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  News
‘Great Event’ challenges black churches

Larry R. Hygh Jr., Sep 30, 2008


UMNS PHOTOS BY LARRY HYGH JR.

Bishop Jonathan D. Keaton leads a plenary session during the Sept. 11-13 gathering in Dallas.
By Larry R. Hygh Jr.
United Methodist News Service

DALLAS—As African-American congregations in the United Methodist Church face the future, do they look like the face in the mirror or does the mirror show something else? 

The Rev. Zan Holmes posed that question as he challenged 560 black Methodists during a Sept. 11-13 church growth and revitalization event. 

“It’s important for us to find our own voice, our own God-given purpose,” Dr. Holmes told participants at the Great Event, a program of the United Methodist initiative called Strengthening the Black Church for the 21st Century. 

Created by the church’s 1996 General Conference and operated under its General Board of Discipleship, the initiative assists United Methodist congregations that are predominantly black to be more effective in mission and ministry. It focuses on spiritual vitality and growth by linking effective congregations with partner congregations searching for new ideas and revitalization. There are 2,400 African-American United Methodist congregations in the United States. 

“The essence of leadership is that you have to have a vision,” said Michigan Area Bishop Jonathan D. Keaton, chairperson of Strengthening the Black Church. “We don’t need any more money; we need more visionary leadership.” 

Dr. Holmes, who is pastor emeritus of St. Luke “Community” United Methodist Church in Dallas, said churches can be strengthened if members begin using the biblical model found in Acts 1 and 2, where many voices speak the same language to talk about what God has done. “The Pentecostal power did not come until they faced the Pentecostal task,” he said, noting that God united unique people that day for a God-given purpose. “They had come to the end of their own strength.” 

Using the mirror analogy, Dr. Holmes said “we come to our churches to get fixed up to resemble who Christians ought to be.” 

Dr. Holmes’ challenge and the event’s theme of “God Delivers Us Through Hope, Healing, and Wholeness” was evident in remarks made by the Rev. Joseph Daniels, pastor of Emory United Methodist Church, Washington D.C. 

“God needs prophets with a powerful proclamation, not an empty pontification,” said Dr. Daniels, declaring that self-centeredness must give way to self-sacrifice. “Proclamation needs to be transformational. We need to preach the Gospel not as a popularity contest.” 

Dr. Daniels’ church is one of the program’s 20 mentor congregations, which range in size from 150 to 9,000 members and hold training sessions in their areas of ministry expertise. During the Great Event, 14 of the initiative’s congregational resource center teams mentored 95 partner church teams. 

“Each of the congregation resource centers has various gifts they can share with conference churches,” said Cheryl Stevenson, national coordinator for the initiative. “Through training, I hope partner churches receive hope, inspiration, encouragement and determination to go forward with the vision the Lord has given the church.” 

Churches qualify to be partner congregations if they demonstrate a willingness to change and be open and are eager to devote time and resources to making the training process a success. “God has equipped each church with the resources to do ministry,” Ms. Stevenson said. 

During the Great Event, participants contributed more than $7,300 for recovery and relief efforts in Haiti, which has been hit by four catastrophic storms in less than a month. 

The United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) is assisting in relief efforts in Haiti. United Methodists can help in the rebuilding by mailing checks to UMCOR, PO Box 9068, New York, NY 10087, and writing “UMCOR Advance 418325, Haiti Emergency” on the memo line. Online gifts can be made at www.givetomission.org.

Dr. Hygh, director of communications for the California-Pacific Conference, is chairperson of the communications committee for Strengthening the Black Church for the 21st Century. 

For more UMNS stories, visit http://umns.umc.org.

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Other articles by Larry R. Hygh Jr.:
Cal-Pac staff loses home in wildfire (Sep 11, 2009)
Border experience: Bishops visit bi-national gathering at fence (Jan 5, 2009)
Retired pastor finds life in midst of fire tragedy (Nov 29, 2007)
Church housing effort brings new hope to South L.A. neighborhood (May 13, 2005)
United Methodists visit Israel with interfaith group (Apr 29, 2005)

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