What does it mean to have the presence of the Karen people among us?
Sometimes I sit back at the sound
booth of my congregation just in awe of this amazing congregation. The older English members in their 80’s are
watching the speaker intently but not understanding a word that is spoken. After the service everyone is smiling
thinking of what a great service they just experienced. How could this be?
I grew up
in this congregation as did my father and grandfather. This is where I was planted so this is where
I was to bloom I believe. But our small
country church always seemed to be feeder congregation for other larger
congregations. It seemed we were always the
beggar congregation just hoping someone would might come and walk with us. We always prayed and hoped but even my 8 year
old son proclaimed at one point “the only new people who come to our church are
the ones we pay to come” referring to a pastor who was hired who brought his
family. How desperately I wrestled with
my pillow praying somehow testimony of this church could bear fruit and a
community of faith could bloom and prosper once more at Habecker
Mennonite.
A burst of hope did bloom at our church. When our children were in high school a
coffeehouse was started. Some community
young people came and even joined our morning service. I was excited that younger and older could
mix together in a service and enjoy each other.
The congregation was quick to incorporate contemporary songs and include
the gifts of these new arrivals in our congregation. Many young people were assisted in their
interest in extended mission trips. The
entire leadership was put in the hands of our young people as we sought to make
our church their church. We believed
this movement was the work of God as we sought to overcome the generational and
theological differences between us. We
believed it was happening. We loved our
young people intensely. They could do no
wrong.
But a wedge
came as out of blue within our body.
Differences were described between us.
Sin was identified within our extended body. Overt displays of passion in worship were
identified as marks of spiritual maturity which some did not demonstrate. So it was recommended by leadership that our
congregation divide.
We who were left were mortified. As a jilted lover who gave all they had and
had it all torn away we were left with no energy at all. We tried hard to smile but we were weeping
inside. Even though I could not say it
I just wished the bishop would close our doors.
This was 8 to 6 years ago.
It is now
5 years ago our Pastor came saying “There’s a lot of love here”. One recommendation she offered was that we
sponsor an immigrant refugee family. So
we did. This family invited other
families who did not have sponsors.
Amazingly they seemed to enjoy coming to church. Can you imagine the heartthrob of an 85 year
old woman who walked around the church for years praying for children….to see
children in the church? The energy
returned to our service. Our hope was
born from these people. To have love
reciprocated toward us is not something we expected. Can you imagine how it feels to have people
35 years younger from church come out to visit you? We feel like we are living the
resurrection.
I
also feel like we are living the New Testament. We had an empty banquet table which needed
to be filled. We believed everyone was
busy and had no interest in the banquet we served …..But the refugees came. Every Sunday we drive to town I feel like we
our filling our banquet table bidding them to come. Our theology gets really simple when the
heart of care is food on the table and a roof over one’s head. It is no chore to sit with people in the
medical clinic when we feel that what we are doing is “as unto Jesus”. We joke we go to church to get our job list
for the week. Everyone in the church has
something to do whether it is tutoring for school, shopping for Wic groceries,
being taxi, assisting with green cards, or managing the congregational garden. When one is part of the body every gift is
important. I like to say our spiritual
giant in the congregation is one who never sings a song or says a word in
church, but he’s always there and everyone knows he loves them and feel respect
from him.
I like to
think of our church as a Home of Refuge.
Certainly this fits for our refugee population. But as the church is a covenant body of
Christ when the Church divides everyone is a refugee. The church is just like a family. Only when Mom and Dad love each other do the
children feel safe. When our people
first arrive many times they have these big eyes and you know they are really
anxious even fearful. As they come to
church it is so fulfilling to see those eyes relax and they feel safe. I want everyone to feel safe when they come
church.
I wish I could say we are a people
without sin. We wrestle with sin
probably almost as much as Jesus did. We
probably are as sinful as the people Jesus invited to be his disciples. But love does cover a multitude of sins. Jesus sat with sinners, ate with sinners, lived
and died for sinners because he loved them.
Certainly this is what he calls us to do too.
I always dreamed of a congregation that
could demonstrate that God has broken down all walls that would divide
people. Differences between rich and
poor, generations, education, national identity and culture normally divide
people. In the kingdom of God
those walls are all broken down. Even
the older people who listen intently to a sermon not understanding a word, makes
me believe God is reversing the tower
of Babel of the Old
Testament and we are experiencing Pentecost.
They sense the Spirit.
But it was
not for us alone that God dropped these “strangers and aliens” among us at Habecker Mennonite Church. I believe from the bottom of my heart that
God worked this work of Grace and Mercy among us not for those present in our
assembly but those not present. For
truly this experience is a demonstration that God is no respecter of persons.
It is Jesus who is our shepherd and we together are the sheep. The love Jesus recognizes is the love we show
toward each other. Our most passionate
worship is our care for each other and not the song we sing. We give our strongest sermons when we listen. It is the prayer of the broken and contrite
and not the demanding which God hears. The
most significant mission we have is sitting beside us and not the trip afar. Our strength comes from our church wide and global
connections and not from our independence.
Our authenticity is rooted in the messiness of who we are willing to sit
with and not our purity. The truth, that
God is and that God is love, which God understands to be true is not what I
believe or teach but what I enable the one beside me to believe. The faith baton most easily passed from one
generation to another is the faith visible when all generations are
present. The older demonstrate faith,
grace and mercy to the younger and younger give strength and hope to the
older. Sometimes what we reject is
closest to the heart of God and who we walk away from are the people we need
the most. The greatest sign and wonder
of all is that what was given up as dead is alive because someone had the faith
to believe.
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