Volume 4, Number 1, Winter 2011
Missouri Episcopalians Gather at Convention, Chart Course for Mission
It was an informative, inspirational, joyful, tiring whirlwind of a time; it was energizing and balanced, fun, fellowship-filled satisfying hopeful event. So said lay and clergy attendees of the annual meeting of the diocese held mid-November at the St. Charles Convention Center. This issue of Seek is a recap of meeting highlights from Bishop Wayne’s address to the diocese to the resolutions passed by the 171st convention. Also included are some thumbnail sketches of work done this past year by diocesan organizations that are less familiar to many. You can find complete reports on the diocesan website: diocesemo.org. Photos: Standing Committee gathered to present their report to convention; members of the Companion Relationship Committee talk about Lui with archivist Sue Rehkopf, representatives from Episcopal City Mission, Task Force for the Hungry and Sustain a Faith manned information tables; the youth of Episcopal Church of the Ascension in Northwoods captured video for a storytelling project; the new Cures in the diocese gathered for recognition; Bishop Wayne shares observations about last year and his vision for this coming year in the Diocese of Missouri.
Bishop of Missouri: Context, Text, Action Bishop’s Address to the
Grace to you, and peace from God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ.
I begin with one of the great, hope-filled passages from Revelation, as John continues to unfold the vision given him, here at the twentyfirst chapter: I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “See, the home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them as their God; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them; he will wipe every tear from their eyes. Death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no more, for the first things have passed away. Notice how this passage undermines a popular American imagination about the end of days, which talks about a rapture of believers into the sky, an escape from a doomed world. But that’s not what Revelation tells us. The new Jerusalem comes down, renewing the earth. The home of God is among mortals. There is no escape in this picture. This much beloved world is the context for God’s working-out of salvation. It is the only context we have. The new Jerusalem, whose presence comes to us from above and from the
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context, both nearby and far off. We do well to interpret the context of our neighborhoods—and the global neighborhood. It is my hope that we can understand that what we do in Lui Diocese in Sudan, and what we do at the Peace Meal at St. John’s in Tower Grove in St. Louis, are of one piece. They simply lie on different horizons of our context. A first step, then: Interpreting the context.
After context, then text. What in scripture helps make sense out of this situation? What comes to mind? Where are the links? Formal scripture studies, whether modern in shape or avant garde and post-modern, can interpret a passage of scripture to within an inch of its life. Part of the brilliance of the method which I am describing is that it allows the scriptures to do the interpreting. The scripture becomes free to make sense of us, and the situations which we face. They bring clarity into our understanding of what God is doing in our contexts. Context. Text. Action. Once we begin to understand what God is doing in the context, then we can find the invitation to do the thing that God is doing. Remember: it is always God’s mission, not ours, and we are accountable to and servants of that mission. And as we engage more deeply in the context,
171st Annual Meeting of the Diocese of Missouri, November 20, 2010, St. Charles, Missouri
the interpretive loop begins again. Context. Text. Action. An everchanging tableau. I asked Robert Towner, rector of Christ Church in Cape Girardeau, if I might share some of the story about missional life in that congregation, and how this interpretive template fits. It fits pretty well. In 2001 or 2002, at a conference for revitalizing older, established churches, which Bob attended with the senior warden of the parish, he came away with one important insight: serve the neighborhood where you have been planted, or else move. That’s all about context. Christ Church was faced with an important decision: to move to the growing edge of town, or stay put in a downtown neighborhood in decline. They ended up staying, not as a path of least resistance, but purposefully. That’s when, Bob says, they started talking to their neighbors. That is to say, Christ Church got more serious about its context. And some texts emerged to help make sense out of that context, to Continued on page 3.
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