I can’t believe it has already been six weeks since I started working as the assistant pastor at Ramseur Wesleyan Church (RWC). It has been a full and eventful six weeks; I have been to camp meeting for the district, district conference, preached twice, taught some leadership courses for the youth ministry, attended LBA meetings, chaired a Christian Education Board meeting, worked with different areas on what fall ministries will look like around RWC and started setting up shop in my new office.
I know see RWC as home and the congregation as family, it is a church about 200 to 215 on a normal weekend. She has two services a contemporary and a traditional, with sunday school sandwiched between them. The sunday school ministry is bursting, there was about 150 some people last weekend. The church has a great heart and a deep passion for fellowship, where a normal church in america would greet for about two minutes each sunday morning this church greets for about six or eight. They love to fellowship and greet each other, but it does not end there. They want to reach out with love to the community, through their children’s and youth ministries, and along with a partnership with others churches in the area to run the Ramseur food pantry.
I am not sure what God has planned for this church or myself, but I know God has blessed these people and I am thankful that He has allowed me to join the staff here at RWC.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
General Superintendent Jo Anne Lyon
On June 9th,The Wesleyan Church come into a new chapter of life. Since our planting in the 1800's we have supported women in ministry and women having equal rights in life and society, but never a woman in the highest leadership position of the church. That has changed, Jo Anne Lyon CEO and Founder of World Hope International has become our first woman General Superintendent.
After "accepting her new assignment, Dr. Lyon challenged the church to go places it never has gone before. 'I believe the Lord is positioning The Wesleyan Church to have a voice in the 21st century like never before, ' she said." (take from http://www.wesleyan.org/doc/news#bk95)
After attending the whole General Conference, I was challenged by Dr. Lyon's words and her passion for a social holiness that flows out of a deep personal holiness. This will be a great new chapter in The Wesleyan Church. I am ready to go into the local church and live out holiness of heart, powered by the Holy Spirit.
Saturday, June 7, 2008
General Conference ‘08
It is time again for another General Conference of The Wesleyan Church. It is my first time attending and it is in a great location sunny Orlando, FL. Over the next few days we will hear about the past 40 years of ministry and a vision for the next. There are some very interesting items coming to the conference floor; that will be voted and discussed. It should be a great time in Orlando for The Wesleyan Church.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
The Search . . .
Over the past six months I have been seeking God’s will and guidance on which church I will be going to. During that time doors have opened and closed, I have been discouraged but I have also learned a lot about who God has created me to be. The last church I visited was a nice church with a deep passion for the Bible and loving people. I interviewed for a youth and college position, through the weekend God really laid a deep passion for discipleship and spiritual formation on my heart. This is not new, but it did help me see a little more of the direction God is leading me down.
While the Saturday afternoon of my graduation has come and gone. And I now hold a master’s degree of divinity from Asbury Theological Seminary, and it is great to be done with all the class work and assignments. I find myself seeking God more and more, asking those questions of where and when. What does the future hold and what direction do I walk. I know it is connected with spiritual formation and discipleship, but is it as a small group pastor or a small church pastor? I am not sure, but I know God is still God, and He has not brought me to this open for nothing.
While the Saturday afternoon of my graduation has come and gone. And I now hold a master’s degree of divinity from Asbury Theological Seminary, and it is great to be done with all the class work and assignments. I find myself seeking God more and more, asking those questions of where and when. What does the future hold and what direction do I walk. I know it is connected with spiritual formation and discipleship, but is it as a small group pastor or a small church pastor? I am not sure, but I know God is still God, and He has not brought me to this open for nothing.
Monday, April 21, 2008
What are Spiritual Disciplines?
Many of you know that my connection group on Wednesday nights is studying spiritual disciplines using Coach Drury's book. Each week we study a different discipline, but we always come back to asking what the purpose of spiritual disciplines are? Susanne Johnson says, "Spiritual Discipline is not a program of self-improvement, not an ideal to be striven for, not a set of tasks to be accomplished. It is, rather, a way of posturing ourselves to receive God's work 'for us' through Israel and in Jesus Christ."
Many times as Christians we see spiritual disciplines as something we do in order to grow spiritually, but since it is 'spiritual' it follows out of who God is. Spiritual Disciplines become ways that we partner with God in His work in our lives. Spiritual disciplines are less about what we do and more about who we are and becoming.
Many times as Christians we see spiritual disciplines as something we do in order to grow spiritually, but since it is 'spiritual' it follows out of who God is. Spiritual Disciplines become ways that we partner with God in His work in our lives. Spiritual disciplines are less about what we do and more about who we are and becoming.
Labels:
spiritual discipline,
Spiritual Formation
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Confession . . .
James 5:16, “therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective” through a proverbial wrench into our Protestant Christian. Confession is often seen as a personal issue between God and the Christian. Coach D and the Apostle Paul take a totally different approach to confession, confession is not just letting God know, it is about becoming an authentic people within a community.
During this chapter Coach D recounts John Wesley’s thoughts on confession and how it was apart of the weekly small groups or class meetings. I wonder what the American Church would look like if every small group and Sunday school class would ask the following four questions: “What known sins have you committed since our last meeting?” “What temptations have you met with?” “How were you delivered?” “What have you thought, said, or done of which you doubt whether it be sin or not?” Confession of sins and temptations leads a Christian to deeper accountability and humility, it would appear that in the place God is able to form and shape the Christian more into the likeness of Christ.
This week I don’t want to just ask how you are practicing the spiritual discipline of confession, but how are you being formed through your practice of confession?
During this chapter Coach D recounts John Wesley’s thoughts on confession and how it was apart of the weekly small groups or class meetings. I wonder what the American Church would look like if every small group and Sunday school class would ask the following four questions: “What known sins have you committed since our last meeting?” “What temptations have you met with?” “How were you delivered?” “What have you thought, said, or done of which you doubt whether it be sin or not?” Confession of sins and temptations leads a Christian to deeper accountability and humility, it would appear that in the place God is able to form and shape the Christian more into the likeness of Christ.
This week I don’t want to just ask how you are practicing the spiritual discipline of confession, but how are you being formed through your practice of confession?
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Trip to HQ
Last Sunday afternoon and evening approximately twenty Asbury Seminary students from the Wesleyan Church headed north to Fisher, Indiana. The reason for this trip was to visit The World Headquarters of the Wesleyan Church. Every two years the Department of Education and the Ministry hosts the seniors to Seminary Day. This is a day that is designed to help graduating students to connect with different church leaders and exposes them to the ministries that HQ has to offer students graduating from seminary.
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