The Pastor's Blog
Welcome to The Pastor's Blog! We will present Rev. Ferguson's month messages on this page as they appear in The Meadowlark. All visitors are able to read his messages. Registered users may log in and respond or comment on the entries. Click the "Reply" link at the end of each entry to respond or comment on that entry. We suggest that your "Preview" your posting prior to submitting.
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Archive for March 2010
Dear Members and Friends,
Recently, my wife and I have had the opportunity to see performances of two operas, two very different operas. One we saw at the Met, the other was broadcast on PBS’s series, “Great Performances.” The former was Verdi’s “Attila” about the conquest of the Roman Empire in its death throes by Attila the Hun. The latter was “The Tales of Hoffmann “(Les Contes d'Hoffmann) by Jacques Offenbach. My purpose in mentioning them is not to give you a detailed review of the performances; however, I do want to mention the contrasting styles of the productions for a moment. “Attila’ was staged in a very uninvolving way; the performers barely related to each other as they appeared and sang. They rarely interacted with each other except from a distance and though I realize this is a style of production favored by some, I personally don’t care for it. It left the audience as uninvolved as were the characters on stage. On the other hand, “The Tales of Hoffmann” was opera as it should be (at least as I like it). The characters’ interactions and the intensity of their relationships were powerful and it seemed to drive the performers’ singing.
All of this is simply to illustrate the difference between acting separately and with only tenuous connections compared to acting in concert and with unity of vision and purpose. The Church at its best is like the latter. We are not simply a collection of people with loosely defined goals and values acting separately toward some unspecified future. We are the Body of Christ, a unified community of believers whose goal is making disciples and transforming the world. We may have our own ideas about how things should be done in the Church and by whom, but for the good of the body and the Kingdom of God, we must be willing to accept that sometimes things aren’t going to be the way we’d like them to be. In addition, that has to be okay with us. There may be hymns you don’t like on a given Sunday, but perhaps they speak to someone else. As the body of Christ, we should give thanks that they have meaning for someone else. A decision of the Administrative Council may be one with which we don’t agree but our theology of the Church is that the collective discernment of the council usually has a better chance of being what God wants for the Church than the wisdom or desires of any one individual.> More...

