
Be the change by Jason Valendy is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
The #UMCGC of "Go" Misses the Church of "Be"?
The emphasis/theme of General Conference is on of "Therefor Go". Sermons and rallying cries are around the standard of "Go". It is a big tent theme where all sorts of people are getting behind. There is a strong sense that the UMC is at her best when we "Go" into the world to make disciples of Christ for the transformation of the world. That is a noble goal and theme. I wonder, with so much focus to "Go" are we overlooking "Be"?
It is great to have social action, but action without contemplation (a Richard Rohr major theme) we are missing the point. Perhaps it is worth allowing the good Father to share in his own words from May 13, 2016 devotion:
I used to think that most of us must begin with contemplation or a unitive encounter with God and are then led through that experience to awareness of the suffering of the world and to solidarity with that suffering in some form of action. I do think that's true for many people, but as I read the biblical prophets and observe Jesus' life, I think it also happens in reverse: first action, and then needed contemplation.
No life is immune from suffering. When we are in solidarity with pain, injustice, war, oppression, colonization--the list goes on and on--we face immense pressure to despair, to become angry or dismissive. When reality is split dualistically between good and bad, right and wrong, we too are torn apart. Yet when we are broken, we are most open to contemplation, or non-dual thinking. We are desperate to resolve our own terror, anger, and disillusionment, and so we allow ourselves to be led into the silence that holds everything together in wholeness.
The contemplative, non-dual mind is not saying, "Everything is beautiful," even when it's not. However, you do come to "Everything is still beautiful" by facing the conflicts between how reality is and how you wish it could be. In other words, you have to begin--and most people do in their adult years--with dualistic problems. You've got to name good and evil and differentiate between right and wrong. You can't be naive about evil. But if you stay focused on this duality, you'll go crazy! You'll become an unlovable, judgmental, dismissive person. I've witnessed this pattern in myself. You must eventually find a bigger field, a wider frame, which we call non-dual thinking.
Beginning with dualistic action and moving toward contemplation seems to be the more common path in the modern era. We see this pattern in Dorothy Day, Thomas Merton, Martin Luther King, Jr., Mother Teresa, and Jean Vanier. These people entered into the pain of society and had to go to God to find rest for their soul, because their soul was so torn by the broken, split nature of almost everything, including themselves.
As we focus on being a church of "Go", that is important. However, if the "Go" is not moving us into contemplation then we will be nothing but a glorified social action group that carries the name of the United Methodist Church.
Life is a journey, unless you are at #UMCGC. Then it is all about destinations.
Many people have adopted the Emerson quote "Life is a journey, not a destination" as their life mantra. It is something that gives inspiration and hope when things are tough. It can remind one that while things may not turn out as one would hope, just going the journey is the point.
This mantra is applied at all ages and stages of life. I remind myself and teach it to my children. Looking at all the images with this quote on the internet, I imagine I am not alone in my appreciation of this mantra. Many value and appreciate it.
Until General Conference of the United Methodist Church.
There are many who are disappointed, angry, frustration and dishearten about the amount of work that is not being done. It is as though arrival at the General Conference we are more interested in destination and forget about the "goodness" of the journey. Destination is paramount. Slogging through the process of crafting or voting on legislation is met with disgust and dismay. The journey is valued less.
Perhaps I am too naive, but I continue to believe that life is a journey. And if life is a journey then is death a destination?
#UMC Delegates and Olympic Athletes
There is a level of health that is required to be an athlete at the Olympics. Events are different and each event requires, at times, a different skill set. While weight lifters and swimmers both qualify for the Olympics, you don't assign the weight lifter to swim the 100 backstroke or ask the swimmer to lift weights over her head. It is obvious. While one qualifies to the Olympics, each skill set for the events are different.
The UMC meets every four years, and much like the Olympics, there are many people who qualify to attend. It is worth asking, what are the skill sets that may be needed for an individual attending the General Conference?
Depending upon your specific role at the GC, you may need a different set of skills. Bishops need to be good at facilitation. Various observers need to be good researchers. Delegates need to be thoughtful. And, similar to the Olympics, there are things that are universal to all participants. In the Olympics, physical fitness may be a universal skill to be an Olympic athlete. In the GC, spiritual fitness seems to be a universal skill.
If you are ever in a position to vote for delegates to the GC, I would submit that the primary requirement be one of spiritual fitness. Asking questions like: Is this person patient? Is this person kind? Is this person self aware and can they self reflect? Can this person self differentiate between issues and personal attacks and not see them as one in the same? Can this person keep their 'snark' in check? Can this person listen with their heart?
Just like the physically fit are most successful at the Olympics likewise, the people who are the most helpful and insightful at this GC are people who are spiritually fit.