Friday, April 30, 2010

Heroes and Crooks: I’ve Learned Much from both of their Styles

Once again I am preparing to blog about the Florida–Bahamas Synod Assembly. Now blogging for me is one part observation, one part reflection, and for the most part odd connections with images and metaphors from the present day.

Just coming off of last Sunday’s lessons about shepherds and few of my comments concerning the meaning of the word Pastor being shepherd, I got caught in an image. You see, the shepherd I imagine is dressed in a robe and holding a shepherd’s crook. My comment was that when the Bishop comes forward during the Synod Assembly Worship in particular he is dressed in flowing robes and holding his crozier, which is basically that shepherd’s crook. He is the Pastor’s Pastor, Shepherd of the Shepherds. And somehow, I also got the image of a cope which is a liturgical cape, and the immediate thought was the line from Jimmy Buffett’s song “Son of a Son of a Sailor,” “Read dozens of books about heroes and crooks, And I’ve learned much from both of their styles.”

Now I know that contextually, the song is talking about good guys and bad guys, but in my mind, it’s a reference to those caped crime fighting heroes, and those crook toting spiritual heroes like our Bishop and all the leaders of the church. Our Synod Assembly is a celebration and preparation for both concerns.

Superheroes come in a number of different guises. Not everyone drives a Batmobile (But if you see one parked at the Synod Assembly, it is indeed mine. In fact, just this past Sunday, I took a young visitor for a quick ride in said Batmobile, and instead of saying, “Thanks, Pastor!” he said, “Thanks, Batman!”) Secret identities aside, the heroes might look like relief workers who have been off to Haiti. Habitat for Humanity volunteers. Soup Kitchen and Food Pantry workers. And most likely, they won’t be wearing a cape because it would get in the way of swinging a hammer or filling a soup bowl, and quite frankly capes are not all the fashion in Florida today. Just check Bealls and you will find they are sadly not part of the Florida lifestyle. This will be a terrible disappointment to my young passenger from Sunday as he thinks he would make a splendid Robin, but the cape is a must!

The second of these types to celebrate are those crook-wielding spiritual shepherds in our midst. They are the ones with the God-eye activated, looking for God-moments and opportunities. They use that shepherds crook just like the shepherds of old. Sometimes it is used to defend against wolves who might threaten the fold. Sometimes it is used as a prod to keep us on those right pathways for his namesake. And sometimes it is used as a giant hook to snag us around the neck and jerk us back in line. However, it is used, the crook is not used haphazardly or capriciously but rather by the will of the Spirit, in the service of Christ, for the purposes of our Creator!

I anticipate the Synod Assembly will have both types there. In fact, in the very best examples, the same person will be both. They will probably look like that image I have of the Bishop processing down the aisle, cape on his back, crook in his hand. They will be the effective ones, because they will be moved and led by God, but will also jump in the fray like a hero with a heart of courage. They will be action heroes grounded in the Word. And they will be ones who know that saving the helpless is not just the call of the hero, but of everyone who follows the Good Shepherd.

The Batmobile is all shined up (that usually means it’s going to rain soon) gassed up, and packed up for the trek to Orlando. What characters will we meet this year? Who will save the day for someone else? And whom will God call to affirm the mission and vision for the church? Most likely, the answer will be everyone who hears the call of Jesus. And on the scale of cape to crook there will be many examples. I hope we can all learn from what God brings about this weekend. I’m sure it will be worthwhile. Because, you see, as I started off, in my experience, heroes and crooks, well I’ve learned much from both of their styles.

Assembly begins

"Somebody make me laugh,
somebody make me cry.
Somebody tell me something my heart can't deny."
So go the lyrics to a love song by Hillary James that I believe carry what Christ does to us. He overcomes us with his unconditional love and we are beyond choice.
We do not chose him. He choses us.
Pastor Steve Bouman's keynote struck a strong note in my heart. We have lost our "evangelical muscle" as a church....for a bunch of reasons in my mind. But this Pr. Bouman tells us: we've lost the love song(s) that brought us to faith. So, I was moved by Pr. Bouman's call to "remember our first love!" Yes! It's not about us who are here. It's about the people who are not here! Mission! God is blessing and healing the world in Christ.....and our mission is simply this same mission....healing and blessing the world.....not the church!......with Christ.
Related: did you see and hear from all the folks walking back and forth on the dais this afternoon....what God is up to in and through the FB Synod! Healing and blessing the world!
Related: Pr. Livenson telling us in no uncertain terms how the love we share with Haiti and Eglise Lutherienne d'Haiti is the love of Christ and because of Christ we are not alone and we are one. That my friends, is the real deal!
Related: Together in Mission! After much work and rework and work and rework it looks like we have now something of substance into which we can all sink our teeth!
Identify, Invest, Provide, Expand, Give, Target! Provide, Invest, Support, Direct Resources, Fund! This will all work, and I believe it will, when we "remember our first love." Those words of the angel to the church of Ephesus (Revelation 3)call us to remember and respond!
Something really refreshing is happening....do you feel it? Do you sense it? What is God up to here with us in the Florida Bahamas Synod? What I sense is that after all the necessary attention we have given to the very controversial and divisive social issue of human sexuality, our church has made a decision (Churchwide Assembly last August)and now we forge on! This is not to say the August decisions are simply history or not open to molding or changing. This is to simply say it feels good to be focusing on reaching out and making disciples!
Enough for now.
Johan Bergh

Thursday, April 29,2010 - Blog 1

Blog Power?

Does anyone read Synod Assembly blogs? And particularly, does anyone do so who might be in a position to address in a meaningful way issues raised therein? Only the IT folks know the tracking figures for hits, but here’s a bit of anecdotal evidence:
Last year one of the points made by this blogger was that the assembly agenda provided no opportunity for Youth Voting Members to get together, except for Saturday night pizza with the bishop. At the appointed hour for workshops, at the suggestion of this writer, the youth representatives met on their own in the conference center lobby (they had little difficulty recognizing one another) and headed off somewhere for an hour of bonding (or not).
The tentative agenda for this year called for a half-hour of “Mentoring for Youth Voting Members” at 12:30 p.m. Friday, right after the one-hour “Orientation for New Voting Members.” An Assembly Update posted later on the synod Web site states that, instead, Youth Voting Members “are invited to meet together” from 11 to 11:30 a.m. Friday (just before the voter orientation), in the same space where the orientation is to take place – Salons C and D of the Palms Ballroom. It’s okay to bring lunch to the meeting, since most of the young people will be staying for the orientation, and the first plenary session will begin right after that.
Oh, yeah – pizza with the bishop is on again this year. It’s at 5 p.m. Saturday. If you’re neither a youth nor a bishop, don’t expect to get in.

What’s Happening

This time last year, synod assemblies, including this one, were agonizing over what would or would not happen a few months later at Churchwide Assembly regarding the proposed Social Statement on Human Sexuality and proposed changes to Ministry Policies. Now, what did happen is not only history but history in the making.
If you would like to hear some encouraging news from Florida-Bahamas Synod congregations who find the Churchwide Assembly actions cause for celebration, stop by the panel discussion at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the Siesta Room (next to the snack bar near the hotel registration area). All are invited to join the conversation immediately afterward, and again after the Opening Eucharist service. Brown bag your supper at 5:30 if you want, since the gathering music for the service begins at 7.

Passions and Pensions

A couple of highly contentious controversies are raging within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America right now – and neither of them has anything to do with sexuality. Both are about pensions – the pensions of those retired from the roster of the ELCA and the pensions of employees of Augsburg Fortress, the ELCA publishing house.
ELCA retirees learned last September that, effective in January, their benefits would be reduced by 9 percent a year for the next three years, a total cut of 27 percent come 2012. Blazing e-mails have been fanning the flames of outrage, with one complaint being that the Board of Pensions failed years ago to establish a reserve fund. One retired clergy member wrote that “Many of the pensioners, if not all, were advised by representatives of the BOP to annuitize, and they were guided into a so-called bridge fund with some assurance these conservative instruments would protect their pensions . . . there has yet to be an explanation of how the funds are managed and where they were invested.”
The situation with Augsburg Fortress (as reported April 23 in The Wall Street Journal, among other places) is that the publishing house announced in January that it was terminating the retirement plan for its 500 employees and retirees, saying the plan had been underfunded for the last nine years. Employees and retirees of AF, based in Minneapolis, have since sued the publisher in federal court, claiming that it allowed their pension plan to fail and that it used its connection to the ELCA as a shield to avoid paying them their pensions. ELCA Secretary David Swartling, by profession a lawyer, drafted a lengthy and lawyerly defense of the ELCA’s stand that it is not a party to the issue because Augsburg Fortress is a separate corporate entity.
What does this have to do with the Florida-Bahamas Synod Assembly? With regard to the ELCA pensions, find out at the traditional Retired Rostered Leaders Luncheon at noon on Saturday in the Lemon Ballroom (you must be retired and have registered in advance for this one). If you’re retired but didn’t register for the luncheon, you can go to the Lemon Ballroom at 2:15 p.m. to meet with John Kapanke, executive director of the Board of Pensions, who has been in the hot seat at other Lutheran gatherings, notably at the Minneapolis Area Synod Assembly last weekend. Finally, if you’re not rostered and retired, you can meet with BOP representative Fana Tekle, who will have a display table in the Ministry Marketplace. According an assembly update, she’ll be available “to conduct individual consultations with plan members, congregational representatives and synod staff.”
As far as Augsburg Fortress, it had been known for some time that the publishing house, because of financial constraints, would not have representation at Synod Assembly this year.

How to Help in Haiti

A year ago the synod celebrated the formation several months earlier of The Haitian Lutheran Church and the ordination of four pastors to serve its members. One of those pastors, Livenson Lauvanus, spoke at a hospitality suite gathering during the 2009 assembly, asking synod congregations to provide financial support for the young congregations of l’Eglise Lutherienne d’Haiti to build permanent church structures that could also serve as community education, health and social service centers.
In response, synod conferences and congregations began fund-raising efforts to support this outreach ministry. And then on Jan. 12, 2010, the earthquake struck. Fund-raising for church buildings was put on the back burner and the focus changed to disaster response. Pastor Livenson – who had come to Florida on a fund-raising mission the day before the earthquake and was not able to return home for some days – will be here again at the 2010 assembly. Help – of money and muscle and materials – for rebuilding will be needed for years. Hurricane season is almost at hand, with mudslides certain to wreak further destruction to people’s communities, lives and spirits. Ask Pastor Livenson what you can do to help. He will tell you.

Keep Your Cool

Another observation from this blogger last year was that one way the synod could witness to “going green” would be to have the hotel crank the thermostat up a couple of degrees in the conference hall. A meeting of the Synod Council on Thursday afternoon took place in a comfortable ambience. Whether voting members will have to endure the big chill again this year remains to be seen. Not too encouraging is this note from an assembly update: “Cold natured? Bring a sweater, as it can become quite cool in the Palms Ballroom and workshop rooms.”

Stay Tuned

Those who volunteered by way of their online registration to sing in the Synod Assembly choir were advised by e-mail soon afterward that there will not be a choir this year. Given that a volunteer choir adds next to nothing in the way of production costs, the reason for this decision is not immediately clear. If an explanation can be found, you’ll find it in tomorrow’s blog.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

2010 Synod Assembly

Welcome to the official blog of the 23rd Annual Assembly of the Florida-Bahamas Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, featuring the Rev. Stephen P. Bouman as keynote speaker and 19 workshops divided between two different sessions. The assembly, which is help April 30- May 2, 2010, at the Wyndham Orlando Resort in Orlando, FL, is an expression of the church in action. Centered in Christ, the Gospel and the Sacraments frame the Assembly's gathering. Assembly members will interweave plenaries on God's mission for the church with workshops on missional activities. As the synod's highest governing body, the Assembly seeks to discern God's calling for our time for the direction of ministry and mission in its 206 worshiping communities and congregations with over 77,000 members.

Voting Members, which include all rostered pastors, associates in ministry, deaconesses, and diaconal ministers, as well as lay congregational members selected by their respective congregation, listen for the promptings of the God's Spirit as they hear presentations, receive reports, act on motions and resolutions, attend workshops, enjoy fellowship, and most importantly pray, study scripture and praise God.

If you have never been to an assembly, you are always invited to attend as a visitor and experience this exciting and Spirit-led event. If you can't attend, keep in touch with the assembly by visiting the official assembly website at http://www.fbsynod.com/synod-assembly/2010-assembly where you can view pictures and news updates from the assembly. Also, be sure to keep this blog on your favorites list as it will be updated with posts from Voting Members at the assembly.

Our bloggers for the Assembly are Jean Etsinger, Tracy Moffatt, and Johan Bergh. We look forward to their comments in the days ahead.