The Glenburn Community Church |
I resented having to be in church yesterday. And yes, I mean the beloved
congregation that I consider myself extraordinarily blessed to serve as pastor.
I didn’t want to be there.
Yesterday,
in West Union, Ohio at 1:00 p.m. EST (roughly
fifteen minutes after our Sunday morning Bible study convened out here in Glenburn, California),
my Uncle Harmon Dryden officiated the funeral of my Uncle Bruce (Wm. Bruce
Gulley, about whom I’ve recently written: http://deathpastor.blogspot.com/2013/11/wm-bruce-gulley-1921-2013.html).
I wasn’t there. I was at The Glenburn Community Church.
The
obstacles preventing me from receiving permission to fly to Ohio for my uncle’s funeral are several and
varied, and mostly stupid and galling. The obstacle preventing me from going
AWOL (Absent With-Out Leave) is simpler. Early in my ministry I came to
understand the importance of constituted authority, and I believe it applies in
even a one-congregation denomination (as the State of California defines GCC). As much as I may
joke that “it’s always easier to get forgiveness than permission,” simply
absenting myself from my duties as the solo pastor was not an option I allowed
myself.
Who
would deny their pastor permission to attend the funeral of one of their
closest relatives, even if it meant missing a Sunday, without time to arrange
pulpit supply, or a pianist, or…well, any of the other things I do on Sundays?
No one would deny that permission, so far as I can guess. Likewise, though,
there is currently no one to give permission. Like all congregations and their
leaders, ours is made up of always flawed and occasionally inattentive human
beings. (As one of those responsible for the current level of dysfunction in
our decision-making/permission-granting/policy-applying vacuum, I include
myself, of course, in that description).
A great place on Sunday mornings (except one, for me). |
So
while neither of the individuals who may or may not currently be the
chairperson of our board of trustees were available (we are apparently amidst a
three-month leadership hiatus while the adjustment of our fiscal year—formerly
ending September 30—aligns to the calendar year after December 31), and while
the currently non-existent Pastor-Parish Relations Committee was equally
non-available for comment (no one has been appointed to serve in that capacity
for at least the past four years), and while the Elders are still in the
developmental stage of this new phase of leadership structure, I prepared to steel
myself in the midst of my own bereavement so that I could preach the sermon I
had prepared long before my uncle’s illness became critical. It was the first
sermon in our next expository series in Samuel and Kings, and it addressed "The
Mis-Treatment of the Bereaved.” (I was specifically looking at Hannah’s
encounters in I
Samuel 1:1-8. I’ll send you the audio-file if you’d like.)
Several
from our own congregation are in the midst of the early phases of their grief
and mourning, having been bereaved through death and other significant losses.
Present in our congregation yesterday, though, were also two sets of first-time
visitors. Both had experienced the untimely loss of loved ones under uniquely
difficult circumstances in the recent past. I had known of each situation, and
prayed for them as their local family members provided updates. But it was my
first time meeting all but one of them and, I believe, the first time any of
them had attended church at Glenburn. They were in the right place at the right
time for the right sermon for all the right reasons.
You'd think he could be in two places at once. |
I
was in the right place at the right time for the right sermon, too. And despite
the fact that I was there for, in my humble estimation, all the wrong reasons,
I took their presence, the presence of others in need among our regular
attendees, and the response from each of them, and from even those I had no
idea were in the midst of significant losses…well, I believe God verifiably
validated my presence there, then, for them…and probably for me, too. But make
no mistake about it: I didn’t want to be there.
I’m
absolutely certain that God wanted me to be there. I see why. It was awesome to
see the Holy Spirit touch people’s lives through a sermon I didn’t want to be
there to preach. God used it, and people were blessed. But I’m still mad about
it. Of course, this isn’t the first time God chose not to take my advice about
how best to run my life (or who I should minister to and where). And even when
I haven’t had such clear evidence that He knows best, I’ve gotten over it in
the past. I’ll get over this, too.
So,
I’m sorry I missed your funeral, Uncle Bruce. But unless I am entirely mistaken
about your testimony of faith, I know you can feel free to take it up
face-to-face with the One I blame for it. Or maybe you’ll just chalk it up to
one more thing you got to teach your nephew, even when I thought the
opportunity to learn from you had passed. Either way, thanks again.
4 comments:
All that being said, you WERE in two places at once, with a little help from Cousin Judith and me.
That's very true. Thanks for helping to make that happen, too. (For others reading the comments: My cousin printed out the previous post regarding my uncle, and my sister--University of Charleston--read it during my uncle's funeral.)
Until I read this blog, I felt you should have gone; permission or not. However, I would have been forgetting that those lessons learned in the past should not be forgotten no matter how illogical they seem. God taught them to us for situations such as this in order to learn greater lessons and to experience His faithfulness. I admire your integrity. Thanks for the reminder and thanks for your sacrifice. Pat
If it helps any, it still feels like I should have gone. I’d have been wrong to. But it stills feels like I should have.
And if that makes sense to you, it’s probably because you know that this whole “walking with Jesus” thing is based in the reality of a relationship, not on the rules of a religion.
Thanks!
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