The 2025 session of the Susquehanna Conference met in Williamsport, PA on May 29-31, 2025, under the theme “Believe and see the glory of God!” rooted in John 1:1-45. This passage is not just about a miraculous resurrection that happened a long time ago. It is a call from the Spirit, for us today, to nurture the kind of faith that opens our spiritual vision so that we can see, claim, live, and share the glory of God in our everyday lives and ministries.
Bishop Héctor A. Burgos-Núñez
In this season, God is inviting us to BELIEVE and SEE. God wants to expand our spiritual vision so that we can see, experience, and share God’s glory in our communities. But let us be honest. Believing is not always easy. Trusting God is, many times, difficult. Martha and Mary, filled with grief, struggled to reconcile their sorrow with their faith. Their brother was dead, and Jesus had delayed his coming. Why did He wait? Why did He not prevent their suffering?
In our discipleship and ministries, we often face challenges (and have as of late, right?): declining attendance, disagreements, and divisions. Struggling communities. Socio- political chaos. Personal doubt and struggles. And, like Martha and Mary, we struggle and ask similar questions.
But through this story, Jesus is calling us to lean into our faith! Jesus is calling us beyond doubt, beyond despair, beyond defeat, into a deeper trust, where our believing unveils God’s glory in ways we could never predict. Ways that open our eyes to see that God is still moving, still working, still bringing life where there seems to be none.
In this season, God is calling us to step forward even when the path is uncertain. Martha believed in resurrection. Yet, she hesitated when Jesus asked for the stone to be rolled away. How often do we do the same? We claim belief in the unlimited power of God, but when action is needed from us, we falter. We hesitate.
The raising of Lazarus was not just an isolated event. It is also an invitation for us to trust, to believe, to put our faith into action! Jesus is asking us today, just as He asked, Martha, “Did I not tell you that if you believe, you will see the glory of God?”
We are standing before the tombs of our time! Tombs that threaten our communities, our ministries, and our witness to the world.
The tomb of decline, as many churches face shrinking resources and growing uncertainty.
The tomb of lingering disappointment and mistrust after years of disagreements and divisions.
The tomb of exhaustion, as many of our leaders wrestle with doubt, frustration, and burnout.
The tomb of isolation, as loneliness, division, addictions, and hopelessness grip many of our neighbors.
The tomb of injustice, as racism, exclusion, and inequity distort God’s vision for creation.
The tomb of oppression, as power is abused, and the rich are prioritized over the poor, the elderly, those with disabilities, people of color, and immigrants – just to name a few.
As we stand before these tombs, what are we going to do? Now more than ever, as followers of Jesus Christ, as servant leaders in Christ’s church, as United Methodists, our faith must move beyond passive belief. Beyond doctrinal assent. Beyond labels that seek to separate us. Beyond rituals and traditions and become a holy living action. An embodiment of the Risen Christ!
As we stand before these tombs, what will we do? We believe. We step forward. We trust that God’s unlimited power will move in our lives in our churches, and through our ministries, bringing new life through the healing, and liberating love of Jesus Christ!
In our churches and ministries, we must do the important, yet difficult work that leads to healing and reconciliation we must protect our unity amid our diversity. And I say, “protect our unity”, because we must understand that, contrary to what some believe, the unity of the Body of Christ it is not a human endeavor. As the Scriptures clarify in Ephesians 4, in Christ, GOD brought us together to fulfill God’s purposes.
The common denominator that brings us here and compels us to be together is our shared faith and love for Jesus Christ! Therefore, this season, God is inviting us to recalibrate our hearts again, to Christ, to recommit to one another as those called by God to journey together, to put aside everything that might be harmful, to forsake anything that may be distracting us, and to take the next faithful steps into God’s vision for our lives and ministries as United Methodists here in the Susquehanna Conference.
In our ministries, we must also stop mourning decline, as if it were inevitable or permanent, holding on to what is, and clinging to nostalgia, and instead, go about living the gospel and embodying God’s love with our neighbors in all places in ways that are meaningful to them, even if it is sometimes uncomfortable for us. We must innovate, experiment, and take risks for the sake of the gospel. We do not fear resource shortages, and instead trust in God’s sufficient provision. We do all this together, so that SO THAT we grow and form disciples of Jesus Christ, develop Christ-like servant leaders, journey in solidarity with the poor and the most vulnerable, and we seek health and wellbeing of all people and creation.
In our leadership, what are we going to do? We step forward in faith. Trusting the One who called us. We care for ourselves and one another, knowing that exhaustion is NOT failure, but a call for renewal. We build community. We embrace collaboration, knowing that the Holy Spirit moves in community, not in isolation, and that we are stronger TOGETHER. We hold each other accountable in love and with grace. We preach the gospel with conviction, boldly proclaiming that through the Holy Spirit, God’s power, in Jesus Christ, still moves stones bringing hope and new life.
In our communities, what will we do? We embody Christ’s love and hope. We refuse to accept brokenness, division, and loneliness as inevitable. We preach God’s grace in Jesus and invite people to embrace God’s boundless love through active discipleship. We build bridges. We reconcile relationships. We offer a place to belong. We reject systems that oppress, lifting the poor, defending the marginalized, and advocating for justice. We speak God’s truth to power, refusing to let the idols of this era distort Christ’s call to love all people without distinctions or favoritism.
In the world, what will we do? We are BOLD in faith! Racism, white supremacy, and Christian nationalism are NOT of God. So, we dismantle them with truth and love. Abusive leadership, greed and exploitation contradict the Gospel. So, we lead with compassion and justice, prioritizing the vulnerable above the powerful, just like Jesus did.
And in every act of love, service, and prophetic witness: we proclaim the resurrection, not as a distant hope, but as a present reality, that, thanks to Jesus Christ, is available today to all who call on the name of the Lord, alleluia!
Resurrection, new life, is possible. Not in our strengths, but, yes, in the power of the Risen Christ. In our lives, in our servant leadership, in our congregations, and, in our communities. So, let us open our eyes and see the glory of God! Resurrection is happening. Resurrection is OURS, by the power of the Holy Spirit, through Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior. Resurrection is OURS. Let’s believe it, let’s claim it, let’s live it, AND most importantly, let’s share it freely with as many people as possible.
God did not leave Lazarus in the tomb and God will NOT leave us in the tombs of our times! But faith requires deep trust and obedience. It requires action. It requires rolling away the stones even BEFORE we see the miracles!
United Methodists of the Susquehanna Conference, let’s seek the kind of faith that manifests God’s power that transforms lives and communities. That brings new life through the boundless love of Jesus Christ! Let’s roll away the tombstones. Let’s shed grave clothes. Let’s believe and see what God can do!