UMR Communications
 
SiteWeb

Home

Contact Us

UMR Staff

News Archive




About the Reporter

Comment Policy

About UMRC

Print Products

Advertising Info

Books and Journals

Amazon Store



Classifieds




The United Methodist Reporter is offering the latest headlines
in the RSS format.

RSS

Send This Page
To A Friend
 
 
 

  Commentary
COMMENTARY: Christian institutions offer a crucial witness

L. Gregory Jones and Benjamin McNutt, Feb 21, 2012


Benjamin McNutt
By L. Gregory Jones and Benjamin McNutt
Special Contributors

Too often we Christians tend to think of the church’s service efforts as outreach (emphasis on “out”)—the extra activities we do in addition to being regular, everyday Christians who worship the triune God in communities of discipleship. 

Thankfully the New Testament reminds us that the early church believed provision for the widow and the orphan, the sick and the poor, was not simply an extension of the church’s mission but at its core. 

Friends in the faith remind us as well. During a meeting in Cote d’Ivoire with his senior leadership team, United Methodist Bishop Benjamin Boni noted that the most important forms of evangelistic ministry in their country were schools and health clinics. 

Addressing the laity and clergy in the room, he said: “Almost all of us became Christians, were introduced to Jesus, through schools and clinics. That is why education and health are so central to our work. The needs for students to learn and people to get health care are very great—and they are an amazing way for people to discover Jesus.”

Visible witness

For Bishop Boni, these institutions, founded and sustained by Christians, were the visible signs of what it means to be a Christian community that worships a risen Lord. 

At their best Christian institutions address deep human need; organize people’s time, talent, effort and passion in sustainable ways toward a common end; and witness to what it means to be a human being made in the image of God. 

At earlier points in American history, Christians were at the forefront of movements to start new institutions—especially in education, health and nutrition. They were crucial to sustaining Christian congregations and providing visible Christian witness. 

But in recent years we not only have started fewer such institutions, older ones have drifted from their ecclesial roots and are increasingly secular. 

The situation is enough to make Christians wonder whether we still believe that institutions are crucial to introducing people to Jesus, sustaining congregations and addressing crucial human need.

Core of faith

We do if we’ve read John Calvin closely enough. The Pulitzer Prize winning novelist Marilynne Robinson helps us see why. She says, “[Calvin] writes very beautifully about the notion that any encounter with another human being is an encounter with an image of God. . . . 
‘What is God asking of me in my encounter with him or her?’ . . . He says that the beauty of the image should override everything and leave you with only the will to embrace that person and help them to the fullest extent of one’s means.” 

For Calvin, service is at the core of the Christian faith because every encounter with another human being is an encounter with someone beloved by God. Christian institutions create the conditions for this kind of human interaction, where Christ is at the center of our encounter with and service to the stranger. To give them up would be to give up what it means to be a Christian. 

Calvin’s greatest theological achievement was a two-part tome. Funny, isn’t it, that he titled it the Institutes of the Christian Religion?

The Rev. Jones is the former vice president and vice provost for global strategy and programs at Duke University and was dean of Duke Divinity School from 1997-2010. A senior strategist for Leadership Education at Duke Divinity and professor of theology, he is the author of numerous books, most recently Forgiving As We’ve Been Forgiven: Community Practices for Making Peace (with Celestin Musekura).

Mr. McNutt is the editor of Call & Response at faithandleadership.com., where this column first appeared.

Print
Email to a friend:   
Other articles in Commentary category:
AGING WELL: Tips for seniors on greeting young visitors in church  (Missy Buchanan, Jan 4, 2013)
COMMENTARY: Why it’s time for the UMC’s Era of Innovation.  (Rob Rynders, Jan 4, 2013)
WESLEYAN WISDOM: Aldersgate - a playbook for revitalizing the UMC  (Donald W. Haynes, Jan 4, 2013)
COMMENTARY: Congregations can help the troops coming home  (Larry Hollon, Jan 4, 2013)
REFLECTIONS: As we search for answers and a reason to hope  (Bishop Woodie W. White, Dec 28, 2012)

Archived articles:
Search archive
http://www.abingdonacademic.com/leadership


http://www.cokesbury.com/forms/DynamicContent.aspx?id=316&pageid=1270


http://beadisciple.org


http://www.umcom.org/site/c.mrLZJ9PFKmG/b.7841901/k.418E/Rethink_Church_Change_the_World.htm?utm_sou


http://www.southwesterncollege.org/ump/



Home UM News UMPortal Store
©2012 UMR Communications, Inc.