other language that would have given a distinctly Christian spin on the definition. He was passionate about lifting up his energy for "doing good" that he shares with many other Christians--the passionate resource of faith as the motivation to keep going. IJM does some of the most dangerous work in the whole field of Christian mission: It works internationally through to ensure that public justice systems protect those most vulnerable to violent abuse. It exposes and prosecutes slave traffickers, international prostitution rings; it intervenes in cases of police brutality and illegal property seizure and detention. You can't be exposed to some of the brutal work without an amazing resilience and persistent hope. I wish Mr. Martin had explained where this hope comes from, for Christians.
Mr. Edwards said that "humanists don't need religion" because human beings can do good all by themselves and held up his own organization and its partners around the world as examples. Mr. Martin conceded that ground, too, by saying that he didn't care where the motivation came from, only that more workers are needed.
I didn't stay for the Q & A that followed. Maybe some more discussion took place. I just wish that more Christians had the facility to state what and why we believe as we do. We do have a story to tell, but it might not be exactly around this issue. Christians do believe that many people can do good--not everyone has to be an explicit follower of Jesus or even understand their own motivations in order to do good. Jesus himself seemed to recognize this. [John 10:16 I have other sheep that do not belong to this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one flock, one shepherd.]
The Humanist Association seems to me to have all the trappings of any American Christian denomination, including a communication and network structure, statements of belief, principles, ways of connecting to other like-minded people, and some fairly strong statements explicitly rejecting "religion" as they define it. The problem is that their definition of "religion" is about as narrow as one can get. Christians reject it, too. Mr. Edwards said that he "doesn't need religion" to do good because humanist principles are adequate. I had to chuckle. The argument works just as well in the opposite direction: Christians don't need to rely on Humanist principles because we have Jesus.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

SEX!



I didn't think that such a volume of "talk back to the preacher" would be unleashed when I preached on the Song of Songs text last Sunday. Sunday, August 30, 2009--Song of Songs text from the lectionary. Of course it celebrates sexual attraction between a woman and a man, harkening back to the creation story in Genesis. But because there is so much that could be said about this controversial topic in our time, I didn't want to start out with the controversy. I wanted to lift up what was GOOD and HOLY about sex.
Apparently it got a lot of people thinking. People have been sending me stuff--printed works, and links and publications and way more than I can absorb. We'll have to pray to see where all this takes the little church with a big mission...

Thursday, July 23, 2009

What about the future??

I browse several sites and THEOOZE is consistently provocative. Here's a great video:


The future of the church and our little site in Arlington is on my mind nearly constantly. We have many challenges--including a setting that seems to have everything going for it, and yet is nearly invisible to the neighborhood. Who would notice if Church of the Covenant disappeared? And yet we sit among a great in-migration of people and cultures that are different and wonderful.

Monday, July 20, 2009

home from vacation


The church didn't burn down while I was away for 4 weeks, so I'm counting that as God's opinion that we should continue here!
The first week out of town was with a group doing a mission project in Iowa City. See the photos and stories on the church website "covenantchurcharlington.org" The group came together in new and wonderful ways, and so I'm thankful, for their witness to the rest of the congregation and their springing up in hope. If God is in it, somehow it works out--demonstrated well by the week.
The next two weeks I spent in Alaska with husband and his siblings, in the first reunion of sorts of the Goss family since their parents' death two years ago. Brother-in-law Dave made the arrangements for the cruise, and we supplemented various land excursions...too many experiences to catalogue, but I suppose I should label the pictures before I forget what they were. In a vast land like Alaska, one can experience the desolation and grandeur at the same time. While I was traveling, I was reading "Into the Wild" by Jon Krakauer, and was fascinated by the type of persona that is drawn into such difficult experiences, almost as a spiritual quest.

The Alban Institute - 2009-07-13 A Place that Offers Life

The Alban Institute - 2009-07-13 A Place that Offers Life

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Monday, June 1, 2009

no longer web-invisible

So, now Church of the Covenant is on the web. [see my first post here] I guess the technology gurus have won out. This morning our road sign will announce it to the drivers on Military Road in Arlington. Does that mean we have arrived? Not likely. We still face the challenge of how to love our neighbors, most of whom we never see. During the week, when I'm hanging around Arlington, very few people are in their homes. On the weekend--Saturdays and Sundays--I see loads of people outdoors: cyclers, walkers, dog- and otherwise, runners, strollers (with and without children). Every week, I pray for our neighbors, those who know God and those who don't, and I pray for me and the church, for how to love them. What I'm hoping that the new website will do is not call attention to ourselves, but let the neighborhood know that we care. We care about its individuals and its community. I'm fairly sure that this is at least one reason God put Church of the Covenant right here.
Most of the members and friends who worship here on Sunday live within just a few miles of the church building. That's amazingly LOCAL, and it's not just an accident. Our mission is right here, with the folks in this neighborhood. We know there is pain here--families in trauma, broken relationships--and we know that God wants a better life for us. God loves us with a love stronger than we can imagine. Jesus promised it, and learning to rely on that promise is an act of faith. Sharing that faith, with love, hope, and conviction, can make a difference in our neighbors' lives, I'm convinced of that.
There's a button on the website called "I believe..." Eventually we hope to collect the faith stories of lots of us to post here. My next sermon series will be on "telling our faith stories" so that we can practice telling each other how God has become real in our own lives, how love has conquered us. Sharing that faith with neighbors is not far behind.

The Alban Institute - 2009-06-01 God Talk

The Alban Institute - 2009-06-01 God Talk

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Monday, April 27, 2009

The azalea church

Easter has come and gone...the grounds at Church of the Covenant are alive with...azaleas. This is the month that God said "You see; purple does go with green." For a long time, this has been known as "the azalea church." It's hard not to be impressed by the beauty of our setting here on Military Road. But we wonder if our neighbors are impressed by our gardens or our giving glory to God. Are they seeing our horticulture or our culture of love? I don't know, but I'm going to find out...a small step outside of the church building to make some face-to-face contact with the neighbors seems the right thing to do. What will we find out?

Update--website almost live!!

Friday, March 13, 2009



The Webmasters conspiring to launch the website...

So the church website is on the way...

In the first reflection I did when I came to Church of the Covenant, I thought about what it's like to be a small church pastor, to a church without a website. So now we're about to get one...plan to launch by Easter...
When the tribes of Israel asked Samuel to find them a king, he responded by telling them how much it would change them. The king would confiscate their wealth to raise armies, take their women, and generally mess up their lives. "But we want a king, anyway," they said. "So that we can be like all the other nations."
Somehow having a king might give them a prestige in the eyes of the outside world. OK, now, little Church of the Covenant...we're going to be a little like everyone else. Still I think, God has a special mission for us on Military Road. It may or may not depend on a website, but I'm sure it does depend on us being present to our neighbors and neighborhood.