Extended Family

This past Sunday I had the opportunity to worship at Carmel Presbyterian Church where my fiancé and his family have worshipped for decades. As a pastor, it is always nice to be a visitor to another church’s worship service. You are so often called to lead in a worship service that you forget what it is like to simply gather and receive on a Sunday morning. Please don’t misunderstand, I love leading in worship, but every once and a while it’s nice to sit back and let others do the leading.

This particular Sunday was doubly blessed for me. Not only did I get to worship with a new congregation, but I was also able to meet so many of the people who had watched my fiancé grow up in the church. I met his Sunday School teachers, choir director, and friends of the family who were all to ready to share a story about PJ as a child of the church.

This got me thinking about all the people who have surrounded me on my journey and how important they were in my faith formation. Mark DeVries would call these people my ‘Extended Christian Family,

“An extended Christian family is a community of believers who affirm and encourage growth toward Christian maturity.” - Family-Based Youth Ministry

These extended family members can be Sunday School teachers, youth group leaders and advisors, but the extended family members who make the most impact tend to be the ones who notice and affirm a youth out of genuine interest rather than programmatic involvement. I remember many of my teachers and advisors begin important influencers when it came to my faith formation. But, it was those members of the congregation who would seek me out to have a conversation or who would affirm a gift in me without being directly involved in the programs who connected me to the broader life of the church.

So many of my closest friends in middle school and high school were in my youth group. We were a very involved bunch. We sang in choirs, taught Sunday School and VBS, attended youth group, worship, and Bible Studies. A few of my friends have continued their journey of faith and found congregations and mission where they are involved, but many more of my friends have drifted away from the church. It makes you wonder, why was church so life-changing and formational for me and just a phase for someone else?

Ben Patterson in an article in Youthworker many years ago, made a very compelling point.  He said, 

“It is a sad fact of life that often the stronger the youth program in the church, and the more deeply the young people of the church identify with it, the weaker the chances are that those same young people will remain in the church when they grow too old for the youth program. Why? Because the youth program has become a substitute for participation in the church...When the kids outgrow the youth program, they also outgrow what they have known of the church.”

If young people feel connected with the youth program, that’s excellent! However, if we don’t take that seed and help it to grow and mature, it will wither and die just like a plant that has outgrown its clay pot and is not transplanted.

Helping to connect and involve young people in the life of the church is not just the job of those running children and youth programs.  Sure, we love to affirm the children and youth in our care and help them to find their way, but, as the African proverb says, it takes a village.

I pray that we all might recognize our role as members of that village and members of the extended Christian family for the children and youth in our churches. 

Mission Trips

It feels like I have been going on mission trips for my entire life, but really it has only been since I was an excited and nervous 7th grader. When I was 13, I embarked on my first mission trip experience to West Virginia with the youth group of my home church. After that trip, our annual mission trip was one of the most anticipated weeks of my year. The day we got back we would begin hounding our youth leader about next year’s location, we would fundraise throughout the year, we would try to convince our friends to come along with us, and my friends and I even had a tradition of going shopping the week before for all the essentials (candy, playing cards, and more candy). 

My friends and I would always have a wonderful time meeting new people, working to make our host community a little bit better, and spending time singing songs and playing games in God’s name. I never wanted the tradition of going on a summer mission trip to end. My friends and I even talked about continuing to meet up to go on trips together when we were home for college. Unfortunately, that dream very became a reality. However, the leaders of my home church asked me one summer if I would like to be one of the leaders for that summer’s Junior High Mission Trip. I have to be honest; I was a little hesitant. I loved going on mission trips as a student, but I wondered if I would have as much fun going as an adult leader.  Nevertheless, I hesitantly and skeptically agreed to help them out.

On that trip, something amazing happened. I got to see mission trips from another angle. These 6th-8th graders had the same excitement and nervousness I had on my first trip. I listened as they told me about the projects on their work sites, which they were completing and the residents that they had met. I laughed with them as we played games and sang songs. But my favorite part of the experience was watching as their faith deepened and their relationship with Christ grew stronger before my very eyes.

Annual mission trips continue to be one of the most anticipated weeks of my year. However, these days, I buy far more first aid supplies and far less candy in preparation for our trips. I feel incredibly blessed to take groups of really great youth to places like Long Island, NY and Kirkwood-Brainerd Camp.  On each trip I pray that the experience for our youth will be a good one and that they will grow in their faith and, of course, have fun while doing it.  These past two mission trips were incredible. I know all youth pastors think they their youth are the best youth in the world, but I honestly believe that God has brought together a special group of uniquely intelligent, thoughtful, and compassionate youth here at Thompson Church and I am proud and honored to be a part of their walk with Christ. 

Ordination

This past weekend, I was blessed to be a part of the ordination service for Christopher Miller. Chris and I met at Princeton Theological Seminary while participating in the choir. After seminary, I was called to Thompson Memorial Presbyterian Church and Chris was the intern there for two years. Chris was not only a wonderful colleague but also a true friend.

Many friends, family, and colleague surrounded Chris on July 5 to celebrate with and pray for him as he began his ministry as a Teaching Elder in the Presbyterian Church USA.  One of those friends was Rev. Brian Ellison who brought the Word of God for the people gathered. His sermon centered on this passage from Hebrews;

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles.” Hebrews 12:1

Rev. Ellison used a wonderful image that stuck with me from his sermon. He said that when he hears this passage, he imagines a stage where he is standing front and center with the spotlight on him. The audience can only see him, but as he looks to his right and to his left there are tons of people back stage and in the wings who have helped him, who are supporting him, who are there to feed him lines, or give a nod of encouragement.

My favorite part of ordination services is the moment when deacons, elders, and pastors are called forward for the Laying on of Hands; a prayer of blessing for the newly ordained individual. Right before this prayer during my own ordination service, Stephen Heinzel Nelson asked me to stand up and turn around to look at all the people who had come forward. And it was at that very moment that I began to tear up. I looked around at the faces of Sunday School teachers, youth group advisors, fellow pastors, members of multiple congregations, family, and friends who had walked with me on my journey.  It was incredible!  Not everyone is blessed with a moment like this, but I want to remind everyone that no one is on the journey of faith alone. Each of us has a cloud of witnesses waiting in the wings. 

Caffeinated

Coffee is important to me. I wouldn’t say it is the most important thing in my life, there are many things that out-rank it, but I would be lying if I said, “coffee wasn’t near the top.”

I also know that I am not alone in this feeling. Many TV shows and movies feature main characters who take coffee very seriously and refuse to work without it. These characters reflect a reality in our own lives to which we can relate. Our society’s love of coffee, I’m afraid to say, probably has less to do with enjoying and appreciating the beverage itself, but rather the draw is to the feeling of renewed energy brought on by caffeine.  And why do we feel the need to rely so heavily on the limited effects of caffeine? Simple, life is really busy. We are all so busy running errands, running businesses, running kids to and from places, running households, running, it feels at times, in circles. We live in an age when we have unlimited opportunities to connect, learn, to be entertained, to be distracted. How many of us have said to ourselves, “There are not enough hours in the day!”

With this ever-moving lifestyle, where can on find the time to stop and prayer, or listen to a sermon, or delve into God’s Word? We rationalize by saying that God understands. God thinks family is important and would want me to focus on them. God believes in our vocations and so has called me to work hard on my career or my school work. Who in this day and age has any time for Sabbath rest? The Gospel of Mark tells us,

“The sabbath was made for humankind, and not humankind for the Sabbath.” Mark 2:27

God created the heavens and the earth and all that is in them. Then God created humankind and only after that did God establish the Sabbath. The Sabbath was established with us in mind and we need the Sabbath.

“The meaning of the Sabbath is to celebrate time rather than space. Six days a week we live under the tyranny of things in space; on the Sabbath we try to become attuned to holiness in time. It is a day on which we are called upon to share in what is eternal in time, to turn from the results of creation to the mystery of creation; from the world of creation to the creation of the world.” The Sabbath by Abraham Joshua Heschel

Now, let me be clear, I still love coffee and I will continue to begin my mornings with a cup (or three). But it is my hope that my day, and yours can begin as consistently with God. What if we recognized our need to be in God’s presence as acutely as we needed our daily fix of coffee?