Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Becoming the Presbytery Owl

 
Lately, I have been putting effort into writing vision and job descriptions for the Presbytery Owl…which, it turns out, is one of the roles I have been asked to play for the presbytery.  Writing vision descriptions is necessary, because the presbytery voted in October to reduce my work to 10 months per year.  It has become necessary to define which roles the executive presbyter will play in presbytery leadership, and which he (I) will not.  Since the first of those blocks of time away from the office will be this month, it is high time to decide on what ministry roles the executive presbyter shall fulfill. That is the role of the vision description.  A job description describes the duties included in fulfilling that vision. 


According to the Presbytery Leadership Team the executive presbyter is called to play two roles within the life of the presbytery.

First, the executive presbyter is to serve as pastor to the presbytery.  This means that the executive presbytery is to serve
·      as pastor-to pastors,
·      as first responder, along with the stated clerk, to crises and problems as they arise in the presbytery.
·      as the “face” of the presbytery, showing up in each region and helping interpret the mission of the presbytery,
·      spending two weeks out of eight on-site in the villages pursuing specific goals.
·      and as holder of the presbytery vision when staffing committees.

It is when we talk about the second role the executive presbyter plays that we find ourselves describing the Owl to the Presbytery.  The executive presbyter is not caught up in one congregation or community, or even just in our presbytery.  The executive is to rise up and look at the big picture, as if from an altitude, and asked to challenge the presbytery to not lose its own perspective on what God is doing. 

Some scholars [like Ron Heifetz] call this “leading from balcony space.”  However, the Joint Parish members commented in February that “balcony space” was truly not descriptive in a land with almost no balconies; they wanted a better definition for this role than that.  As that conversation progressed, one person finally spoke up and said this is more like the owl.  It hovers over the tundra with sharp eyes and sees with wisdom.

Since then, different groups have thought about the executive presbytery filling the role of Owl to the Presbytery and have shared some creative thought on how this image helps the presbytery.  I want to share some of that creative thinking. \

Before I do, though, let me share one personal thought:

I have never really liked the title executive presbyter.  I always have to explain what it means, and the explanation is not very exciting.  However, given the two roles the Leadership Team has asked me to play, I have been toying with the title Pastor and Owl to the Presbytery.  Now that is a fun title!  Anyone want to add it to our personnel list?


Monday, May 13, 2013

Living the Solutions


Living the Solutions
Garden Ministry at Immanuel
Immanuel Presbyterian Church of Anchorage recently met to discuss putting legs on their vision statement for ministry.  One ministry they have decided to design is some form of Church Garden ministry.

Nationally, garden ministry has been gaining attention as it allows the church to reach out in ministry to people beyond the local church, especially low income people who do not own land.  Some of the benefits of garden ministry include these:
  • Garden ministry increases family independence by allowing people to grow their own food;
  • garden ministry helps congregations to connect with low income people an form better relationships in life and ministry;
  • and garden ministry increases helps congregations to learn and teach about the environmental value of growing food locally (no CO2 emissions for transportation), as well as methods for growing things in more environmentally friendly ways than what happens in most commercial farming.
Immanuel Presbyterian Church has only just decided to begin designing their own Garden Ministry approach.  This year, they hope to continue developing the plan, and to make the preparations needed to be ready for next year's growing season.    

Building with Local Materials--Clay Straw-build at Bioshelter
Experiments on living into sustainable life can sometimes result in a more efficient and comfortable life, as well.  That is the hope of Cindee and Curt Karns at the Alaskan EcoEscape Bioshelter and Permaculture Center.  This summer they are offering classes on building with locally harvested clay and straw.

The classes will offer a "hands-on" learning experience at the Bioshelter near Eagle River.  Participants will learn about the breathability, thermal mass value, and ecological benefits of clay construction. They will then practice, first by making the clay slip and adding the components necessary for proper construction, and then by acutally constructing a wall in a new, clay-straw greenhouse.

The first class will be June 1 and 2.  The instructor will be the well-known clay-straw builder, Lasse Holmes of Homer.  Classes with Lasse Holmes cost $250 for the weekend.  There are still two slots open

A number of participants indicated they could not come on that date.  Therefore, a second class will be held on June 8-9.  Cindee Karns will be the instructor, following Lasse Holmes' teaching.  Classes with Cindee Karns cost $50 for the weekend.

For information on the classes, email: alaskanecoescape@yahoo.com

For a meditation on how the Karnses see this as a response of faith, see Curt's Blog From the Bioshelter, reflecting on the Lord's Prayer and Philippians 4:8.

http://curtkarns.blogspot.com/

Earthcare Concern
NOAA--400 ppm CO2 -- May 9 marked the first time in millions for so much greenhouse gas
One of the most important faith issues of our day: how will humanity respond to the catastrophic impact humanity's current lifestyle is having on life today, and will have for future generations.  In Alaska Kivalina, Nowtok and Koyukuk already stand as poster-children for the impact it is having in our own state.  But the projected impact on all life in the lifetimes of young people alive today, and for their children, is hard to believe.

http://researchmatters.noaa.gov/news/Pages/CarbonDioxideatMaunaLoareaches400ppm.aspx

Since Earthcare is the most urgent global concern for people of our generation, this blog would love to hear what disciples of Jesus Christ are doing to live into a different, life-sustaining way of life.





Possibilities for the Future
The Economics of Happiness is an informative video exploring economics that do not exploit or overconsume land or people.  The video has become available on a pay-per-view basis through VIMEO

Although The Economics of Happiness is not from an explicitly Christian source, it is a thought provoking video.  The video can be used by groups interested in exploring the signs of the times we are in, and interesting possibilities for the future.




Monday, May 6, 2013

Changing Things Up


 
This week marked a major change for the Presbytery of Yukon.  April 30 was Jan Burger’s last day as administrative assistant, and May 2 marked the first day for Melissa O’Malley to be the new voice and the face that greets you from the presbytery office.  To be sure, Melissa actually began on April 12, and Jan has been training her since.  Still, April 30 felt like the true boundary moment—a true changing of the guard. 

The Personnel Committee and office staff held a retirement party for Jan on her last day.  Thirty people gathered in the Fellowship Hall at First Presbyterian Church in Anchorage to celebrate Jan’s nine years of service in the presbytery office.  There was lunch and prayer and symbolic gifts and stories, as we celebrated Jan’s graceful presence in the office, and her faithful work that helped the ministry in so many ways.

One turn of events added an ironic twist to the whole event.  The Personnel Committee arranged for a piece of walrus ivory artwork to come from the village of Gambell as a gift for Jan.  The gift did not make it by party day!  Somehow, this seemed rather humorous, given how many times Jan has made arrangements for many of us, or for our supplies, to travel only to discover that the weather preempted her best scheduling.  Such is life and travel in the Presbytery of Yukon.

Melissa comes to us from Eagle River.  She is Southern Baptist, so she is scrambling to learn what Presbyterians mean when they talk about Teaching Elders, Ruling Elders, and other such jargon.  However, Melissa wanted a part-time job that would allow her to serve God through God’s church and to be home with her kindergarten-age child for a good part of the day.  The Presbytery of Yukon administrative assistant position makes a good fit.

However, Melissa was not hired to do exactly the same job Jan has been doing.  The Presbytery voted in October to change the job from a 20 hour per week job to 12 hours per week.  With this in mind, Melissa’s main roll in the presbytery office will be to facilitate communication through appropriate technologies, and to serve as travel hound dog for the presbytery—that’s my term, not the personnel committee’s J.

Cutting the Administrative Assistant’s hours will mean a number of changes.  Probably what will be most noticeable at first will be that Melissa only works three days per week: Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.  For those who travel to presbytery, you will also notice that Melissa will not normally be present at face-to-face meetings of presbytery. 

All of this will require some adjustment from all of us. For instance, you can still call the presbytery office on Mondays and Wednesdays and leave a message.  Sharon or Mary or I will check for messages regularly, so that we can reply to your needs as promptly as we can.  However, we ask that you bear with us as we all begin to learn new patterns for working together.

If you get a chance, please send Melissa a call or email to welcome her into this work through the Presbytery office.   Her email address is the same one Jan has been using: office@pbyukon.org.

Peace,
Curt Karns

Sunday, February 10, 2013

02 11 13 A Second Gold Nugget


A second golden nugget in this series on transformational churches is the realization that churches are not in the business of attracting church members.  Churches are tasked with creating a community of spiritual leaders.  Elaine Heath has given a wonderful list of touch points to use in disciple formation, and I will list it, below.  But first I want to write a bit about the difference between trying to attract church members as opposed to raising up a community of spiritual leaders.


This difference is significant, because if churches and their ministry strategies simply assume that people generally want to be church members and are waiting for a really attractive church to show up, then they are not truly observing what is going on in the world.  Although their was a brief period after World War II when people believed that flocking to institutions was the way to be responsible, good human beings, those days are long gone.  Since the 1960s Western society has been increasingly distrustful of static worldviews.  People are increasingly interested in ways of living that incorporate new learning and experimentation into their worldviews.  Old institutions are in drastic decline, and the new ones that are emerging are not based on attraction so much as a common mission.  People get involved in order to be a part of the mission, not the institution. With this in mind, the whole concept of membership changes. 

In the long run, I believe this is good news for churches.  God’s mission in the world has never been a static thing.  Christians used to be known as “people of the way, meaning path or road (see John 14: 6),” which means we know our lives to be a journey, and we know ourselves to be the companions in this journey, following the lead of the Messiah.  Journeys are inherently about not being static.  Journeys are about going somewhere, discovering new people and experiencing new things.  Journeys are about personal growth, and journeys with the Messiah are about growing while we accomplish something together. 

Churches, then, are not tasked to train institutional members, but to form a community of spiritual companions, who are journeying out into the world to do something as a part of God’s mission in the world.  These spiritual companions have to be spiritual leaders, because they are leading the way into new places to participate in the new things God is doing (remember all those Psalms about “singing a new song?” Or how about Isaiah 42:9, “See, the former things have taken place, and new things I declare; before they spring into being I announce them to you.”)?  They are leaders, because they are not “doing church” the old way, nor are they ever done learning or trying out new endeavors.  They are always on the journey with the Lord, always participating in something new.

However, the journey with God generally doesn’t go well unless the journeyers learn to build and care for a balanced spiritual life.  With this in mind, Elaine Heath (see The Mystic Way of Evangelism, Baker Academic, 2008) offers the following list of personal disciplines for Christian life:

Prayer                        (I’m currently using The Daily Prayer app on my iPhone);
Presence            (the practice of becoming aware of Christ’s presence in the here-and-
now, and holding onto that awareness throughout the day);
Gifts                        Becoming aware of one’s giftedness and being a steward of them;
Service                        We are sent out into the world for service, if we follow Christ;
Witness            We bear witness to the Christ we follow, and what he is doing.

Practicing this balance of spiritual disciplines, both as an individual and as a member of a missional faith community, is essential for building people up as spiritual leaders, and for building an empowered missional faith community.  It is this kind of balance that gives us vision and empowerment for the journey along the Way.


Thursday, February 7, 2013

02 08 13 A Gold Nugget to Share

 
Given Alaska’s gold-rush history, I hope you can forgive me for using gold nuggets as a metaphor.  The presbytery’s participation in the Acts 16:5 Initiative has surfaced several “gold nuggets” that are worth sharing across the presbytery. Today I want to tell you about one of them: The Three Dimensional Ministry Perspective.

The three dimensional ministry perspective observes that effective and enduring ministries require that churches balance their ministry efforts by caring equally for three specific dimensions of relationship.   Much could be said about each one, and it essential for each congregation’s leadership to give serious consideration on how to care for all three.  For this blog, though, I will just list them briefly as follows:

  1. Our relationship with God  (worship, prayer, the practicing the presence of God, etc)
  2. Our relationship with fellow believers (fellowship, Christian education, equipping the members for service in the community), and
  3. Our relationship with the rest of the world (an intentional witness in our communities and, perhaps, beyond).

As I have followed this outward from the Acts 16:5 program, I have discovered that there is a lot of research behind this three dimensional ministry approach.  One of the most helpful descriptions comes from The Faith of Leap (by Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch; Baker Books, 2011).  They point out that churches have traditionally started with worship and prayer as the beginning point of ministry, but this has not worked well for the church, especially in the past century.  It is this very approach that has led us to the current era where churches across the west are in decline and where, only this year, people who claim no religion at all emerged as the fastest growing segment of American society.  We have to do better.

Frost and Hirsch began to ask which of the three dimensions best serves as a catalyst for ministry.  If beginning with our relationship with God is not the best starting point, what is?

Starting with our relationship with God tends toward an divisive arguments on which point of view has the most pure doctrine, and leads to the kind of Christianity that is interested in empire and power.  Starting with our relationship with fellow believers can often degenerate into an in-grow “club”-type church that is not much motivated to service in the world.  But beginning with the world—that is, beginning by listening and observing where God is most active in healing the hurts and raising the hopes of the world—engages Christians in service, inspires a burning desire to build the kind of faith community that is being equipped to do the service to which they are called (indeed, the rigors of serving together in the world builds a special espris de corps that the Bible calls koinonia, and that Christians these days have begun to call communitas (spirit-empowered community), and turns people strongly to God for guidance, strength, and joy. 

Some people have suggested that too many of our churches were founded on the “worship first” principle, and that new churches need to be developed.  Acts 16:5 reminds us that the work of God is about transformation, and it begins by transforming our tired churches into vital ministries.  And a good place to start is by paying attention (listening and observing) to what God is doing in the world, and joining in.


Tuesday, January 8, 2013

01 08 13 Manger Throne


One of the things that I love about permaculture is that it works.  For instance plants that are cultivated in partnership with other species make the land even more fruitful than single crop production, without using chemical fertilizers or pesticides.  An example of this is the three sisters: squash, corn and  beans allows one plant (beans) to draw nutrients up into the surrounding soil and feeding its neighbor plants, another (squash) to cover the ground and keep away weeds and invasive plants, another (corn) to provide a tall stalk, and yet another (beans again) climbs the stalk.  In this way all have just what they need to flourish because they grow in proper relationship with one another.

There is also a practical side to any healthy spirituality.  The Wisdom literature of the Old Testament (Psalms, Proverbs, Job, Ecclesiastes), for instance, has a goal of showing that life is good—that is, practical—for people who follow the way of the Lord.  Any religious practice that is not a good way for God’s creatures to live simply does not make sense.

For this reason alone the arrival of the Lord God in the birth of Jesus requires some extra scrutiny.  How are we to interpret the defenselessness of Jesus as a proper way to make the Creator of the universe manifest among us?  How can we interpret the majesty and power of God when we what we see is a mewling infant, born in a barn, to poor and not very powerful parents?  If this is how God chooses to come among us, we absolutely must ask: Why?


I suppose I have already shared some thoughts on this—that God signals us through the birth and life of Jesus that God is with us, cares passionately about us, and continues to be at work in, through and around us.  But there are two more reasons that I really need to lift up.  Both are essential for humanity, but the second is especially important when we think of what redemption means for the planet today.

The first is that the salvation God brings through Jesus requires a partnership of God and creature.  God has the desire and power to bring salvation to the created order, but though humans may discover that they desire salvation, they lack the power.  Sin is real and we are stymied when we try on our own to fix ourselves, or our world.  It really does take a power greater than ourselves if salvation is to become real, and it is only by the power of God that our best efforts become effective for good.

Yet, God wishes this salvation to emerge into our creaturely reality—not just in some heavenly bliss after death.  If real existence is to become a celebration of God’s salvation, it requires the creatures to live it out.  And on earth, humans are the most powerful of all creatures. Jesus was born as the perfect communion between God and creature, so that God could join with the creaturely realm—including humanity, to bring real salvation to the cosmos. 

In Jesus, God’s power joins with perfect human obedience to bring salvation.  Christ demonstrated who God is to his followers and demonstrated what living a life of trust in God looks like for human beings.  Jesus also demonstrated the power of God in the world, teaching with authority, healing the sick, casting out demons and lifting up the outcast and the downtrodden.  These same actions demonstrated what Jesus was teaching: that repentance—intentional change on the part of humans—is necessary if God’s project of redeeming the earth is to continue.  Quickly enough, Jesus’ call for change brought upon him the wrath of the powerful.  It was for this reason that he was put to death.

The wrath of the powerful brings me to the second reason why it was so important for the majesty and power of God to appear in a defenseless human child.  The arrival of the Christ in such humble circumstances defines the Kingdom of God that is continually breaking-in on the world. 

Just because the ancient language of “Kings” and “Kingdom of God” is used, we should not miss how Jesus demonstrated that kingdom.  In the Kingdom of God, the King does not identify himself with the powerful and the mighty, but with the poor, the outcast and the defenseless. 

·      According to Bible scholars, at the time of Jesus’ birth shepherds were considered such renegades that their testimony was often not allowed in court.  Yet the shepherds were the ones given the honor at Jesus’ birth of being the ones to receive the angels, and then to be the first to proclaim the good news. 

·      The magi from the East were not even a part of the Chosen People, yet they were the ones who were so open to the new thing God would do that they saw the signs in the stars as a sign from God.  They were the ones we still remember because they demonstrated such faith that they embarked on what some believe was a two-year journey to find this newborn king.

·      Throughout Jesus’ ministry people were confused, and often put off, by the fact that he did not raise armies, did not force his control on the political or religious leaders of the day.  Instead he healed the sick, especially those whose sickness had caused them to become outcasts; brought repentance to sinners, whose sin had cut them off from God and God’s people; and stood as a stark contrast to all powers that exalted the powerful at the expense of the poor and the weak.

The arrival of the power of God in Jesus represents a move away from domination and control as a way of salvation, and moves toward communion between God and creatures as God’s way.  It must have been a shock when Jesus, a poor carpenter from Galilee, began his ministry, saying:

“The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!”
                                                                                                            Mark 1:15

The questions for followers of Christ must therefore be framed something like this:
  1. Do we acknowledge God’s grace in our own lives, accepting that we do not have the power or the wisdom to bring about our own saving transformation?

  2. Accepting our need for God, and God’s offer of salvation through a relationship with God, do we then accept God’s way and purpose as our way and purpose?

  3. Since Jesus demonstrated God’s way as being not through human ways of power and prestige, but through intentional relationships between God and God’s beloved creation, and through identification with the poor and the downtrodden…

    How shall we live out the in-breaking of God’s Kingdom into the world right now?  How shall we live in a ways that lift up the poor, the disempowered and the outcast?  How can we live in ways that that do not further the empowerment of a few and the disempowerment of so many others?  How can we live in ways that allow all creation and all generations to have the best chance to thrive, rather than focusing only on what we want, or what is convenient for this generation?

Each generation needs to live out the answers to these questions in ways that fit them; life is about change and so we must constantly adapt to that change.  However, whatever form we live out the in-breaking of God’s Kingdom on earth (that is, this thing-that-is-always-new) it must always be lived out in word and in deed as a participation in God’s movement.  It is from God, not ourselves, that the creativity and the power for real change comes.  It is from God that our best efforts are empowered, and become effective for good.

--------------------------------------------------------
For me and my wife, the permaculture movement has provided some excellent guidance for living out the in-breaking of the Kingdom of God at this moment in history.  Permaculture
·         seeks a way of life that builds human cooperatives and other collaborative human relationships that are not based on exploitation or hierarchical empowerment;

·         seeks a way of living with the earth that Christians may recognize—a way of life where humans live-out the Genesis 2 commandment to live in relationship with the land, getting their food from it and caring for it;

·         seeks a way of life where human societies are based on cooperative relationships, and human life and society know themselves to exist in relationship with all creatures on God’s beloved planet, beginning with the people and the land in their immediate vicinity.


Manger Throne:--a Christmas Song
What kind of King would leave His throne
In Heaven to make this earth His home?
While men seek fame and great renown
In loneliness our King comes down

Jesus, Jesus, precious One
How we thank You that You've come
Jesus, Jesus, precious One
A manger throne for God’s own Son

You left the sound of angels' praise
To come for men with unkind ways
And by this Baby's helplessness
The power of nations is laid to rest

What kind of King would come so small
From glory to a humble stall?
That dirty manger is my heart, too
I'll make it a royal throne for You

My heart is a throne
My heart is a throne for God's own Son

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Where the Christ is Found

 
“In him we live and move and have our being.”  (Acts 2:18)

I once had a poster that shared a piece of wisdom that in necessary for a healthy spiritual life.  The poster depicted a kindly face on a poster with this statement at the bottom:

I have two pieces of good news:
There is a Savior,
And it is not you!

I have always appreciated this piece of wisdom.  Although God gives meaningful purpose to our lives, we do need to remember that we can only do our part, and that we should not entertain the notion that we need to be in control of how things turn out.  It is a trap to begin believing that we should be in control of things that are beyond our control.

This is something Cindee and I are trying to live out at our home and in our lives.  Like all human beings, we need to live better on the planet than we have if we are to be a part of the healing of our damaged planet.  We are trying to grow or collect more of our own food, to live in a more environmentally friendly house, to be part of building local networks, and to do other things that enhance healthy, sustainable interdependent relationships between people and other creatures. 

But the truth is, we are limited in our understanding and in our personal power.  We are limited in our understanding of anything—even in understanding the complex natural environment on the property where we live.  We can do our best to help the land and life on the property to flourish, but we truly only know so much, and so our best efforts will inevitably miss the mark to some degree.

Similarly, we can, and do, work hard on land relationships and on community relationships.  But truly, we all know that we can’t control the weather, or invasive plant diseases, or other natural phenomena.  And the maintenance of friendships and human relationships is always complicated.  The point is, we can do our best with the understanding that we have, but it would be a mistake to think that we to think that we actually have control of very much.

You and I are not the Savior.  And this is good news, because it is only that knowledge that keeps us sane.  When we forget that fact (like when we start believing and acting as if we should be in control of things we cannot control) then we begin thinking and acting in ways that are good neither for ourselves nor for those around us.  In short, we try to be what we can not be, rather than what and who we truly are.

Yet, in God we discover that there is salvation, and that salvation appeared to us in Jesus.  Christmas is about a baby’s birth—the birth of Jesus, the Savior.  In that birth we receive some profoundly important information about God. 
·      We see that God is not distant, but chooses to be found with us and among us;

·      We see that God is not uncaring, or unmoved by our needs.  Rather, God is responsive to our true needs.  In Jesus we see that God joins in creation’s history and joins in our lives;

·      We see that God’s relational nature works through the whole created order, including everything from angels from heaven, to the creation in which we live (the Star in the East), to the political systems (prophesy fulfilled through a journey for a governmental census), to the people who witnessed it (shepherds, receiving and proclaiming the news).

So…as I think about where the Savior was found, I am left thinking about how well I incorporate this knowledge into my life, and I challenge you to do the same.  For my part, today I am thinking about questions like these (you can come up with your own):

·      How consistent am I in keeping track of what I do have control over, and what I do not? 

For me, my best grade card on this score comes from my emotions.  When I am living with an undercurrent of fear, or anger, or shame, then I am either being lazy about something I can do, or I am trying to get control of something beyond my grasp.

·      Knowing that God cares about my world and about me, how well am I keeping my eyes open to what God is doing in the world, or in my life?

Since God is at work to care for and redeem the whole created order, and wishes us to participate in God’s work, I need to pay attention to all that is happening around me.  Maybe a related question for me would be this:

Where can I recognize God’s presence, moment by moment, as my life continues to unfold?

·      AND…how consistent am I in going to God with my celebrations and my concerns? 

God wishes to be in relationship with me (and all of us).  Personally, I find that it is in living out this relationship (including prayer) that I am most successful in letting God be in control, and in participating whole-heartedly in what God is doing.