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Multiple Voices

11/16/2017

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When we added our third service at Furnace Brook we faced a quandary.

The best arrangement seemed to involve an 11:00 service in each of our two locations, a problem that many other churches have successfully resolved by streaming the live preaching in one location to the other.


             And He called the twelve together, and gave them power and authority over all the demons and to heal diseases. And He sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to perform healing.- Luke 9:1-2

​It would not have been impossible for us to do that, and we have no criticism for the churches that do. But we sensed the Lord leading us in a different direction. We are proud to be a church with different voices on our preaching team- but we know it’s a new concept for some. With that in mind, here are some reasons why we value having a teaching team.

Below are five reasons for having a preaching/teaching team.
  1. Speaking “with one voice” is less impressive when there's only one voice speaking. True harmony, compelling harmony, is only achieved when we broaden the scope of participating voices.
  2. Aspiring preachers need meaningful opportunity for developing their skills. None of us want to get our haircuts or sushi from novice practitioners, and I certainly don't want to be the skydive instructor’s first student. But we can all be grateful for the “Guinea pigs.” Hair grows back and, well, that's where the metaphor starts to break down. The point is, we can better afford the occasional amateurish sermon than a church with no preachers in the wings. In this way, we can also provide a safe space for those exploring their calling to test the waters, and be obedient to God’s leading. ​
  3. It keeps the lead pastor humble. He is not indispensable, and the success of a teammate makes that point without diminishing the team’s captain.
  4. It makes for a bigger net. People are so varied in how they learn and what they're willing to feel that it takes a varied group of teachers to catch them all. A preaching team increases the likelihood that everyone in the congregation will get to hear someone speaking “their language” at least occasionally.
  5. It spares us from being technologically dependent. We love making use of technology in our effort to make more and better disciples for Jesus. But we are wary of structuring our ministry in such away that a glitch might defeat those efforts.

We are confident that the teaching team lends itself to our mission, and will help us make more and better disciples. Please pray for all of the teachers, and our church, that we may be a true testament to God's saving grace and transforming power.




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Hard Hearts and Soft Targets

11/7/2017

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Imagine how hard his heart had to be to do what he did.

But don’t imagine for a minute that that hardness made his heart strong. A hard heart is not a tough and enduring heart: a hard heart is hard in the sense of being brittle and susceptible. A hardened heart is like a defective clay vessel that, having been fired in the kiln, has nothing left to do but break.

A soft heart, on the other hand, is not soft in the sense of being weak and pitiful. The softness of a soft heart makes it expansive and resilient.

A
s a young man I tried one time to chop down a sumac. The sumac is a soft tree, and puny. The first few swings of the ax were gratifying as the outer bark fell away at the bite of the blade. But beyond the bark was a slick and rubbery core. Every subsequent swing of the ax made the whole tree shudder, but it only bruised the trunk and embarrassed the “lumberjack.” I want my heart to be soft like that tree. I also want my church to be soft like that tree.

I’ve been thinking about this in light of the shooting at Sutherland Springs. There will be a lot of conversations in the days to come about churches and security, and rightly so. Our places of worship could be targets any Sunday: do they have to be soft ones? But it’s in the nature of our churches to be eagerly (even naively) hospitable. Not only have our guards been down, there’s little evidence they’ve ever been up. 

So what will it mean for us to be “shrewd as snakes and innocent as doves” in this alarming hour?

Churches should be alert and attentive. They should be on good terms with their neighbors, and especially those neighbors more likely to be found on their porches than in the choir loft on a Sunday morning. They should pray deliberately for their own safety, and then pray twice as hard for the persecuted church around the world. It’s a good idea to see church security as a ministry and to make some investment in it. Reasonable steps can and should be taken. But the church that puts more energy and resources into security than evangelism should take the ultimate security precaution and just close its doors.

I take it as a given that men who love Jesus will attend church with their families and will, if called on to do so, act with vigor and violence in defense of the defenseless. But I’m not impressed with faux macho Christianity. I don’t want to hear about pastors “packing heat” or graceless boasting about the unfortunate idiot who makes the mistake of messing with this church or that church. Such talk does not reflect the mind of Christ and is not persuasively masculine.

The impulse to make church safe makes sense, but the bravado associated with that effort does not. Real churches attract real mean because they are not safe. The proper church exists at the perilous intersection of the merely mortal and the dangerously divine. It is the sort of place where any Ananias might drop dead, and any Eutychus might be made alive. And it is the closest thing we have to a permanent address for the Holy Spirit, the disruptive wind that blows where it will.

Being the arena for God’s redemptive power, churches are dangerous in a way that no number of armed guards can make safe, and safe in a way that no number of armed assailants can threaten. But that will not keep the armed assailants from trying.

The church is only a target because it’s dangerous, and it’s only dangerous because it’s soft, and it can not be otherwise and remain “the church.”

In the end the church has no easy answer for the problem of the bad man, heavily armed. But I take some comfort from the knowledge that Satan has no answer, easy or otherwise, for his problem of the soft church, sweetly resolved.

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    Furnace Brook Wesleyan Church Blog 

    Furnace Brook Wesleyan Church, Pittsford VT


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    Pastor Joel Tom Tate 
    ​Leads Furnace Brook Wesleyan Church and thoroughly enjoys life in the most un-churched state in the Union.

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