Friday, March 20, 2015

Some Thoughts on NEXTChurch 2015 - Transformation

In the sanctuary of Fourth Presbyterian Church in Chicago, I looked up from my seat to see a large bird hanging from the rafters.  Its body and neck were made from a guitar; its head, wings, and feathers were constructed out of strips of paper.  The story behind the bird is a story of transformation.
Earlier in the week, more than 600 Presbyterians assembled for the 2015 NEXT Church National Gathering.  NEXT Church is a network that began among Presbyterian Church leaders who “believe the ‘church that is becoming’ is a church that is faithful, fruitful, diverse, and engaged in sharing good news of Jesus Christ in a changing world.”  The theme of this year’s 3-day gathering was “Beyond Our Walls, Our Fears, Ourselves:  Encountering God’s Transforming Grace.”
At opening worship on the first morning, we found our bulletins contained a strip of paper cut from familiar documents: old hymnals, Book of Order, and other church reports.  We were asked to write on the strip one thing that holds us back from moving into the future of the church.  The strips were put together to construct paper chains down the length of the sanctuary. 
Later in the day we were asked to use colored markers to write something that gives us hope for the future of the church, adding color to our chain wall.  The following day, in the midst of our shared work of discovering creative and innovative ways the church is moving forward, we were invited to tear the chains apart, link by link. 
Our final morning together we were greeted by the soaring bird – which was prayerfully created out of paper strips we used the first day to confess the fears that chain us, and the hopes that enliven us.  The message was clear, soaring above us:  all those things that hold you back have been loosed by the power of the Holy Spirit.  You are transformed … you are free.
My friends, this is the Easter story which defines us.  What was bound is now set free.  The old life is gone; God is doing a new thing.  Again and again, we are offered new birth, new life, in Christ Jesus. 
Each year on Easter Sunday this is the message.  Each Sunday of the year, in fact, this is the message – God is offering resurrected life!  That which is no longer useful may die so that something new can be born.
In this Easter season, know that the saving act of Christ was performed once and for all time. But know also that our response, the shedding of the old life and moving into the new life, is required of us each and every day.

May the blessing of Easter empower you today and every day.

1 comment:

revhope said...

powerful words of hope