Showing posts with label AC2021. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AC2021. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Congratulations to our 2021 Class of Elders!

Left to right: Bishop Sandra Steiner Ball, Rev. Daniel Wilt, Rev. Jason Schwartzman, Rev. David Layser, Rev. Kristopher Sledge, and Bishop Cynthia Moore-Koikoi.

You can view the Ordination Service at
www.youtube.com/watch?v=tyG1NXxrB-I

Daniel L. Wilt was born in Altoona, PA, attending Altoona High School, University of Valley Forge and Wesley Theological Seminary. He was recommended for ministry by Second Avenue UMC, Altoona. He currently serves as pastor at St Paul’s UMC in Lewisburg in the Lewisburg District. His favorite scripture is John 15:15. “My faith begins and ends in relationship; rituals, traditions, songs, services, buildings, and all that are insignificant if I don’t remember the relationship.” 

Jason M. Schwartzman was born in New York, New York; attending St Raymond High School (Bronx NY), Caldwell College, and United Theological Seminary. Jason is married to Michelle and father to Dante and Jahnavi. He was recommended for ministry by Aldersgate UMC in York. He currently serves as pastor at Grace UMC, Lemoyne in the Harrisburg District. His favorite scripture is John 10:10. “This verse is an inspiration and a challenge to each of us to embrace the full spectrum of human experience.”

David N. Layser was born in Harrisburg, PA., attending Hershey High School, Messiah College and Asbury Theological Seminary. David is married to Emily and father to Julia, Edison, Gideon, and Joel. He was recommended for ministry by Fishburn UMC in Hershey. He currently is pastor of Trinity UMC, Danville in the Lewisburg District. His favorite scripture is John 15:5 “It reminds me that the calling of discipleship and ministry—with all its adventures, demands, and challenges—is most basically an invitation to abide in an ever-deepening relationship with Jesus, from which the good fruit of the Kingdom naturally grows. When I am really living like this (and there are many times I am not!), the pressure is off, life is abundant, and ministry is good.” 

Kristopher R. Sledge was born in Lewisburg, PA, attending Selinsgrove High School, Messiah University and Wesley Theological Seminary. Kris is married to Hannah and father to Lydia. He was recommended for ministry by Christ Community Church in Selinsgrove. He currently serves as pastor at The Journey in the Harrisburg District. His favorite scripture is from Romans 8:31. “In the midst of one of the darkest experiences in my life, Romans 8:31 gave me the deep assurance that even in the midst of trauma, God was present, caring, and indeed for me!”


Called to Love All God’s People


By Bishop Jane Allen Middleton (retired)

2021 Susquehanna Annual Conference, June 19, 2021. Juneteenth.

tinyurl.com/y2havbdm (12:47-35:44)

Scriptures: 1 John 4:11-16, 19-21 and Luke 10:25-37

Love God with all your heart and mind and soul and love your neighbor as yourself. That is the commandment which Jesus gives us. He calls this the most important of all commandments. It sounds so simple but it isn’t because we humans, even we who are good church people, are very complex. 

The neighbors Jesus tells us to love refers to all people. So this commandment sounds quite simple, but [in addition to us being] really complex, this word neighbor is all-inclusive—everybody! Neighbors really does means all, and some of the neighbors we are called to love are not the ones we want to love at all.

Underlying all of scripture is the fundamental truth of the power of God’s love. God out of His infinite love created the world and all that is in it and called it good. Underlying all of theology is God’s unconditional love of all people. All means all people.

Who are these people? That troublesome neighbor? Yes. That difficult father-in-law, parent, child? Yes. The ‘never Trumper’ that drives you nuts or the ‘Trumper’ that drives you nuts? Yes. The homeless, unkempt one with the sign “Will work for food”? The arrogant millionaire? The person who is constantly rude, even cruel to you? Yes, yes, yes! All are God’s beloved.

Love is so very basic. Love that a child learns in the crib in a wondrous cycle of love. The mother gazes at her child and smiles. The baby smiles in return awakening profound love in the mother. She reaches for her precious child and the child giggles, the sound brings joy to the mother who in turn embraces the child in a warm embrace. It’s a cycle; love is given, love is received, love is returned.

This is the loving gaze that God gives to every human being. We can love because God first loved us. This is our source, and when we can reach into our hearts for that source our capacity to love grows and grows. That same love relationship happens between people, or it can. 

Mary Janecek was my classmate in third through sixth grades. Her family immigrated from Czechoslovakia when she was eight because of World War II. She really bugged me. The truth is, I was very jealous of her and I tried to make her life miserable, and it may be that she made mine miserable as well. Everything changed in the sixth grade. I don’t remember the details, but I do remember as if it were yesterday, that one day she invited me to her house after school. It was a beautiful spring day. We wandered in the woods near her house, picking beautiful wildflowers and rejoicing in the warmth and loveliness of the day, which was made more beautiful because we were enjoying friendship. Those years of hostility were obliterated by the glory of mutual friendship and yes, love. At the end of the school year my family moved away and I never saw her again, but I’ve never forgotten the wonder of that reconciliation and how it was so much more fun than being enemies.

How do we do this? What is expected of us? How do we love everyone?

When Jesus was asked who is my neighbor, who is the one I should love? He answered with a story. You probably know this story by heart. Perhaps not like the way I’m going to tell it, but this may be how Jesus would tell the story today...

A man was walking from Jerusalem to Jericho when suddenly a band of robbers attacked him and stole everything he had and left him half dead by the side of the road. 

The first to come by was a pastor. He may have been a United Methodist. He saw this poor man but the man looked almost dead, beyond help and he walked on by. The second to come along may have also been a pastor, maybe an evangelical or Roman Catholic who also saw the terrible state he was in and kept walking. 

And then a third came down the road. Who was he? We’re told he was a Samaritan. Today, perhaps a Hindu from India. Or Black. Or even an apparent recovering drug addict. Maybe he was Jewish, from Brooklyn. He was the ‘other’. And he immediately gave this wounded, suffering stranger his own garment, bound his wounds as best he could. And took him to a hospital telling them he would pay for everything and would check on him when he returned from his trip. 

Well, that’s not exactly what the bible says but you get the picture.

Over and over the stories Jesus tells reach across societal and prejudicial boundaries and the mighty are struck low and the lowly are lifted up. The heroes of his stories are the tax collector, the woman with an issue of blood, the poor widow, the leper, the Samaritan woman. He turns the values of the world upside down and challenges us to do so today. But it’s hard. We are so much a product of our prejudices and assumptions.

I’m reminded of a time when our grandson Anthony was about nine years old and we were spending the day in New York City. As we were walking down the street I saw a man I recognized. I said as we approached him, “I know that man.” It happened that the church which I pastored at the time had a ministry called Midnight Run. About once a month we would take a van into New York City, arriving about midnight, and we would spend the night distributing soup, beverages, bag lunches, clothing and blankets. This man was frequently one of the people we encountered. Truthfully, I was actually trying to impress my grandson, but as we walked by I said nothing and I assume he didn’t recognize me. Anthony said with a puzzled expression, “Why didn’t he say hello?” I felt a huge pang of guilt. Why didn’t I even say hello? He wasn’t my friend and [I’d treated him like] an object, as one-among-many receiving my benevolence at 62nd and Park. I didn’t love him.

The kind of love Jesus is calling for is a profound love in which the Christ in me sees the Christ in the other—every other.

The power of love Christ requires of us is its all-inclusiveness. The most impossible reality of that love is its all-inclusiveness. How can we love, knowing our own frailties? We cannot love in this radically inclusive way through our own power. Only by surrendering our will, our idiosyncracies, our dysfunction, and our prejudices to God can we even begin to love with radical inclusiveness. Perhaps—even most important—if we can accept with every part of our being that we ourselves are unconditionally loved by God, perhaps then we can truly love.

For those of us in the white majority, the commandment of Jesus to love becomes much more specific. And it is more of a challenge as we face the reality that this wondrous nation of many peoples is a nation of immigrants, except for native peoples and blacks who came as slaves, representing almost the entire human spectrum.

And we are called to love all, people of every race and creed. 

Love is a verb. It is a decision, a practice. Do it until you believe it. 

Jesus calls us to a better way, The way of truly seeing one another as sisters and brothers, the way of infinite love.

Jesus calls us to understand that when one suffers we all suffer. One hundred years ago, in Tulsa Oklahoma, racial hatred resulted in the deaths of some 300 people and the destruction of an entire community of people whose only crime was to be born black. Jack grew up in Tulsa and had never even heard of the Tulsa Race Massacre.

The horrendous acts of May 31 and June 1, 1921, not only destroyed a whole community but these acts destroyed the future for hundreds. This truth struck me profoundly because our parents come from there. When the massacre occurred, Jack’s father who was born in Tulsa was four. My father who was born in nearby Muskogee was seven. Our mothers were both three years old. None of them were children of college graduates, but in spite of poor beginnings they accomplished a lot in their lives. 

In contrast, many other three, four and seven year olds were also living in Tulsa at that same time. They were among approximately 13,000 people who lived in the Greenwood neighborhood of Tulsa. It was a thriving community with many college graduates, doctors, pastors, teachers, financiers, as well as many large and small business owners. Their children could look forward to a very bright future. This community had only one very huge problem. The citizens of this very successful, thriving part of Tulsa were black.

The whole area of Greenwood was burned [by white rioters] overnight leaving some 10,000 people homeless. Details are still unknown but it is estimated that from 300 to 3000 were killed, wounded, or missing. Most of the area was destroyed by fire including over 600 businesses.

All of this was stolen by hatred. But more than that, those three, four, and seven-year-olds, along with hundreds of other surviving children, lost their future.

In her book Caste, Isabel Wilkerson compares the 400 years of blacks in the United States to the caste systems in India and Nazi Germany. She writes that the creation of a caste system happens when one group stigmatizes another and dehumanizes them in order to justify a system of perpetual domination. A caste system, according to Wilkerson sets the presumed supremacy of one group against the presumed inferiority of other groups on the basis of ancestry and often immutable traits. 

Jesus invites us to live into a beloved community which destroys these systems and replaces them with justice and love.

Howard Thurman, the great African American scholar and pastor of Boston School of Theology, said, “When I have lost harmony with another, my whole life is thrown out of tune. God tends to be remote and far away when a desert and sea appear between me and another. I draw close to God as I draw close to my fellow people. The great incentive remains ever alert; I cannot be at peace without God, and I cannot be truly aware of God if I am not at peace with my fellow people.”

The words of first John remind us that the source of this love is God in Christ Jesus. We can’t do this by our own power but by God’s gift. It’s a wondrous circle of love. “If we love each other, God remains perfect in us.” (1 John 4:12) Only by God’s grace can we even hope to live a life of love. The proof of our capacity to love is in our relationships with the near one and the far one, with those closest to us as well as those who are unlike us, our opposites. “If anyone says I love God and hates their brother or sister he or she is a liar.” (1 John 4:20)We must love with every fiber of our being. We must love because God first loved us. How can we do this? By allowing the Christ in me, to recognize the Christ in you.

All things are possible through Jesus Christ who loves us. With this love in our hearts, anything is possible.

Can we be God’s beloved community? May it be so.

Thursday, September 9, 2021

AC2021: How About Love?


By Bishop Peggy Johnson, Eastern PA Conference

2021 Susquehanna Annual Conference, June 18, 2021

tinyurl.com/s2zfp484

Scripture: I Corinthians 13:4-7

Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way, it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices in the right. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.

Prayer: Your Word is a lamp to our feet and a light to our path. May you light a fire in our hearts this day that we will go from this place and do your Word in Spirit and truth. Now in spite of me or through me, speak your word to your people. Amen.

The Broadway Musical “Rent” officially closed production in 2008 making it one of the longest running musicals on Broadway. It included a show-stopper song that asks “Five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes. Five hundred twenty five thousand moments so dear. Five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes. How do you measure? Measure a year? In daylights, in sunsets, in midnights, in cups of coffee, in inches, in miles, in laughter, in strife. Five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes. How do you measure a year in the life?” 

Then the chorus resounds with: “How about love? How about love? How about love?” 

I would take some liberty with these lyrics and say, “Five hundred twenty five thousand sessions of conference. How do you measure your annual conference? In resolutions, in debate, in budgets, in nominations? How about love?

How about love? Your theme this year for annual conference is A Vision of the Beloved Community. It is all about love and the love we have for one another. It the most important measure of the success of an annual conference or a church or your very life. Without it, you are a clanging cymbal or a noisy gong.

How about love? In these most strife-filled times we are living, it still remains the more excellent way, the thing that never fails and is the very heart of God.

As you begin this session of annual conference: how about love? 

No better words can be found than I Corinthians 13. Too often read at weddings and little else, it has the practical kernels of love embedded in verses 4-7. May they be your guide for annual conference 2021.

Qualities of love 

So what are the qualities of love that we should measure?

Love is patient and kind

They say that a broke clock is right two times every day and that is a loving attitude. If you know someone who bothers you and works your last nerve? Think about the good things in them, even if it is only two things and get to know them.

There was a person in my life who I had experienced great conflict. Know anyone like that? I showed up at a peace walk last summer and there was this person: my star detractor. I stiffened up, hoping things could at least be civil, remembering the sting of the past. We ended up walking from the school parking lot to the church and really talked. I found out more about his life and background and slowly began to understand his perspectives and hurts. I was suddenly humbled to think all this time I had judged him wrongly. I had been impatient with this person but he was indeed a precious child of God.

Jesus saw the heart of people: The woman at the well, Nicodemus at night, Peter by the charcoal fire after the resurrection. He patiently listened, engaged and looked at them with the eyes of God’s love and kindness.

Sometimes we are so busy or so sure we know what a person is like ahead of time that we don’t really see them, hear their hearts and understand their backgrounds. Pope Francis recently wrote, “This haste, this everything-right-now, does not come from God. If we get worked up about the right-now, we forget what remains forever, and we follow the passing clouds and lose sight of the sky.” Love has patience and sees the sky.

I believe we would have less racial tension in this country if people would practice patience and kindness and really see each other as God sees them, learn their life’s story and take time to engage.

When I was in parish ministry there was a lady who lived in the house next door to the church who was always complaining. There were many concerns: the tree in the church yard, the trash cans, cars parked near the driveway, etc. She sent letters of complaint, and with each letter, we tried to fix things. But nothing made her happy. We even tried to shovel her sidewalk after a snowstorm. She shouted out the window “don’t touch my snow!”

At Christmas one year my assistant pastor Nancy said she would give homemade sugar cookies to all the neighbors and invite them to church on Christmas Eve. I warned her not to go to this house next door. “She will toss you and your cookies off the front porch,” I said. Nancy ignored my faithless counsel and marched right up the steps of the house next door. The door opened, Nancy went in. She stayed there a long time. We thought we would have to call the police and report a hostage incident. 

Finally, the front door opened and Nancy came back to church smiling. She explained that this elderly lady was lonely and not well and she was happy to have these cookies and the visit and that she would be at church on Christmas Eve. We never heard another complaint. Love is kind. I know you can’t win over everyone with a can of cookies, but you can try.

Where can we show patience and kindness? How about love?

Love does not insist on its own way. 

Who doesn’t want to win? Who doesn’t think they are right? Who isn’t tempted to quit when we don’t get our way? All of us! But love doesn’t think about winners and losers. Love is willing to find a win-win solution and even allow the other to win.

My grandfather loved poetry and he quoted many a vintage poem in my presence. One of his favorites was by a poet named Edwin Markham who describes this kind of love: “He drew a circle that shut me out! Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout. But love and I had the wit to win. We drew a circle that took him in.”

This means loving so much that you are willing to work with the very people that hurt you and exclude you. That is the kind of love that God has for God’s children, “while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.”

It’s not selling out your cause or giving in. It’s more like Martin Luther King’s Jr’s strategy of non-violent resistance that is motivated by love. It is about hanging in there to overcome evil with good. 

Bishop Michael Curry in his amazing book “Love is the Way: Holding on to Hope in Troubling Times” notes that there will always be difficulties with people, but it is all about rising higher than those bonds so that you have the vantage and strength to break them. It is about looking for dawn in the midnight hour and believing in the power of love.”

One of our retired women bishops shared with me about the power of persistent love in her life. She finished seminary and was newly ordained and all ready to serve a church, but the bishop refused to appoint her. “No one wants a woman,” he said. It is hard to believe and very sad. But, she kept working as a lay person in a local church doing exceptional ministry, getting the attention of a district superintendent, being her talented self. The following year there was a church that was going part time because they were likely going to close. The DS appointed her there. Within the year this church grew under her excellence and became a full time ministry! She did not insist on her own way, she won by the power of overcoming love. This still works today.

How can you win the day in an impossible impasse that you are facing? How about love? Finally….

Love rejoices in the right

The world is full of negativity and people talking against each other. Love looks at the bright side of things. Instead of talking death, love talks about life. Instead of giving up, love keeps going. Instead of being happy when someone gets what they deserve, love believes in restorative justice.

In the city of Philadelphia, 498 young black and brown men and women murdered in gun violence incidences in the year 2020. It is overwhelming and sad for so many families. It make you want to give up and stay away from Philadelphia. But love goes straight for the problems and makes a difference. 

There is a group known as “Every Murder is Real” in one of my churches and they have classes, therapy, and resources for families who have lost loved ones in gun violence. They are making things better for so many families. I was at one of their prayer meetings recently and they are full of positivity and praise and hope. They rejoice in every victory. Instead of wanting to give up I was drawn to the love in their hearts and am happy to join their efforts of waging peace.

Rejoicing in the right means taking notice of all the good even when things are looking bleak. Lifting up the positive where there is negative and doing what you can is love. Sometimes it causes snowball affect of goodness in this world.

A long time ago my husband and I served a student pastorate in Indiana and one of the little country churches was having a serious problem with the foundation. The church was sinking. It looked like they might have to close. If they state came in they would likely condemn the building. 

Then there was Mr. Watson. He went down in the basement and found one part of the building that was still worth saving. He started digging around and before you know it some other men got involved, and then some of neighbors and the cabinet company down the street and the next thing you know they had talked someone with a crane into lifting the church off of its foundation and put down some concrete and the church was saved. It just took one person to see the good in one remaining part of the foundation. The church was saved and I still get a Christmas card from one of the members to this day. 

Where can you rejoice in something good and not looking at the negative? It is all about where your focus. A loving heart is always rejoicing in the right. How about love?

May you have a blessed annual conference session Susquehanna! My sister conference. The United Methodist Church is a facing some incredible moments in the next few years. How will you move forward into these uncharted waters? How about love? “Faith, hope and love abide forever, but the greatest is love.” 

AC2021 COVID Memorial Service: Mending Nets

pixabay.com Franck Barske

By Rev. Barry Robison, Harrisburg District Superintendant

COVID Memorial Service
2021 Susquehanna Annual Conference, June 18, 2021

tinyurl.com/3mzch329

Well, where to start? I don’t know about my colleagues, but I always find it a challenge to know how to begin a message for a service of death and resurrection or a celebration of life observance. Often, I struggle with what the best way would be to acknowledge the loss and pain that death brought to family and friends, but also to proclaim the hope and healing that Christ’s resurrection brings. 

Perhaps I make it harder on myself than it needs to be because I’ve always made it a practice to craft the service, and especially the message, in as personal a way as possible. I believe it is important for family and friends to hear something personal in the liturgy as well as the message. There’s a healing aspect to knowing that your loved one was known, personally, by others and by God. There’s real comfort in being reminded that your loved one, and their life, mattered to others, and to God.

It’s also important to hear words acknowledging the reality of death, and more so to hear the hopeful words acknowledging the reality of victory over death. A significant aspect of hearing such words fairly soon after a death is that they help strengthen and prepare us for when death will intrude into our lives again down the road. These services and messages help us to move on and begin to put our lives back together again, sooner rather than later. But where to begin a message for a service intended to acknowledge all the losses and pain we have suffered due to COVID? I mean, persons have lost their lives and families and friends have lost loved ones to the pandemic, some as much as sixteen months ago. 

Churches, too, have suffered losses. Congregations have been impacted, not just by deaths of congregants caused by COVID, but also by suffering the loss of ministries, of financial security, of momentum, and the loss of the sense of family as people choose to go elsewhere or not return to in person worship. Our churches, too, need to hear words acknowledging the reality of these kinds of death in their fellowships, and even more so, perhaps, to hear the hopeful words acknowledging the reality of victory over death. 

It was the third Sunday of January this year when I tuned in to an on-line service from one of our churches. The scripture lesson was about Jesus calling Andrew and Peter, John and James. That Sunday was right after perhaps the largest spike in COVID cases since the pandemic began. Maybe that’s why I heard two verses of that very familiar passage of scripture as I never heard them before: “A little farther up the shore, Jesus saw two other brothers, James and John, sitting in a boat with their father Zebedee, mending their nets. And he called them to come, too. They immediately followed him, leaving the boat and their father behind.” 

What jumped out at me that day was the phrase, “mending their nets.” Immediately my mind was drawn to the image of mending nets as an apt description of the work and effort required of us to put our lives back together as individuals, as churches, as our nation, and even as the world, as we come out of a devastating pandemic. 

Interestingly, three months later I attended, in person, a worship service at the same church because I wanted to hear the guest speaker who was to preach. Lo and behold, I heard the same scripture from the same pulpit in person as I did virtually. That confirmed for me that “mending nets” was the way to start the message for this service acknowledging all of the losses and pain we have experienced because of the pandemic.

The nets of our lives, individually and congregationally, have been torn and the task of mending them is before us. COVID has torn the nets of our lives in different ways. It has affected the physical, mental and spiritual health of some people in ongoing ways. It has affected others through loss of income or employment. It has caused folks to feel isolated through the loss of relationships, both personally and congregationally. COVID has torn the nets of the ways we live life, at home, in public, and at church.

For those who fish with nets, it is inevitable that the nets will tear. One can’t escape the fact that using nets to fish causes the nets to become worn and/or broken. The more or the harder they are used, the quicker and more severe the tearing will be. That reality, though, shouldn’t discourage folks who fish from using nets. Those who use them simply need to understand and be prepared to make repairs frequently. Likewise, we shouldn’t shy away from living life and being the church simply because the nets of our lives and ministries will eventually get torn.

And so, part of a fisher’s work is spent fishing, and part spent mending. Repairing broken nets is tedious and often time-consuming work. I can’t imagine very many people look forward to or enjoy mending nets. Sometimes it may seem to those who fish that more time is spent mending than actually fishing. Whether true or not, mending nets is doing what needs to be done behind the scenes so the nets can be used again to catch fish. 

All of us, as we live our lives, encounter times when the nets of our lives have been torn or broken. Relationships have ended, jobs have been lost, illness or accident have altered what we might be able to do, or not be able to do, physically. Death is certainly one of those times when the nets of life get torn, perhaps in wider or bigger ways than any other. Yes, the pandemic has torn the nets of our lives in many ways, but especially torn the nets of our hearts through the deaths of our loved ones. 

For those of you who have lost loved ones over the course of this pandemic, you have been faced with the daunting task of trying to mend the nets of your life in ways that are not traditional. Services of Life and Resurrection, memorial services and funerals could not be held at all, much less in our accustomed ways. Family, friends and loved ones could not visit before death came, or gather afterwards for comfort, in the familiar ways that are so helpful. Mending the nets of our lives following a death has been difficult in these days because we have been denied the opportunity to hear words acknowledging the reality of death, and more so to hear the hopeful words acknowledging the reality of victory over death.

But the good news is that our hearts can be mended. God is in the mending business, you know. God can, will and does help us mend all the nets of life, but especially our hearts. May you hear in verses 14 and 15 of Psalm 90 the affect the mending work of God can have for you: “O Lord, satisfy us each morning with your unfailing love, so we may sing for joy to the end of our lives. Give us gladness in proportion to our former misery! Replace evil years with good.” Sounds like those words were written for today, doesn’t it?

One universal effect I’ve heard the pandemic has had on people, on pastors, and on parishioners alike is weariness and the sense of feeling burdened. Folks are just plain tired … tired of coping with and fighting over restrictions, tired of trying to hold life and ministry together now, while looking for creative ways to adapt ministries to a world that has changed, and tired of trying to mend the nets of our lives. 

As we’re finding out, it takes time and effort to mend. Usually, it is slow and meticulous work that requires patience and steadfastness. The same will be true of mending the tears and brokenness in our human families, especially since some our grief work has been delayed. And it will also be true for our church families. So may we hear anew and take hope from Jesus’ invitation as recorded in Matthew 11:28: “Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest.” 

Applying the image of mending nets to our churches would mean that much work needs to be done behind the scenes to care for what has become torn or broken in our churches by this pandemic, so that the church can be best able to cast nets again to bring people to Christ, and hopefully into the church, as well. Hear that again: much work needs to be done behind the scenes to care for what has become torn or broken in our churches by this pandemic, so that the church can be best able to cast nets again to bring people to Christ, and hopefully into the church, as well. 

Mending what is torn or broken is not glamorous work, whether on a lakeshore or in a zoom meeting room. It is not the work that usually gets recognized, acclaimed or even thanked. It can be hard and frustrating. But just as God is at work to mend the nets of our human hearts and lives, God will be present to help congregations mend the nets of their lives and ministries, no matter how great the tear or how big the holes. 

The word “mending” implies an intention to keep using. One doesn’t mend something unless one intends to keep and use the item, as opposed to throwing it away and getting something new or different. But hear this: The thing mended, fixed or repaired, might not be able to do everything it used to do or in the way it was used to do it. Nevertheless, it still might have value and could still be useful.

An example: I inherited an electric trimmer for shrubbery. That means I have to use an extension cord to operate the thing. To reach all of the bushes at one parsonage, I needed a hundred-foot extension cord. One time as I was trimming, I went to flip the cord over the top of bush while still operating the trimmer. The cord caught on the bush and I “trimmed” off the last 12-18 inches of the cord. Now, being cheap—I mean being frugal and a wise steward— instead of throwing 98-½ or 99 feet of extension cord away and buying a new one, I asked a friend to “mend” the extension cord by splicing the plug back on to the remaining cord. I could then use the perfectly good cord, just not being able to reach quite as far.

Our churches and church families will not be the same; ministries, events, worship services will be different in part because some members of the family have chosen not to be there. Ministries, events and worship services will be different because many have discovered, and are now using, new and different ways to conduct those ministries, and by them are reaching new and different people. Because churches and church families will not be and are not the same even now, we can choose to look at the situation entirely negatively and try to go back to the old ways, like the disciples later wanted to do, or we can look at it as something new with all the potential and possibilities of new things. 

Remember, God consistently proclaims throughout Scripture that God is a God of the new. It seems that we are poised today to experience Ezekiel’s vision of the Valley of Dry Bones. Already God has been at work through the people and pastors of our congregations to put nee flesh onto dry bones and to breathe new life into our churches and our ministries.

For instance, several of our churches opened their facilities to community children and their families as part of the Community Classroom Initiative. The goal of the Initiative is to provide a safe space where local elementary students could continue their on-line education when staying at home and/or going to school weren’t options. What a wonderful, new way for God’s people to connect with local people like never before. 

As great as that is on its own, in at least one case God did even more. A family with elementary aged children utilized a church’s Community Classroom. The parents later came to the pastor and asked to have their children, and themselves, baptized and to perform their marriage. Beyond merely the ministry of the congregation, a net was mended for that family personally. What’s more, that connection between a church and neighbors the congregation never knew before is an example of how we can fulfill our mission to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world even in a pandemic. As the pastor observed, “...sometimes it takes stressful and overwhelming circumstances to provide the catalyst to change in positive and uplifting ways.” Said another way, “Sometimes nets need to be torn so they can be mended in new and perhaps stronger ways.” 

But you know, there do come times when the nets can no longer be mended sufficiently to be useful or effective to catch fish. In those times, the wiser and better course is to discard those nets and replace them with something new, and perhaps something different. Andrew and Peter, John and James were called by Jesus while they were mending the nets, not after they were finished. We may feel like all we can or should do at this time is mend our nets by trying to put our lives back together the way they were. But God may very well be taking the opportunities created by the pandemic to call us from mending only to some other purpose. Remember, in Ecclesiastes 3 it says there is a time to tear and a time to sew, but also there is a time to keep and a time to throw away.

This passage from Matthew reveals to us that Christ may come along and call us away from what we are trying to mend, calling us to follow him in new directions and into new ways to fish or to live instead. Jesus did that here, at the beginning of his ministry, calling Andrew and Peter, John and James away from their fishing and their mending. 

Jesus also did it at the end of his earthly ministry. You may remember that after the crucifixion, the disciples wanted to go back to their old way of life. But Jesus came again and called them away from going back to what was, to moving ahead to what could be on the other side of the resurrection. The power of the resurrection made available through the coming of the Holy Spirit would make things possible that were impossible and inconceivable before the crucifixion tore apart the nets of their lives and their three-year ministry with Christ. I believe the same can and will be true for believers and congregations that look for and respond to Christ’s coming to them today as the church rises again post-pandemic.

Covid forced change on us. The pandemic forced our churches to consider all kinds of ways, most new and different, to “mend” the ways they did worship, Bible study and Sunday School. Churches had to figure out how they could mend the ways they offered food and clothing to the needy, care for and “visit” those confined to their homes or residential facilities, reach out to their neighbors and communities, and use the buildings which were suddenly vacant and underutilized. 

A couple of weeks ago my wife was looking through a file drawer and came across a bunch of folders. She put them aside for me to look through, to see if there were things that we still wanted or needed to keep. In one folder, I found a message I wrote in 1999 to a congregation I was leaving for a new appointment. I had forgotten all about it, but it seems in God’s timing that God brought those words back to my attention again that I might share some of those words with you in closing today.

I wrote: There [was] a commercial by the Hershey’s Corporation that [said]: “Change Is Bad.” (The commercial referred to changing formulas or recipes of food products.) Don’t you believe it. Maybe for Hershey’s and Classic Coke change is bad, but for everything else change is essential. A wiser person than an advertising executive observed that “Living things that do not change, die.”

Think about it. Snakes shed their skin; if they didn’t, they would remain forever small or strangle in their too tightly fitting skin. Hermit crabs leave one shell to find a bigger one; if they didn’t, the pressure of growing against their cramped quarters would eventually kill them. We enjoy beautiful butterflies because caterpillars changed. Gorgeous flowers blossom because seeds first died.

Change is good! Human beings change all the time. No mother can give birth without her body going through tremendous changes. Although there are some days when we may long to return to the simpler times of childhood, most of the time we adults are glad that we endured the growing pains of childhood and the upheavals of adolescence. Without those changes, we would remain children.

The whole point of this [reflection] is to say that change in the church is good, too. No church wants to be known as a dead church. (Refer to Revelation 3:1-6 for Jesus’ rather strongly negative opinion of dead churches.) But to remain alive, churches must change. In order to grow, churches must change.

Like the hermit crab, the church I served changed in the past by moving from a building too small to a larger one. How painful that must have been to those folks who were baptized, married and had family buried out of that first sanctuary. But the work of the church flourished with bigger space, and the congregation enjoyed the benefits of the change undertaken so many years ago.

Like mothers, the church I served had undergone tremendous changes to give birth to many new, different and exciting ministries. Sometimes, like caterpillars, ministries had to be suspended for a time only to emerge in wonderfully new ways. Sound like today, folks? Other times, long-forgotten seeds planted by church members finally grew and sprouted into effective ministries in God’s time. Most of us have no idea of the struggles involved, the tears shed, the agonies endured by those who have gone before us. What we do know, is that [the church] and its individual members are stronger disciples for Christ because those changes took place.

And so today, as important as mending nets can be, I encourage you to resist the temptation to think that all you can or should do at this time is mend your nets by trying to put your lives back together the way they were. God may be calling all of us away from those efforts to some other purpose. 

Friday, July 9, 2021

Day 2 Recap: 2021 Susquehanna Annual Conference


 Janelle Walker, Director of Communications

On June 19, 2021, the 2nd day of the 12th Session of the Susquehanna Annual Conference was called back to order by Bishop Jeremiah Park. (Plenary 3) The day began with a Juneteenth worship service. Rev. Kris Sledge started the service with a brief history of Juneteenth and the importance of the holiday. Rev. Sledge was followed by members of the connection singing “Oh Freedom”. The poem Juneteenth by Noah Griffin was then recited. Bishop Park then introduced Bishop Jane Middleton, formerly of the Susquehanna Conference. He noted her many accolades and great history of ministry. Bishop Middleton, then took time to offer her appreciation for the conference and the honor of speaking on this day. Rev. Mindi Gochnaur, then read 1 John 4:11-16, 19-21 and Luke 10:25-37. 

Bishop Middleton began her message with words of love for all, no matter your difference, no matter how hard it is. “The kind of love Jesus is calling for is a profound love in which the Christ in me sees the Christ in the other, every other. The power of love Christ requires of us is its all-inclusiveness. The most impossible reality of that love is its all-inclusiveness. How can we love knowing our own frailties? We cannot love in this radically inclusive way through our own power. Only by surrendering our will, our idiosyncrasies, our dysfunction, our prejudices to God can we even begin to love with radical inclusiveness. Perhaps even most important, if we can accept with every part of our being that we ourselves are unconditionally loved by God, perhaps then we can truly love,” she said.

Bishop Middleton, went on to talk about the Tulsa Oklahoma Massacre in 1921 and the effect it had on generations. She closed with thoughts on 1 John “The words of first John remind us that the source of this love is God in Christ Jesus. We can’t do this by our own power but by God’s gift. It’s a wondrous circle of love. ‘If we love each other, God remains perfect in us.’ Only by God’s grace can we even hope to live a life of love. The proof of our capacity to love is in our relationships with the near one and the far one, with those closest to us as well as those who are unlike us, our opposites. ‘If anyone says I love God and hates their brother or sister he or she is a liar.’ We must love with every fiber of our being. We must love because God first loved us. How can we do this? By allowing the Christ in me, to recognize the Christ in you,” Bishop Middleton said. 

Following Bishop Middleton’s message, Rev. Catherine Boileau, spoke about the Cup of Water Fund. Next came the song “We Shall Overcome”. Rev. Kris Sledge closed the service.

The Trustees report was the first business of the day. Rev. Mark Shover, President of the Board of Trustees presented the report. The Trustees motions and actions are as follows:

Convene corporate session. The motion was approved.

Approval of the minutes from the October 2020 meeting. The motion was approved.

The adoption of the reports of the Board of Trustees and the Property & Casualty Committee. Rev. Shover had 3 corrections to the Trustees’ report. Rev. Barry Robison, confirmed and affirmed those corrections. The motion was approved.

Disaffiliation of Bethel-Marysville church. Motion to call for the question was approved. The motion was approved.

Confirmation of the new trustees just elected in ecclesiastical session. The motion was approved.

Adoption of the full report of the trustees. The motion was approved.

A resolution to approve all acts of the board of trustees from October 3, 2020, to and including June 19, 2021. The motion was approved.

Adjourn corporate session. The motion was approved.

Motion that in ecclesiastical session, the conference approve the actions taken at the 2021 meeting. The motion was approved.

Next was Rev. John Overman, Chair of the Commission on Equitable Compensation, who delivered the Commission’s report. Motion to amend line 23: 2022 minimum salary increase from 2% to 3% was not approved. The report was approved.

Following that was the 2nd part of the Leadership Report. The ministries featured today exemplified the conference’s mission of growing transformational leaders, equipping vital congregations, and connecting with each other and the world. Rev. Kevin Witt and Kim Shockley, spoke about the Grow Curriculum. Then the conference got a look inside how one church used the curriculum and how impacted the congregation. The Camp and Retreat Ministry followed. They talked about coming back to camp after the pandemic and how it was made possible through donor support. Next, was some insight into Fresh Expressions through the experience of First UMC in Williamsport and Camp Hill UMC. Then the conference learned more about multi-site churches with Linglestown Life/ Rockville UMC and Spry/Pine Grove UMC. Following that, Disaster Response Coordinator, Doug Hoy. He talked about what Disaster Response does and how churches can get involved. Michelle Schwartzman, Volunteers in Missions Coordinator, then spoke about the different things that missions do and how it impacts people.

Next, there was a motion to return to Resolution #5 from day 1 of session. The motion was approved. The resolution was as follows: Unity in Mission: It calls for four actions. The first, asks the conference to resolve to desire to be an Annual Conference that lives out unity in diversity for the sake of our mission and as an answer to Jesus’ prayer that we may be one. The second, asks the conference to resolve to desire to stay in relationship with The United Methodist Church and in mission together. The third, asks the conference to resolve that, if the United Methodist General Conference amends The Book of Discipline, we aspire to become an Annual Conference that protects diversity of conviction and practice among our local churches and our clergy, including that we would hope to become an Annual Conference which permits, but does not require, performing of same-sex marriages. The fourth, requests that the leadership and local churches of the Susquehanna Annual Conference work towards practical frameworks for living together in connection as The United Methodist Church continues to discern its future path. The resolution was approved.

Next, the Young People’s Ministry Council presented their report. They talked about the program Lead Now, which is an internship program for senior high students that helps them develop their gifts and learn leadership skills that was piloted at Aldersgate UMC in Mechanicsburg. The students worked with Vacation Bible School, built websites, and video production for their churches. They are also mentored by church staff.

Bishop Park, then took time to recognize conference chancellor Ray Hamil, who will be retiring later this year. Bishop Park then recognized Bob Force who has been committed to the conference for 30 years in the finance ministry, he will be retiring this year but will still serve on the Seedling Financial Board. He then recognized Rev. Greg Myers, for his service on conference staff, cabinet, and Board of Ordained Ministry, he will be retiring this year. Bishop Park then recognized Christy Mackey, who served as the Executive Assistant to the Bishop for many years. Christy will be leaving in July.

After the lunch break, the conference heard from those who will be ordained as elders this year through Wesley’s historic questions. Those examined were Rev. David Layser, Rev. Jason Schwartzman, Rev. Kristopher Sledge, and Rev. Daniel Wilt.

Following that we took time to honor those who will be retiring this year, by members of Cabinet reading the names. Followed by honoring those who have passed away since the last Annual Conference, through members of Cabinet reading the names. Bishop Park then set the appointments for 2021.

Then came a time to honor Bishop Park, who will be retiring effective on August 31. Members of the Transition team Rev. Barry Robison and Lisa Bender spoke on the team’s behalf. They thanked Bishop Park for his ministry. As well as shared that many people have donated the Beloved Community Fun on his behalf raising thousands of dollars. Then a video was played of many across the conference connection thanking Bishop Park.

Bishop Park then went on to thank members of the staff, the cabinet, clergy, and laity who worked to plan this year’s conference session. He then made some important announcements: Conference session will come to order again on Oct. 5, 2021, for a special called session. The conference will be voting on the budget at that time. The next Annual Conference will take place in person on June 1-3, 2022, at the Hershey Lodge. We then entered a time of worship.

Closing worship was opened by Rev. Grey Myers. He thanked Bishop Park, talked about his ministry, and praised his steadfast service. Next was the song “How Great Thou Art”. Bishop Park delivered the message for this service. He began by recounting being assigned to the Susquehanna Conference. He went on to thank the conference, “Please accept my ‘Thank you! Thank you! And Thank you!’ from the bottom of my heart for your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now. God’s people of the Susquehanna Conference, clergy, and laity alike, your commitment to discipleship and stewardship, dedication to mission and outreach, and diligence in ministry and service are truly exemplary and exceptional; and you remain committed to all of these things even in the midst of an unprecedented season of multiple challenges. Your faithfulness is outstanding and exemplary. No wonder I was told that the Susquehanna Conference was number one among all annual conferences in the United States for 2019 [apportionments] collection. You honored the general church [apportionments] 100% even last year, the most financially challenging year! Mission Central, Seedling Ministry as a loan fund, and the Stewardship Foundation are all in a much stronger place, ready to serve more people and congregations! Thanks, and praises be to God! 

No matter what, our people are determined to continue to touch and serve and transform lives with the love of God in the name of Jesus Christ. In the midst of the unprecedented challenges all around us, we see our pastors and congregations continue to offer new and creative ministries as they expand their presence and connection with the people in the community and beyond with determination, courage, and grace for the sake of the good news of God. Indeed, our people remain steadfast and serve with their time, talents, and treasurers to represent the presence of healing and hope for such a time as this. Thanks be to God for you!” 

Bishop Park then went on to say goodbye, “So with confidence, I commit you to God and God’s grace for such a time as this. Indeed, the God who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the Day of Christ Jesus,” (Philippians 1:6) He continued to talk of his love for worship, “I have been most richly blessed to have traveled the hills and valleys, the farmland, and the rural areas, small towns, suburban, and the cities of the Susquehanna Conference to visit our churches and people. Lisa and I immensely enjoyed the times we had in worship and fellowship all over the place in our conference. Wherever I visited I shared with our people a message that we are a church alive in Christ together. We worship and serve the living God. As God’s people, there is no other way to be, but alive!” 

He then went on to take a moment of personal privilege, expressing his love for his wife, “Lisa, you’re the best dance partner I can ask for. I am privileged to have the best wife and you are the best mom for Cathy and Matthew, and their spouses George and Joyce, and you are the best grandma Gemma, Penelope, Eugenie, and Eli can have, you are a blessing to all of us beyond description. Lisa, how can I thank my God enough for the joy I have because of you? With you, I know that the best days of our lives are yet to come and am looking forward to our common journey ahead in joy and peace with gratitude.” He closed his message by singing the song “For I Have Touched the Hem of His Garment”. 

Bishop Park then spoke about the Mongolian Mission fund and some of the history of the mission. Next came the song “Great is Thy Faithfulness”. Rev. Matthew Lake then offered a prayer for our Bishops during the transition. The Chi Rho singers then led a time of worship. Rev. Mindi Gochnaur, offer the benediction to close the service.

Closing out the live portion of the session, Rev. Barry Robison, motioned to adjourn the conference session. The motion was approved.

Annual Conference altar design by Amy Wynn, Executive Administrative Assistant, Connecting Ministries.

Day 1 Recap: 2021 Susquehanna Annual Conference


 Janelle Walker, Director of Communications

The 12th session of the Susquehanna Conference began on Friday, June 18, 2021. Bishop Jeremiah Park opened the session (Plenary 1) with a greeting and spoke of the theme for this year’s Conference: A Vision of the Beloved Community. Bishop Park went on to say, “Our world, our nation, and our church are going through a profoundly liminal time with lots of uncertainties and anxieties. We hear seriously concerned voices of frustration, despair, and fear from all over the place. However, this unprecedented time we are living through could be a once in a lifetime moment for God’s people to catch up with the new things that God is doing among us and in the world. This may be a revolutionary moment of opportunity when history and hope and dreams meet together.” Bishop Park continued with a message of love, community, and Christ. “This is the time and we are the people to be a living witness of ‘A Vision of the Beloved Community of Christ’. Once again, we are the people of a vision of the Beloved Community: ‘Alive in Christ together, Susquehanna Conference will embody the Beloved Community of disciple-making congregations.’ Amen and Amen.”

The Conference Session continued with worship, opening with youth from across the connection reciting “Cultivating Beloved Community” adapted by Rev. Nathan Decker, then followed by a rendition of the song “The Gift of Love”. The sermon was delivered by Bishop Peggy Johnson of the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference and Peninsula-Delaware Conference. Continuing the message of love and community, Bishop Johnson said, “Jesus saw the heart of people: The woman at the well, Nicodemus at night, Peter by the charcoal fire after the resurrection. He patiently listened, engaged and looked at them with the eyes of God’s love and kindness…Sometimes we are so busy or so sure we know what a person is like ahead of time that we don’t really see them, hear their hearts and understand their backgrounds. Pope Francis recently wrote, ‘This haste, this everything-right-now, does not come from God. If we get worked up about the right-now, we forget what remains forever, and we follow the passing clouds and lose sight of the sky.’ Love has patience and sees the sky.” After Bishop Johnson, Rev. Kris Sledge, Rev. Anna Layman-Knox, and Rev. Paul Amara spoke about the Beloved Community Fund. Followed by the song “High Above”. The service was closed by Rev. Larry Leland.

After the opening business of the Conference, we viewed part 1 of the Leadership Report. The report featured churches throughout the connection and their various ministries that serve their congregations and communities. These ministries included a growing on-line ministry, vibrant youth ministries, and impactful community service.

The first report of the day was the Council on Finance and Administration, led by Council Chair Rev. Timothy Baer. It is noted that this report does not include the 2022 financial plan, which will be voted on in a Special Session in the fall of 2021. The report included Benevolent Goals, Special Sunday Offerings, and General Recommendations. The motion to accept the report was passed.

Next, Joyce Davis, Conference Lay Leader, delivered the Lay Ministry Report. Davis, spoke about the new Laity Board, which includes five young people to bring new ideas to the table. She expressed her excitement about the new Laity Board and the new collaboration with the Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia Conferences. And offered words of encouragement to our conference laity and urging them to be valuable resources for their clergy and congregations.

Bishop Park then introduced Bishop Cynthia Moore-Koikoi and Bishop Sandra Steiner Ball. He voiced his excitement for this new vision. And, he spoke of the great ministry of these Bishops. Bishop Moore-Koikoi said “To the Annual Conference, in case you haven’t yet heard, I am excited beyond measure that Bishop Steiner Ball and I will be working together to provide episcopal coverage for the Susquehanna Conference, Western Pennsylvania, and West Virginia Annual Conferences. We believe that through the words of Isaiah 43:19, God is saying to our three annual conferences, ‘Today, I’m about to do a new thing. Now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?’” She went on to talk about her love for the Annual Conference theme and the importance of the beloved community. Bishop Steiner Ball said, “I think of you Susquehanna Conference, and the opportunities, the new thing that God is bringing forth among the West Virginia Annual Conference, the Western Pennsylvania Conference, and the Susquehanna Conference. Indeed, the world is our parish, and I am looking so forward to getting to know you better and to being in mission and ministry alongside you.”

Then, Rev. Nick Keeney, Associate Director of the United Methodist Stewardship Foundation, gave the report for the foundation. The report consists of 2 resolutions. The first resolution was the United Methodist Stewardship Foundation merger with United Methodist Foundation of Western Pennsylvania. The second resolution set the parameters of agreement and plan of merger. Both resolutions were passed.

The Nominations Committee report was next and was given by committee Chair, Teryl Cartwright. The Nominations report was approved. After the Nominations, Rev. John Bondhus, from the Conference Board of Global Ministries presented the Advanced Specials. The motion to accept the Advanced Specials was approved. 

Following the reports, a video of a conversation between Bishop Cynthia Moore-Koikoi and Bishop Sandra Steiner Ball was shared. The conversation included parts of the new vision, encouragement of collaboration, and opportunities for innovation.

(Plenary 2) After a break for lunch, Rev. Michelle Bodle, Chair of the Board of Pension and Health, presented the Board’s report. There were 5 motions presented: 1) Annuity rate for pre-1982 years of service, 2) Retirement approvals, 3) Rental/housing for disabled or retired clergy, 4) Comprehensive benefit funding plan, 5) Discontinuation of retirement HRA for those retiring after June 30, 2021. All motions were approved.

Next were the resolutions, presented by Rev. Andrew Burd-Harris, Chair of the Conference Board of Global Ministries.

Mental Health: It includes three actions: The first, asks members to observe Mental Health Awareness Month on the third Sunday in May. The second, asks the conference to recognize September as Suicide Prevention Month and National Recovery Month. The third, asks the conference to observe Mental Illness Awareness Week during the first week of October and to hold a day of prayer on Tuesday, October 5, 2021. Amendment vote to remove lines 7 and 12, not approved. Amendment to add reference to the resolution accepted by Rev. Evelyn Madison. The resolution was approved.

Disability Awareness Sunday: It asks for this action: that members of the Susquehanna United Methodist Conference celebrate Disability Awareness Sunday as the second Sunday in October (October 10, 2021). The resolution was approved.

A Call to Work Toward Unity: It calls for five actions: The first, asks the members to work toward unity and creating space for every church, lay person, and clergyperson to live out their convictions, as we wrestle with different understandings of human sexuality and sin. The second, asks conference members to commit to do no harm in words or actions toward our fellow United Methodists in the Susquehanna Conference in the midst of our disagreements. The third, asks conference members to commit to do the most good possible through words and actions toward our fellow United Methodists in the Susquehanna Conference in the midst of our disagreements. The fourth, asks conference members to that we commit to attend to the ordinances of God together with intention as a witness to our faith in Jesus. The fifth, calls conference members to commit to undertake our work towards unity with charity and grace where possible and without malice when not. Amendment vote to change line 9 to remove “their convictions as we wrestle with different” and replace with “the ordinances of God on the” was not approved. Motion to call for the question vote was approved. The resolution was approved.

Reaching People with the Good News of Jesus Christ, Hope of the World: It calls for this action: which begins on line 41: that we, the people of the Susquehanna Conference of The United Methodist Church, renew our commitment, for such a time as this, to reach people with the good news of Jesus Christ, Crucified and Risen from the dead, the Living Lord of history and the Hope of the world. Amendment to add the word “all” to resolution so it would state “to reach all people” accepted by Rev. Andrew Burd-Harris. The resolution was approved.

Unity in Mission: It calls for four actions: The first, asks the conference to resolve to desire to be an Annual Conference that lives out unity in diversity for the sake of our mission and as an answer to Jesus’ prayer that we may be one. The second, asks the conference to resolve to desire to stay in relationship with The United Methodist Church and in mission together. The third, asks the conference to resolve that, if the United Methodist General Conference amends The Book of Discipline, we aspire to become an Annual Conference that protects diversity of conviction and practice among our local churches and our clergy, including that we would hope to become an Annual Conference which permits, but does not require, performing of same-sex marriages. The fourth, requests that the leadership and local churches of the Susquehanna Annual Conference work towards practical frameworks for living together in connection as The United Methodist Church continues to discern its future path. Motion to table Resolution #5 was approved. Point of order was called. Parliamentarian, Rev. Jennifer Williams, ruled that the ruling stands.

A Call to End Conversion Therapy: It calls for the action that members of the Susquehanna Conference of the United Methodist Church urge the Pennsylvania State Legislature to ban conversion therapy in the state of Pennsylvania to protect and uphold the dignity, rights, and liberty of LBGTQA+ persons in this commonwealth. Motion to table Resolution #6 was not approved. Motion to call for the question was approved. The resolution was approved.

The Susquehanna Declaration: It calls for five actions: The first action, asks the conference to apologize to the LGBTQ+ persons in this conference and its predecessors who felt God’s call to ministry but were unable to pursue it due to discriminatory church laws. The second action, calls the conference to apologize to LGBTQ+ persons 40 who have felt marginalized within their own churches, including those denied the blessing of a church wedding. The third action, calls the conference to pray that God would forgive our straying away from the Greatest Commandment, where Jesus commands us to “love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your being, with all your strength, and with all your mind, and love your neighbor as yourself.” The fourth action, asks the conference to pledge to engage in processes that require active engagement and a commitment to showing grace rather than expressing anger, given that not all in the United Methodist Church embrace LGBTQ+ equality. The fifth action asks the conference to commit to work towards a future church, here in the Susquehanna Conference, and in the broader United Methodist Church that is fully accepting of our LGBTQ+ siblings in all aspects of church life, including ordination, as well as marriage officiated by United Methodist clergy persons in United Methodist churches. Motion to table Resolution #7 was not approved. Motion to call for the question was approved. The resolution was not approved.

After the resolutions, we moved into a time of worship. Rev. Brenda Leigey opened the COVID-19 Memorial Service with words of grief and comfort. Essential workers and youth then read scripture and gave brief messages of hope. Rev. Barry Robison delivered the sermon “Mending the Nets of God”.  

“The nets of our lives, individually and congregationally, have been torn and the task of mending them is before us. COVID has torn the nets of our lives in different ways. It has affected the physical, mental, and spiritual health of some people in ongoing ways.  It has affected others through loss of income or employment. It has caused folks to feel isolated through the loss of relationships, both personally and congregationally. COVID has torn the nets of the ways we live life, at home, in public, and at church” said Rev. Robison. He talked about the time it takes to mend and finding hope in Christ to help us through that time. Rev. Robison, went on to speak about how when the net is mended it will not be the same and how our churches and their ministries will never be the same. He called on churches to embrace these changes. “And so today, as important as mending nets can be, I encourage you to resist the temptation to think that all you can or should do at this time is mend your nets by trying to put your lives back together the way they were. God may be calling all of us away from those efforts to some other purpose” said Rev. Robison. 

The service continued with a time of prayerful reflection. The service concluded with the song “New Wine” and a benediction from Rev. Barry Robison.

Thanks be to God for You


Bishop Jeremiah J. Park

It is hard to believe that it has been 9 years since I received a phone call that said, “Welcome to the Susquehanna Annual Conference”. After the last Bishop is elected at the Jurisdictional Conference, the Jurisdictional Committee on Episcopacy spends long hours praying and discerning about where Bishops could and should be assigned. Bishops do not have a say in their assignments. We do not apply, nor do we lobby for a certain Annual Conference assignment. In fact, we do not know where we will be going until 6:00 am Friday morning, the last day of Jurisdictional Conference. 

For some it is simply a welcome back. For others it begins with an introduction of who is calling and their Annual Conference. It was then that we were told we would be leaving the New York Annual Conference and coming to the Susquehanna Conference. While Lisa and I knew we could be assigned anywhere in the Jurisdiction, the Susquehanna Conference was not on our radar. But God and the Jurisdictional Committee on Episcopacy had a plan for the Susquehanna Conference and for Lisa and me.

What a surprising and amazingly blessed journey it has been! It is hard to believe that the past 9 years have gone by so quickly. In the blink of an eye, we have moved from the gracious and spirited welcome at the Williamsport Arts Center to now this, my last Annual Conference, where I say farewell to my beloved sisters and brothers in Christ.

The 3rd chapter of Ecclesiastes is entitled, “Everything has its season.” Some of the words that resonate at a time like this are: “a time to be born, and a time to die, a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; a time to keep and a time to throw away…” and so on.

What time is it now for me as we depart?

First, this is a time for me to say, “Thanks be to God for you!”

My heart is overflowing with gratitude as I am having this moment with you.

Two passages truly reflect what’s in my heart for you. The first comes from Philippians 1:3-5. “I thank my God every time I remember you. In all my prayers for all of you, I always pray with joy because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now....” The second passage comes from First Thessalonians 3:9. “How can I thank my God enough for you in return for all the joy I have in the presence of our God because of you?”

Please accept my ‘Thank you! Thank you! And Thank you!’ from the bottom of my heart for your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now. God’s people of the Susquehanna Conference, clergy and laity alike, your commitment to discipleship and stewardship, dedication to mission and outreach, and diligence in ministry and service are truly exemplary and exceptional; and you remain committed to all of these things even in the midst of an unprecedented season of multiple challenges. Your faithfulness is outstanding and exemplary. No wonder, I was told, that the Susquehanna Conference was number one among all annual conferences in the United States for 2019 shares of ministry collection. You honored the general church shares of ministry 100% even last year, the most financially challenging year! Mission Central, Seedling Ministry as a loan fund, and the Stewardship Foundation are all in a much stronger place ready to serve more people and congregations! Thanks and praises be to God! No matter what, our people are determined to continue to touch and serve and transform lives with the love of God in the name of Jesus Christ. In the midst of the unprecedented challenges all around us, we see our pastors and congregations continue to offer new and creative ministries as they expand their presence and connection with the people in the community and beyond with determination, courage, and grace for the sake of the good news of God. Indeed, our people remain steadfast and serve with their time, talents, and treasurers to represent the presence of healing and hope for such a time as this. Thanks be to God for you!

My sincere thanks also extends to the Cabinet, conference leaders and staff in the in my office, the conference office and the district offices who constantly, conscientiously, and so freely offer themselves to the ministry of our church. Thanks be to God for all of you! I am truly privileged and humbled to serve our beloved church with such exceptionally gifted leaders and dedicated servants like you. With humbleness and gratitude, I claim that I have had the best cabinet and conference that I can ask for. 

We know that it hasn’t always been easy. There have been difficult decisions and hard choices to make and troubled waters to wade through. But God’s people like you sustained my ministry and kept me going with a profound sense of joy and privilege. I cannot thank you enough for what you have done and will continue to do for Christ and His Church. 

Second, this is time for me to commit you to God’s grace.

The time has come for me to say goodbye, my friends. I regret that I depart when our beloved church is going through a very challenging time. Besides the various pandemics to face and cultural and societal environments that are not conducive to the church, our denomination is having a time of profound uncertainties and is likely to take a painful journey toward a potential denominational separation. It breaks our hearts as our sisters and brothers in Christ are facing a prospect of choosing separate ways of being a church. 

In the 20th Chapter of Acts, from Miletus, Paul sent to Ephesus for the elders of the church. Knowing that it would be his last time to see them, he wanted to have a personal moment with them before his trip to Jerusalem. As he is saying his farewell to the leaders of Ephesus, he leaves them with some parting words from his heart. While the times and contexts are completely different, Paul’s words as paraphrased in Acts 20:32 by Eugene Peterson speak eloquently to what I have in mind for a moment like this. He wrote, “Now I’m turning you over to God, our marvelous God whose gracious Word can make you into what God wants you to be and give you everything you could possibly need in this community of holy friends.”

My sisters and brothers, with the utmost confidence, I am turning you over to God and to the word of God’s grace. 

I have observed and heard of many annual conference sessions throughout the connection that can get very intense where people often do harm to each other by their words and actions. But as your Bishop I have found that you have shown a consistent pattern of being kind, considerate, and thoughtful to one another and are spiritually focused and prayerful as you discern and decide on critical matters of the church with the mission of the church in mind as your top priority. You do not shy away from your differences, but you continue to show that you love one another by the way you discuss and debate issues that are close to your heart. Indeed, you so faithfully demonstrate what it means to be a church alive in Christ together for the sake of the mission of making disciples and transforming the world. 

While your passion is evident for what you believe, what is more evident is the presence of grace. You always try your best to demonstrate a benevolent spirit and actions even in the midst of struggles. Grace never leaves the room.

Paul said to the Elders of the church, “And now, compelled by the Spirit, I am going to Jerusalem, not knowing what will happen to me there…. However, I consider my life worth nothing to me, if only I may finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me—the task of testifying to the gospel of God’s grace.” (Acts 20:22) 

Paul’s journey after his conversion was about testifying to God’s grace. It’s no wonder that his last word to them was “grace”. 

We are God’s people who are redeemed by grace. To say grace saved me isn’t enough. Grace saved even me. Like Paul, we know that our journey in the faith is about testifying to the good news of God’s grace in Jesus Christ.

We are compelled to take the journey to the unknown future.

But the grace of God is far greater than our thoughts and surpasses our understanding. Grace will continue to lead you and me into God’s preferred future. 

So with confidence, I commit you to God and God’s grace for such a time as this. “Indeed, the God who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the Day of Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 1:6) 

Third, this is time to dance

I have been most richly blessed to have traveled the hills and valleys, the farmland, and the rural areas, small towns, suburban, and the cities of the Susquehanna Conference to visit our churches and people. Lisa and I immensely enjoyed the times we had in worship and fellowship all over the place in our conference. 

Wherever I visited I shared with our people a message that we are a church alive in Christ together. 

We worship and serve the living God. As God’s people, there is no other way to be, but alive!

Jesus said, “I came to give you life, an abundant life.” (John 10:10) There is no other way to be in Jesus but alive.

The Church is the living Body of Christ. There is no other way to be a church but alive.

We want every one of our churches to be a church alive as a vital congregation in the most exciting, vibrant, and blissful way.

What does a church alive in Christ look like?”

A singing church is a church alive. I am a singing Bishop. What do you expect?

The Hymn sing was an integral part of my faith formation and spiritual development. I grew up with many Gospel songs that were sung frequently at the revival meetings or camp meetings. Singing hymns and praises feeds my soul and uplifts my spirit. Indeed, when I sing, the spirit comes alive within me. I feel energized and blessed. It’s no wonder that I love to sing!

A praising church is a church alive

A praying church is a church alive

A giving church is a church alive

A church that goes into the Word and into the world is a church alive.

A church in mission is a church alive and so on…

However, wherever I went I lifted up one of the fruits of the Spirit to illustrate a church alive in Christ: The fruit of the spirit I lifted up was joy. A joyful church is a church alive!

We are the people of the gospel of the good news of great joy for all people. If we don’t have joy, what’s the point? 

Church is not a building, not a steeple, not a resting place but people.

Joyful people make a joyful church. 

The joy we are talking about is not what the world can give nor take away from us.

It’s the joy that comes from the love of God in Jesus Christ.

That we are God’s beloved, that God’s love for us is unconditional, steadfast and everlasting, that God never ever grows weary of loving us, that God’s love is far greater than our understanding, and that God loves us not because of who we are but because of who God is, makes us a joyful people, a joyful church. Joy comes from a love like that.

 We remember Jesus’ words in John 13 verses 34-35: 

“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also must love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples. If you love one another.”

Two chapters later Jesus says, “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.” (John 15:12)

The message for us? There’s no other way to be God’s people but to love one another. 

Our theme for this Annual Conference is “A Vision of the Beloved Community.” I really see in you a glimpse of the beloved community of Christ. That gives me a reason for the joy that I have.

The biblical and lasting image of joy is dance. God chose to put you and me together for 9 years. It was in God’s wisdom that we would make good dance partners in and through the ministry of the Susquehanna Conference. In humbleness and with gratitude – I believe we made great dance partners. 

Indeed, memories of my 9 years here among you will continue to flood my soul with joy and thanksgiving.

So I will keep dancing. 

My dear sisters and brothers of the Susquehanna Conference, you have my prayers and best wishes as I commit you to God’s grace. I am confident that you are in good hands as capable, gifted and grace-filled Bishops Sandra Steiner Ball and Cynthia Moore-Koikoi will lead and serve you. May God continue to richly bless and honor you and your ministry and your journey ahead, all to God’s glory. Amen and amen.

Let me have a moment of personal privilege. 

Lisa, you’re the best dance partner I can ask for. I am privileged to have the best wife and you are the best mom for Cathy and Matthew, and their spouses George and Joyce, and you are the best grandma Gemma, Penelope, Eugenie and Eli can have, you are a blessing to all of us beyond description. Lisa, how can I thank my God enough for the joy I have because of you? With you, I know that the best days of our lives are yet to come and am looking forward to our common journey ahead in joy and peace with gratitude.

So, “I will go dancing, I will go dancing, I will go dancing in my soul …” 



AC2021 - A Vision of the Beloved Community


Bishop Jeremiah J. Park

Once again, we gathered virtually because of circumstances beyond our control. I hope and pray and trust that this is the last time we will need to meet as an annual conference this way. As far as the pandemic of COVID is concerned, thanks be to God, we are turning the corner. Please know that we secured the contract with Hershey Lodge to meet there in-person for annual conference next year.

Virtually or in-person, we gather as the Susquehanna Conference to give witness to the world that we are a church alive in Christ together. 

The theme of our gathering this year is: “A Vision of the Beloved Community”. It reminds us of the vision statement of our conference: “Alive in Christ together, Susquehanna Conference will embody the Beloved Community of disciple-making congregations.”

Our world, our nation, and our church are going through a profoundly liminal time with lots of uncertainties and anxieties. We hear seriously concerned voices of frustration, despair, and fear from all over the place. 

However, this unprecedented time we are living through could be a once in a lifetime moment for God’s people to catch up with the new things that God is doing among us and in the world. This may be a revolutionary moment of opportunity when history and hope and dreams meet together. 

We are lifting up a vision of the beloved community for such a time as this.

The vision is about the coming of the Kingdom of God. 

What will the world look like when the reign of God is realized as Jesus envisioned it? 

My answer? Beloved community. The Beloved Community of Christ, to be more precise. I believe that is the closest thing that Jesus had in mind when he talked about the Kingdom of God. 

Jesus proclaimed, “The time has come. The Kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!” The coming of the Kingdom is inevitable. 

We are here as a church to enhance and expand the Beloved Community of God’s reign.

The vision is about the common destiny of the human community.

Martin Luther King, Jr. made that point when he said: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly.”

No matter what race or ethnicity we may have, we are one family of God. No matter what different geographical location we live in, we share the common destiny as one human race. All must be in the journey together toward the world we want to live in where God’s love, justice, and peace prevails for all and true reconciliation among all creation is realized like the vision of the peaceable kingdom of Isaiah.

The vision is about love.

It’s about the greatest commandment: “Love God and love others as yourself.” It’s about the new command from Jesus: “A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” (John 13:34-35). 

It’s about the perfect love of God in Jesus Christ as 1 John says:

“Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God…. since God so loved us, we also love one another. No one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and God’s love is made complete…. God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God lives in him or her…. There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear…We love because God first loved us.” (selected verses from 1John 4:7-21)

The Beloved Community of Christ is about a love like that.

This is the time and we are the people to be a living witness of “A Vision of the Beloved Community of Christ”. Once again, we are the people of a vision of the Beloved Community: “Alive in Christ together, Susquehanna Conference will embody the Beloved Community of disciple-making congregations.” Amen and Amen.