A Song of Faith, 3

This, our third and final journey through A Song of Faith, we explore what the church is and our relationship to it.  The words speak truth to the past and hold hope for the future.  May they be comforting as we continue our journey.

 

We sing of a church
  seeking to continue the story of Jesus
  by embodying Christ’s presence in the world.
We are called together by Christ
  as a community of broken but hopeful believers,
  loving what he loved,
  living what he taught,
  striving to be faithful servants of God
  in our time and place.
Our ancestors in faith
  bequeath to us experiences of their faithful living;
  upon their lives our lives are built.
Our living of the gospel makes us a part of this communion of saints,
  experiencing the fulfillment of God’s reign
  even as we actively anticipate a new heaven and a new earth.

 The church has not always lived up to its vision.
It requires the Spirit to reorient it,
  helping it to live an emerging faith while honoring tradition,
  challenging it to live by grace rather than entitlement,
for we are called to be a blessing to the earth.

We sing of God’s good news lived out,
a church with purpose:
  faith nurtured and hearts comforted,
  gifts shared for the good of all,
  resistance to the forces that exploit and marginalize,
  fierce love in the face of violence,
  human dignity defended,
  members of a community held and inspired by God,
     corrected and comforted,
  instrument of the loving Spirit of Christ,
  creation’s mending.
We sing of God’s mission.

We are each given particular gifts of the Spirit.
For the sake of the world,
  God calls all followers of Jesus to Christian ministry.
In the church,
  some are called to specific ministries of leadership,
  both lay and ordered;
  some witness to the good news;
  some uphold the art of worship;
  some comfort the grieving and guide the wandering;
  some build up the community of wisdom;
  some stand with the oppressed and work for justice.
To embody God’s love in the world,
  the work of the church requires the ministry and discipleship
  of all believers.

 In grateful response to God’s abundant love,
  we bear in mind our integral connection
  to the earth and one another;
we participate in God’s work of healing and mending creation.
To point to the presence of the holy in the world,
  the church receives, consecrates, and shares
  visible signs of the grace of God.
In company with the churches
  of the Reformed and Methodist traditions,
we celebrate two sacraments as gifts of Christ:
baptism and holy communion.
In these sacraments the ordinary things of life
—water, bread, wine—
point beyond themselves to God and God’s love,
  teaching us to be alert
  to the sacred in the midst of life.

 

Yes, the church has not always lived up to its vision.  We have and will probably continue to make errors in judgment, follow paths which, in hindsight, are discriminatory and polarizing, contrary to the teachings of the one we profess to follow.

But we cannot lose sight of the core message of Jesus – to love God and to love neighbor as we would be loved.  If we can hang onto at least that one thing, I believe that there will always be light in the world.

 

In peace

Pastor Beryl

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