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Whether you are reading this for the first time or you're a frequent visitor I just want to say thank you! I am humbled that you would take the time to read what it is I have to say, however significant or insignificant that might be! Shalom, friends!

Friday, June 17, 2011

Let's Break Bread Together

Grilled Chicken Fajitas, onions, bell peppers, cheese dip, guacamole, salsa, and many more delicious offerings filled our table this afternoon as friends gathered around the table in Christian fellowship. 


As I scraped down the grill to prepare the pit for some delectable, juicy chicken breasts, I was reminded how lucky and blessed I am to have amazing friends. Once a week, sometimes more, our little group of friends gather around the table for a meal, laughter, and sometimes tears. 


I am reminded time and time again of the story of the fellowship of believers talked about in the Gospel of the Church, the book of Acts. In Chapter two the author of Luke-Acts tells us this:


The Fellowship of the Believers (2:42-47)


 42And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. 43And awe[d] came upon every soul, and many wonders and signs were being done through the apostles. 44And all who believed were together and had all things in common. 45Andthey were selling their possessions and belongings and distributing the proceeds to all, as any had need. 46And day by day, attending the temple together and breaking bread in their homes, they received their food with glad and generous hearts, 47praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being saved.


Whenever we gather in the name of Christ in Christian fellowship, breaking bread together, we are sharing in the experiential power of the Last Supper. As Jesus was preparing for his "mission" he gathered his disciples around a table. They gathered together rejoicing, laughing, eating, and praying for those who were closest to them. After the supper was over he took bread and wine, gave thanks, and told them of the mission he was about to embark on. 


I am always taken back, rejoicing and giving thanks for the wonderful blessings  I have been graciously given by my Savior Jesus Christ. I give thanks for the wonderful friends that I have. They lift me up in prayer, strengthen me when I am weak, and rejoice with me when I am happy! I give thanks for the bounty of food we are able to partake in. I give thanks for the many gifts I have, for I know that there are those who are less fortunate than myself. I give thanks every single time that all these blessings come together around the table of Christian fellowship each time we break bread together! I also give thanks for the table that is also promised to me when I finally am called home! Oh how wonderful it will be to break together with my Lord and all the Saints! 


Thanks be to God! Amen and Amen! 

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Ordination Sermon - Bishop Hutchinson "Come See A Man!"

Ordination Sermon
“Come See a Man”
Bishop William W. Hutchinson
June 6, 2011
Louisiana Annual Conference

Shreveport, Louisiana
John 4: 1-30
Smiley strikes again!  I shared last year some sage wisdom from Smiley Anders, columnist for the Baton Rouge Advocate.  He has provided fodder for the mill once again.  In the April 29, 2011 edition of The Advocate he related the essence of this story that I had actually received earlier from a friend in New Mexico.
“The year is 2016 and the United States has just elected the first woman, a Louisiana State University graduate, as President of the United States, Susan Boudreaux.  A few days after the election the president-elect calls her father and says, ‘So, Dad, I assume you will be coming to my inauguration?’
‘I don’t think so.  It’s a 30 hour drive, your mother isn’t as young as she used to be, and my arthritis is acting up again.’ ‘Don’t worry about it Dad.  I’ll send Air Force One to pick you up and take you home.  And a limousine will pick you up at your door.’
‘I don’t know.  Everybody will be so fancy.  What would your mother wear?’ ‘Oh Dad,’ replies Susan, ‘I’ll make sure she has a wonderful gown custom made by the best designer in New York.’ ‘Honey,’ Dad complains, ‘you know I can’t eat those rich foods you and your friends like to eat.’
The President to be responds, ‘Don’t worry Dad.  The entire affair is going to be handled by the best caterer in New York.  I’ll insure your meals are salt free.  Dad, I really want you to come.’
So Dad reluctantly agrees and on January 20, 2017, Susan Boudreaux is being sworn in as President of the United States.  In the front row sits the new president’s Dad and Mom.  Dad, noticing the senator sitting next to him leans over and whispers, ‘You see that woman over there with her hand on the Bible, becoming president of the United States?’
The senator whispers back, ‘Yes, I do.’
The Dad says, ‘Her brother played football at LSU!’”
Let me share a story that puts LSU and football in proper perspective.  It too is about a very important woman who had been similarly overlooked.
Jesus and his disciples were headed from Judea back to Galilee and he decided it was much shorter to go through Samaria than to go around this distasteful area populated by Jews who had stayed behind in the Exile period and who had married the foreign invaders, making them very impure in the eyes of the orthodox.  They came to a small Samaritan village where they stopped to rest.  Jesus, worn out from the trip sat down at the town well while the disciples went on into town to get a few things for lunch.
While Jesus was sitting there, a Samaritan woman came to draw water from the well and the conversation ensued that was read for us by Anice earlier.  Jesus asks for a drink.  She is taken aback and asks, “How come you, a Jew, are asking me, a Samaritan woman, for a drink?”
They get into a conversation about the difference between the water she is drawing and the water Jesus can offer, “Living water”, water that satisfies thirst forever, “an artesian spring within, gushing fountains of endless life.”  The woman asks for the water Jesus can give so she will never thirst again, or ever have to come back to the well.
Then Jesus throws her a curve ball.  “Go call your husband and then come back.”  “I have no husband.”  “I know”, says Jesus. “You’ve had five husbands, and the man you’re living with now isn’t even your husband.”
“Oh, so you’re a prophet!” she says.  And then the conversation is totally diverted from the water issue and onto the religious histories of the Jews and Samaritans, the proper place for worship, the proper way to worship, and similar questions of the established religious traditions of the day.  Jesus cautions her that her background and his background are not that important.  But the important thing is to present our very being, our spirits and our true selves, in adoration of God and that is what constitutes true worship.
“Well,” she says, “I don’t know about that but I do know that one called the Messiah is coming and when he comes he can straighten out our concerns.”  “I am he,” said Jesus. “You don’t have to wait any longer.”
About then his disciples returned with the lunch groceries and they were shocked to find him talking with this woman.  “No one said what they were all thinking, but their faces showed it!”  What a great way to say they disapproved!
The woman took this opportunity to run back to town – not to hide or get away from these crazy Jewish men, but to tell everyone there, “Come see a man who knew all about the things I did, who knows me inside and out.  Do you think this could be the Messiah?”  And they went out to see for themselves.
“Come see a man ….” she says.  “Come see a man…”
In a recent meeting in Indianapolis hosted by the Lilly Foundation for Conferences and organizations who have had Lilly grants for “Sustaining Pastoral Excellence”, Krista Tippett, the public broadcast host of the program “Krista Tippett on Being,” asked this question of the audience of those who are attempting to raise the levels of pastoral excellence across the Church.  “Are we going to be a movement of the people of God or an institution?”   (Repeat)
Sound familiar?  You’ve heard that a lot in the last year.  I’ve put it this way, “We are an institution that would be a Movement.”  Even public radio hosts as asking the question!  That tells me it is important and relevant.
And then Krista Tippett made a very profound statement, “Seminary gave us vocabulary, but it didn’t give us voice.” (Repeat)
So true!  If there’s been any one thing I’ve learned since becoming a bishop it is that there is a big difference between vocabulary and voice!  So, in an attempt to use my voice, with the vocabulary of faith, and in an attempt to give you encouragement to use your own voice in your own places of service, let me make a couple of observations about this well-known, often ignored, but begging for the attention of our voice, story.
Jesus, as true to course, was the initiator of this encounter.  If he had not spoken to the woman, she would never have spoken to him.  It would have been one of those “elevator encounters”.  You know the kind where you step on the elevator and everyone looks up at the numbers for fear someone might speak to them or that would call for them to speak to another.  It would have been quite easy for Jesus just to ignore her.  But she had something he needed:  Water.  And he had something she needed:  Living Water. 
They weren’t far into this theological and spiritual conversation when she slammed him with this conversation stopper.  “Oh, so you’re a prophet!  Well, tell me this…”  And she immediately leads him into a rabbit-chasing conversation about history and preservation of that history.  “What about our well?  What about our ancestry?  What about you snarky Jews? “
Oh, how we can get sidetracked from the relevant into the irrelevant!  How we can be derailed from spiritual content to societal content!  How we can jump the track when someone is trying to get our attention with life-changing discussion!
And the Church can be the worst place to be caught up in the irrelevant of any place I know!  Here’s an example:  When I was a boy, my mother, daddy and I went one night to a revival meeting held in one of the two churches in our little community.  Let me quickly say it was not a Methodist Church!  We had gone because friends had continued to invite us to come.  They were practicing evangelism!  After the opening songs, prayers, and purported welcome, the evangelist stood to preach.  But before he preached he asked for all who belonged to that church to raise their hands.  Then he asked for all who belonged to that denomination to raise their hands.  Then he said, “Will all the rest of you who are not yet saved move over to this side of the aisle.”
In the ensuing “saved vs. unsaved shuffle” my Dad ushered us out of the church.  I don’t think he ever went back to that particular church except to attend my piano recitals that were held there. 
Jesus says to the woman of Samaria, “the time is coming – it has, in fact, come – when what you’re called will not matter and where you go to worship will not matter.  It’s who you are and the way you live that count before God.  Your worship must engage your spirit in the pursuit of truth.  That’s the kind of people the Father is out looking for: those who are simply and honestly themselves before him in their worship.  God is sheer being itself – Spirit.  Those who worship him just do it out of their very being, their spirits, their true selves, in adoration.”
That visiting evangelist must have never heard this story!  He was all about protection and preservation of a certain way of looking at the life of following Jesus.
Do you hear the point?  Christianity is not about preservation but about introduction!  “Come see a man!”  It is not about preserving our way of life and our understandings.  But the faith of the followers of Jesus is about seeing life in a new way because we met a man who showed us something different!!  It’s our role and responsibility simply to introduce people to him!
The Samaritan woman left her water jug at the well, and while Jesus had a “come to Jesus meeting” with his disciples, she was on her way to town to say to the townspeople, “Come see a man who knew all about the things I did, who knows me inside and out.”  And they went out to see for themselves.
John, the gospel writer, goes on to say that many from the village committed themselves to him because of the woman’s witness.  They asked him to stay on so they could learn more and he stayed an extra two days.  Many more entrusted their lives to him and their last recorded statements are, “We’re no longer taking this on your say-so.  We’ve heard it for ourselves and know it for sure.  He’s the Savior of the world!” 
All the woman did was to introduce people to his presence.  “Come see a man . . . Let me put you in touch with him and he can and will do the rest!”
We don’t have to guard Jesus’ church for him!  He’s big enough to take care of that himself.  In fact, when we try and guard the church we are not worried about protecting Jesus, we’re really worried about protecting ourselves.  Jesus can take care of himself!  We’re the ones who are afraid because we don’t trust him enough to care for us while he also cares for them!
It is unfortunate, un-Methodist, un-Wesleyan, and unnecessary to guard the flock. It isn’t necessary for us to conserve or protect the Means of Grace!  Our place is to roll those out frequently and prolifically so others can experience him through whatever Means possible!  Jesus himself is the good shepherd and he has placed himself across the entrance to the sheepfold and he can admit whoever he wants!
 “Come see a man!” That’s our role. Pastor’s, you do not need to be given the judicial authority to guard the church.  Jesus will guard the church!  Your role is to introduce and welcome people in that he might do his work!  I’ve been shut out!  I’ve been deemed unworthy and unsaved!  God forbid I should convey that to someone else!
Ray Bowman, his real name and one of the true poor, came with his mother every Sunday to First Methodist Church (not “United” at that point) in Hobbs, New Mexico.  He and she were truly the poor – - poor economically, poor mentally, poor physically, poor hygienically, and desperate for acceptance.  They weren’t like most of us there, but they were part of the church family.  I grew up with Ray Bowman.
When I was in college I worked one summer as a volunteer with the youth and Ray was part of the group.  He was so disruptive that the regular sponsors wanted him banned from coming because he was unruly, bold, smelly and difficult.  But he was no more difficult than were those sponsors!  He was no more difficult than some of the most controlled and controlling, most intimidating and sinfully manipulative, well perfumed and well-heeled and impossible-to-deal-with people in the church today.  And we break our necks to recruit and appease them that they might give their stamps of approval from the secure confines of their Sunday school classes and might drop a little of their amassed wealth (and don’t even question how that came about!) into our thirsting coffers!  When I and another college student went to the senior pastor to tell him what was happening, he asked the sponsors to step aside and let us handle the youth group for the summer.  Ray continued to come and, I believe in his own limited way, he knew this Jesus who accepted him for who he was!  He met the man!  All we had to do was introduce him!
Jesus said to his disciples, “Well, I’m telling you to open your eyes and take a good look at what’s right in front of you.  These Samaritan fields are ripe.  It’s harvest time! . . . I sent you to a harvest field you never worked.  Without lifting a finger, you have walked in on a field worked long and hard by others.” (John 4: 34-38)
The Samaritans committed themselves to Jesus because of the woman’s witness: “he knew all about the things I did.  He knows me inside and out!”  And so they asked him to stay on, which he did for two more days.  Many more gave their lives to him once they heard him and met him.  And in the end they said to the woman, “We’re no longer taking this on your say-so.  We’ve heard it for ourselves and know it for sure.  He’s the Savior of the world!”
“Come see a man!”
Do you see who this Samaritan woman has become?  From an outcast gender, an outcast race, an outcast theology, and an outcast class and caste, this woman, this un-savable person has become the very symbol of liberation and change, acceptance and desirability.  The outcast who lives a disreputable life is being offered “living water” by “the Way, the Truth and the Life” himself! 
This woman at the well opened the door to all kinds of change, although it was a door that has taken us hundreds of years to pry open in our societies, and in many that door is not open yet!  How long did it take for us to have women clergy?  Far too long!  How long did it take for us to elect a female Bishop?  Far too long!  How long did it take for us to rid ourselves of the racially segregated Central Jurisdiction?  Far too long!  And then how long did it take for us to have a cross–racial appointment, with a black pastor serving an all-white congregation, and a white pastor serving an all-black congregation?  Far too long!  And now combine all of these changes and you get the ultimate combination – a black woman Bishop!  Get ready Louisiana!!  Times they are a changing! And the same Savior who had a noon-time visit with a Samaritan woman and shocked his disciples by having done so is having similar conversations today with the outcasts and undesirables of our world and our shocked churches don’t respond much better than did these first disciples!
And would you believe that 2000 years later we’re still trying to get this one right?  We’re so very good at exclusion.  We need to begin to practice inclusion!  We are so very good at discrimination!  We need help with color-blindness!  We’re so very good at “our fathers and mothers did it this way and our uncle Jacob gave us this land, and this church building, and even the well that goes with it!”  We need help with “maybe our way has run its course and now your way, Lord, a calling to ‘engage our spirits in the pursuit of truth’ is what matters!” 
There’s a whole lot of “mantle passing” we need to do and a lot of “freeing up” we must allow.  The banquet table has been set before us and ALL have been invited!  But the ones who are most interested in preservation have married a wife and bought a cow and they can’t come!!  So open the doors!  Let those on the highways and byways come in to sit with the master!  Don’t preserve – - – - – Introduce!!!  And once they have been introduced, let them and “the man” take it from there! Get out of the way!  Jesus is a big boy and he will handle these new relationships quite well.
He even had to fight his way out of his own home town to keep them from killing him because he told them he had come to preach good news to the poor, and to proclaim release to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind and to set at liberty those who are oppressed, and to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord!  And then he said Elijah could have gone to many widows in Israel in the midst of the great drought that resulted in famine over all the land, but Elijah wasn’t sent to any of them, but to a widow in Zarephath, or “Sarepta” (sound familiar?), in the land of Sidon; and there were many lepers in Israel in the time of Elisha, and none of them was cleansed, but only Na’aman the Syrian. (Luke 4: 18-30)  God wasn’t about preserving!  God was about introducing!  And they were filled with anger and tried to throw him headfirst off a cliff! But he passed through them and went away.  Whenever we try to introduce the most challenging of Jesus’ teachings we still get push-back and condemnation!
Is all of this dangerous teaching?  Is it unsavory?  Yes it is!  It got the one who taught it killed eventually. And it may get some of us, including me, in trouble today!  But fear not, we are in good company! And our role today still is to introduce everyone we can to this very teacher!! 
“Come see a man!!!”
On May 21, 2011 the latest predicted eschaton, or end of the world, was to have happened.  A great earthquake was to begin the horrible destruction that would lead to the final end of the world as we know it.  The day came and went with no appreciable natural disasters.  So, we ho-hummed the next morning and said, “Wasn’t that interesting?”  But we didn’t get out quite that easily.  We’re still here!  And that means one main thing to the faithful —we still have to deal with “him!”  And he is challenging us to the core of our very way of being and begging us to move beyond preservation of the past to introduction to the future.
“A Louisiana senior citizen drove his brand new Corvette convertible out of the dealership.  Taking off down the road, he floored it to 80 mph, enjoying the wind blowing through what little hair he had left.
‘Amazing,’ he thought as he flew down I-20, pushing the pedal to the metal even more.
Looking in his rear view mirror, he saw the highway patrol behind him, blue lights flashing and siren blaring.  He floored it to 100 mph, then 110, then 120.  Suddenly he thought, ‘What am I doing?  I’m too old for this,’ and pulled over to await the Trooper’s arrival.
Pulling in behind him, the Trooper walked up to the Corvette, looked at his watch and said, ‘Sir, my shift ends in 30 minutes.  Today is Friday.  If you can give me a reason for speeding that I’ve never heard before, I’ll let you go.’
The old gentleman paused, then said, ‘Years ago, my wife ran off with a Louisiana State Trooper.  I thought you were bringing her back!”
‘Have a good day, Sir,’ replied the Trooper.”
Well, people, I’m bringing Him back!  “Come see a man!!”  And I’m saying to everyone here, we, clergy and laity alike, ought to be about bringing Him back!  “Come see a man!!”  He will change our very beings and our lives.  He will change our church!  He will change our relationships!  He will change everything about us.
It’s not about whether I know how to balance my checkbook or not, but it’s about whether I know how to love my neighbor who has no bank account to balance.  It’s not about whether my children get to go on a ski trip, or a summer mission trip.  It’s about whether they know Jesus the man.  It’s not about whether I have a latte or a Frappuccino at the church café!  It’s about whether I can drink the cup he drank which can contain some pretty bitter and disappointing ingredients.
“Come see a man!!”
It’s not about technology – It’s about theology.  It’s not about whether I have a legitimate birth certificate – it’s about whether I have been born again!  It’s not about whether I agree with you or whether you agree with me – it’s about whether we submit to Him and whether we both agree with Him!
“Come see a man!!”
It’s not about tweets – it’s about “twust” (thank you Tweety!).  Are our hearts “twitter pated” with his joy and his mystery, or are we just “twitter pated” in the head?!
It’s not about football – it’s about foot washing!  It’s not about the death penalty – it’s about giving life and giving it abundantly!  It’s not about capitalism – it’s about becoming a captive.
In the words of Tom Brokaw, “It will do us little good to wire the world if we short circuit our souls.”  (From a commencement address, “Celebrate the Common Cause of Restoring Economic Justice and True Value”)
“Come see a man!!”  I’m bringing him back!! But he never really left!  We left him!  And when we return to him he will fling open his arms, draw the water from his own deep well and will quench our raging thirsts with the sweetness of his unfathomable grace!
Oh!  Come see a man!
Oh! Go show a man!
Oh! Go serve a man!
Oh!  Bring him back!  Bring him back!  Bring him back!

The Episcopal Address - Bishop William Hutchinson

EPISCOPAL ADDRESS - June 6, 2011
Louisiana Annual Conference
Shreveport, Louisiana
Bishop William W. Hutchinson
“God Alone is Changeless”


“There’s been a change in the RiverThere’ll be a change in the seaAnd from now on there’ll be a change in me…., and thee…., and we…..”

When I was a kid our class at school did a musical play called “Mississippi Melody.”  I had the distinct joy of being cast as Huck Finn.  There were several songs in the play, but the only one I remember went like this:
“Mississippi, roll on past my door.  Mississippi, stay on your own floorWhen you’re glad you bring delight to me; when you’re mad you are an awful sight to see!Once I left you, won’t do that no more.  I want to live and dieBy that Mississippi River shore!”
(I’ve wanted to sing that to you for the last eleven years!  I just couldn’t find the proper time to do it!)
The people of Louisiana are indeed a unique people – culturally, geographically, and historically.  Until relatively recent years we were separated by rivers and bayous which allowed us to develop several distinct cultural identities.  As the bridges and roads began to get built and access to other areas of the state became more of a possibility, we were challenged with what it means to move out of our own individual life-styles and into a corporate life-style that included all of us.  The dominant theological approach in northern Louisiana has been influenced by the Baptists and Pentecostals.  The southern tier of parishes has been shaped theologically by Roman Catholicism:  French Roman Catholicism at that, which has its own unique flavor (no food puns intended!)  And in the midst of that mix the Methodists came on horseback, by boat, and any other means necessary to traverse our beautiful land and waters to reach souls for Christ and introduce them to Wesleyan theology, which compliments all the rest in many ways, and challenges them to the core in many other ways.
When the Louisiana Purchase was consummated in 1803, this heretofore forbidden territory to Protestants was opened and Methodist Circuit Riders made their way from the state of Mississippi into the virgin territory.  Vying for the distinction of the oldest Methodist church west of the Mississippi isEden United Methodist Church, just outside Jena, and also Louisiana Memorial United Methodist Church in Opelousas.  I suspect there was little contact between these two infant bodies because of all the natural barriers to communication and that is what has led to the confusion as to which one was established first.  Methodist Churches for those of African descent were established later, with one of the oldest being Asbury in Natchitoches.
We have been a people marked by natural disaster:  floods, hurricanes, tornados, fires.  We’ve also experiencedhuman induced disasters such as the Gulf Oil Spill of 2010.  There was the 1927 flood of the Mississippi, the 1937 flood, the 1973 flood, and now the 2011 flood.  Hurricanes have been numerous and could fill a book of names of choice:  Audrey, Betsy, Camille, Andrew, Lilly, Katrina, Rita, Gustav, Ike, you add your favorite. 
All of these have been defining moments of turning, especially Katrina and Rita, and gave us permission to open doors to new ways of doing things, pushing us to new models, revealing to us the resilience of our people who have inherently known “what to do” in every case, even while our cry was “We don’t know what to do!”  The changes afforded were not just the works of nature, but were the work of the Holy Spirit which used these crisis moments to give us strength not only to continue but to explore new territory.  We have reconfigured the face of the church and even redirected the mission of the church in New Orleans and in southwest Louisiana as a result of Katrina and Rita.
Because we have experienced the ability to do the hard work of redirecting our lives, as well as being on the receiving end of the pushback that always accompanies creativity and newness, it has emboldened us not to back away from bold new directions in subsequent years.  It has become obvious that bold new decisions, hard decisions, can be made for the wellbeing of the local churches and the annual conference and while these may be unpopular at the moment, the annual conference has demonstrated a trusting spirit that continues to give leadership the freedom to innovate for the strengthening of our ability to address our mission field. 
While we have been in the midst of reinventing ourselves as the result of disasters, the General Church has been in the process of questioning themselves as to our decline, our sustainability, and our future.  These questions led the Council of Bishops to the proposals that are now being referred to as “The Call to Action.”  This is a proposed action that comes out of the realization that there is a church in crisis that is larger than any one annual conference.  Both clergy and laity are positioned and ready to move in decisive and definitive ways to address the crisis.
The Extended Cabinet, given financial support and encouragement from the United Methodist Foundation of Louisiana and under the consultation and facilitation of Dr. Gil Rendle has been working steadily and intentionally to bring a new day to Louisiana United Methodism that will assist us in being a more effective movement for the cause of Christ.  We began our redirection with looking at clergy profiles and service records, and looking at local church histories and performances over a ten year period.  Now we are ready to move to ways to bring the laity on board in more complete and effective partnership.Our conference is more than ready to receive the benefits of thelaity’swisdom and passion for the wellbeing of the mission of the church. We’re very clear, laity.  We are not asking you to be followers, but complete partners in a new ministry.
So, crisis has been a power driver and this has led us to be a comeback people.  I am telling this bold story to you because this story allows us to be very bold going into tomorrow.  Katrina and Rita in particular hijacked our normal lifestyle, but our way of doing church has been set free through that crisis and that has been a blessing and a very positive thing.
  1.  THE WORK OF THE EXTENDED CABINET
In the fall of 2010, the Extended Cabinet made a visit to every district in the Conference to introduce to you the work we had done to that point.  The work included identification of the main question that was being asked consistently across the Conference, “What is your mission field?”  Charge Conferences, Ministry Plans, January Review Forms all contained that question.  You have done wonderful work in beginning to identify the answer to that for each of your own particular situations.  It is still a critical and foundational question that must be addressed.
In addition to the mission field question, there was a new request based on some very intense work around four prototypes of churches – 1. “On the Move”, 2.) “Faithful and Strong”, 3.) “Rekindling the Vision”, and 4.) “Passing the Mantle.”  Every pastor, every lay-leader, every church was asked to go back to their faith community and do the necessary discussion/evaluation that would help them come to a decision as to how to “self-identify” themselves as a faith community.  You did very well in responding to that request.  Here are the results:
                 67 - On the Move
                149 – Faithful and Strong
                162 – Rekindling the Vision
                 20 – Passing the Mantle
There was a fifth category as well.  Those who chose not to respond to the request to do this faith-community work.  Those duly constituted churchesthat made no response at all numbered 105.
Thank you to the 398 churches who took this request seriously.  You are providing the Annual Conference with great information to move us to the next steps.  You also will be the beneficiaries of the positive things that are afforded to those who clearly know who they are! 
Speaking of bold steps, as I was a minute ago, I say a profound “Thank You” to those 20 churches who made the boldest identification, and the most difficult – the Passing the Mantle churches.  We are working now on getting professional guidance on how to best help you as you determine how you can pass the mantle in a creative and strategic fashion that will continue to help build the Kingdom of God.
It is very disappointing that 105 churches chose not to respond to this requested information.  What that says to me is that you don’t take your present or your future seriously and you don’t take your connectedness to your sister churches seriously either.  I speak to you specifically now, but I want all to hear.  If you did not respond to this request:
  1. You are now behind 398 of your sister churches and fellow clergy and fellow lay leaders.  Either you didn’t take the request seriously, thought it was unimportant, or you didn’t have clergy or lay leadership with adequate skills to do this work. 
  2. Pastors of these 105 churches –
    1. There will be no Ministry Plan meeting with your District Superintendent this year.  The reason for that is that you will not be able to participate in planning your ministry as to how to deal with the next steps in making your church or your ministry vital without this information.  The District Superintendent won’t waste her/his time, or your time, until you are prepared to be part of the moving body of the Annual Conference.
    2. More than likely there will be no Charge Conference as you have come to know it for you.  You will be required to do the necessary paperwork and turn it in, but the District Superintendent will most likely not be taking the time to come to you because, again, you aren’t prepared for next steps.
    3. There may need to be some special meetings with the “no-responders” to deal with your delinquent work, but those will be scheduled on an as-deemed appropriate basis.
    4. If you have questions about any of this, I encourage you to talk with your District Superintendent who can help you know what you need to do to get in the main-stream of the Conference work and mission.
I asked for some additional information regarding these 105 churches.  Even though you chose not to participate in the requested work of the Annual Conference, you did produce:
  1.  A total of 124 Professions of Faith collectively
  2. An apportionment payout of 95.17%
  3. A total of 9126 members in 2010, which is only 24 less than 2009
  4. A total of 3784 average worship attendance, which is a decline of 82 from 2009
  5. 21 churches had a Confirmation Class in 2009, but only 12 had a confirmation class in 2010, with a total of 75 participants overall.
I am encouraged that these statistics, with the exception of the precipitous drop of Confirmation Classes, held so well in these 105 churches! My great concern is that this will not remain the case if you continue to choose to separate yourselves from the mainstream work of the Conference.
For the 398 who are ready to progress, the main question for you in 2011-2012 will be, “How are you focusing on the Mission/mission field?”
We will be coming to you again this fall with a further update on our work, just as we promised you we would do.  At this point in time we are not totally certain of that format, or of those dates, but we will have both to you in the immediate future so you can plan.  All, including those 105 “No-Responders”, are welcome to be there.  These, again, will not be mandated meetings.  But, if you are interested in being an active and informed part of the Louisiana Annual Conference, you will be present.
So, how did all this 2010 work affect the Annual Conference in 2010? 
  1. More churches know their mission field now than they did at the start of 2010.
  2. For the first time in several years we had a gain in Membership in the Annual Conference!! In 2010 we showed a gain in membership of 257, compared to a loss of 1590 in 2009.That’s great news!
  3. There was an apportionment payout of 98.5%.
  4. We had 95 more professions of faith in 2010!
  5. We had 62 more enrolled in Confirmation Preparation Classes.
  6. And when all was said and done, our churches paid out a total of $13,456,330 MORE than in 2009. 
It’s been a great year for God’s Kingdom. 
And in the area of Appointment–making, our new metrics helped significantly.  Let me just say that we made appointments this year without the compensation figures on the board in front of us.  We didn’t focus on how much a clergy person was being paid, and we did not focus on the salary being paid by the church.  We began with the metrics we have laid out for both the church and the pastor, and we worked to match the two by those metrics without money being a deciding factor.  When we went back and put the money beside our work, it was amazing how well it all worked out. 
We were able to make the appointments this time with hard data in front of us and did not rely on our uneducated estimates and our subjective internal feelings and faulty memories as the main driving factors.  As a result I believe we have made the best set of appointments yet.  They were determined by what the church said was their mission and mission field, and this should strengthen the mission and ministry of the church so they can truly “make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world.”
> Financial Considerations
Let’s move now to the consideration of some of the financial issues facing the denomination and, consequently, all of us.  Let’s start with this video prepared for a spring meeting hosted by the General Board of Pensions and Health Benefits and the General Commission on Finance and Administration, and attended by six persons from our Annual Conference specifically invited for their dealing with and expertise in financial matters, plus the bishop:
To get a feel for the impact of the message of this video I want you to indulge me in a little visual display.  Would those of you under 35 years of age please stand?
  • Between  36-45
  • Between 46-55
  • Between 56-65
  • Over 65
You see how we in Louisiana reflect the statistics that drove the concern of this video.
I’ve also learned in recent days that statisticians now say that it takes a church of 125 in average attendance to sustain a full –time clergy person.  Let me state that again.  It takes a church of 125 in average attendance to sustain a full-time clergy person.  Let me give you some disturbing statistics for Louisiana:
We have 502 churches.  Of those 502 here is the breakdown of average attendance statistics for 2010:
  • 86 with more than 100 in average attendance
  • 416 under 100 average attendance
  • Of that 416 under 100, about half of those are under 50 in attendance
These attendance statistics have major implications for where we go in the future.  They have to do with how many full-time clergy we can support.  (It is shocking to know that in the last 2 ½ years we have lost some 30 full-time appointments in Louisiana!)They have major connotations as to how many people the Board of Ordained Ministry can admit into the Annual Conference. They have major connotations on how we recruit and encourage young men and women to go into ordained ministry.  They have to do with church vitality, which I will say more about in a moment.  They have to do with whether a small number of people can really be a church, or should they be treated more as a Sunday School class, or a small group, or as a mission outreach post but not necessarily a “preaching point?”
Let me go back to the six person team who went to Ft. Worth.  When that gathering was completed, the team determined they would like to dialogue further in order the help strengthen the position of the Louisiana Annual Conference.  Again, with the help of the United Methodist Foundation of Louisiana, this team of people has met twice more, with Dr. Gil Rendle joining and leading us at the last meeting.  We worked on what this group’s major contribution might be to the well-being of our Conference. 
As a result of the last meeting, I have made the decision to gather a team consisting of eleven persons plus the bishop that has no authority to make decisions, but that will be asked to give advice to our structures as to whether the proposals in front of us are financially sustainable or not, or are they even strategically wise from a church vitality standpoint.  This team will be called the “Strategic Vitality Task Force” and will be meeting throughout the Conference year to review and strategize with our structured committees as to how the ministries we have deemed important can be initiated, sustained and supported fully.   The “death tsunami” mentioned in the video threatens the sustainability of what we already have, which includes all our “historical favorites”.  If we want to be a church that is nimble enough to meet the new duties demanded by a new day, then we’re going to have to deal with our money resources just like the federal government, the state governments, the city governments, etc. are doing every day. 
> THE GLOBAL CHURCH AND THE CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES
There has been much said over the past year about “The Call to Action.”  This is the initiative begun by the Council of Bishops and that has now taken on major proportions as we approach General Conference 2012.  This past April 6 some 120 United Methodists gathered across Louisiana to participate in a web-cast seminar and discussion group on this proposal. 
The main thrust of the “Call to Action” is to develop vital congregations across the denomination.  This is very similar to our own local work of trying to renew our churches to be vital in our work in Louisiana.  There are four main drivers identified that propel a vital congregation.  They are:
  1. Effective pastoral leadership including aspects of management, vision and inspiration.
  2. Multiple small groups and programs for children and youth.
  3. A mix of traditional and contemporary worship services.
  4. High percentages of spiritually engaged laity who assume leadership roles.
As General Conference approaches we will hear more about these drivers and how we can incorporate them into our denominational renewal and, most of all, the renewal of a major force for the Kingdom of God.  United Methodism has all the tools necessary to become a great movement of God’s people again.  All we have to do is respond to the leading of the Holy Spirit to take us there.
> THE THREE TASK FORCES THAT ARE TO REPORT AT THIS SESSION
When we left Annual Conference in 2010 we had given three task forces some work to do with a request they bring their findings back to this session.  Those were a task force to study Church Extension, one to study Multicultural Ministries, and one to study Conference Camping and the Wesley Center.  These task forces were duly constituted and have faithfully done their work.  As you have read your pre-conference journal you have seen what their proposals will be.  Let me give you a quick preview and a couple of comments:
> The Task Force on Church Extension and Revitalization
This task force is coming to the Annual Conference with a proposal that would bring major change to the direction and priorities of the Conference.  These changes, if adopted will have major impact on the budget of the Conference.  The proposal is indeed exciting!  It will be fascinating to see how this body handles this report!
> Multicultural Ministries Task Force
This task force will ask for an extension of time for their work.  They wish to have the 2011-2012 Conference year to do a series of listening posts throughout the state and then bring a “robust recommendation” to the 2012 Annual Conference session.
> Camping Ministry/Wesley Center Task Force
This task force was constituted along with the other two and is bringing a recommendation that includes better communication between camps.  There also was consideration of creating a new conference position, “Conference Camping Coordinator”.   They see the need and necessity for an availability of the programs being offered and in effect offer no change for consideration.
This task force probably had the hardest work because they were dealing with longer history.  But the day will come, starting at least with the “death tsunami” when we will be forced to reconsider whether this present arrangement can be continued.
All three of these reports will be before you for debate and action.
> CONTINUING CONCERNS
There are a few continuing concerns I lift before you once again.  Until we have solutions for these, I will be bringing them to your attention.
1. Conference Reserves
We continue to face the future on a “pay as you go” basis.  In essence we have no reserves substantial enough to bail us out of a problem should it arise.  The only place we would be able to get funding for an emergency beyond our normal budget would be:
  1. Apportion a larger amount to the churches
  2. Depend upon the general church to send funds to rescue us, which is a very unlikely solution given the difficulties of the general church!
  3. Sell properties, such as the camps I just mentioned and other institutional properties
We simply must determine a way to increase the Conference reserves as we move into the future.
2. Africa University Pledge
Another year has come and gone and we still haven’t approached how we are going to raise the $1,000,000 pledged to Africa University by the 2005 Annual Conference Session.  I had a meeting just this past month with representatives from Africa University who are ready to help us with the raising of this money.  They are ready for us to underwrite the addition to the Campus Student Union which they desperately need. 
Perhaps the Strategic Vitality Task Force can help us find ways to address this.  I am concerned that these funds were pledged during my tenure as bishop and it looks as if I might be retiring before they are secured.  I certainly do not desire to leave a $1,000,000 debt to the next Episcopal administration.
3. I have tried to keep you apprised of the decisions being made by the general church that will directly affect us financially.  That has been particularly true with regard to clergy benefits.  Let me just approach the two most costly:
  1. Pensions –
The very mention of that word sends shivers through the spines of the clergy.  But you need to know what may be proposed.  There is a proposal that pension payments will be lessened so that local churches can continue to afford a pastor.  Let me put this as concisely as I can:
Currently the CRSP Defined Benefit is 1.25% of the Denominational Average Compensation per year of service.  The proposal is to reduce that benefit to 1% of the Denominational Average Compensation and make even that available only to those serving ½ time or above.  Currently this retirement benefit is available to those serving ¼ time and above. Here’s what that would mean practically:  Today, the Denominational Average Compensation for pension purposes is $61,716.  Under our current plan a full time pastor with 40 years of service would receive $30,858 per year for retirement.  Under the proposed plan, this same pastor would receive “$24,686 in annual retirement, for a reduction of $6.172 per year. 
In addition to the Defined Benefit plan, there is the CRSP Defined Contribution Plan.  Currently this is set at 3% of the Denominational Average Compensation.  It is paid entirely by the local church or the extension ministry to which a pastor is appointed.  In the new proposal, the amount of contribution would stay at 3% ONLY if the clergy person contributes 1% of their plan compensation themselves.  In other words, this will be a sharing of cost between the individual pastor and the church. That will be new.
Several other proposals are being considered that will limit the duration of the treatment of some disabilities, will increase the amount of time one must serve before being eligible for death benefits, and will institute a flat death benefit in place of one that increases with the rise in the Denominational Average Compensation.  These proposals are an effort to make all benefits affordable and sustainable into the future.
Clergy salaries and benefits are causing increasing difficulty in sustaining full-time appointments.  As I mentioned earlier, in the past 2 1/2 years we have lost some 30 full time appointments in Louisiana, and that is greatly attributable to unsustainable costs related to a full time pastor. 
Let me quickly state, “Pastors earn every cent they are paid.”  There is no question about that. Many are actually on the poverty level bubble as far as the amount of their Winn-Dixie money at that!  My heart goes out and my hat comes off to you who are working at the minimum levels!  But all of us see the dilemma.  We cannot continue to have shrinking churches and escalating salaries and have viable congregations with full time pastoral leadership.  We don’t want to balance the shrinking budgets on the backs of clergy benefits, but we also do not want clergy benefits to make a church unable to survive.
      2. Health Insurance
Health Insurance is another battle we are continually facing as far as sustainability of what we currently provide.  There is no prediction regarding health insurance other than increasing costs.  Right now we seem to be stable in our income vs. our outflow.  But that has not always been the case, and without a continued rise in the amount billed for health insurance, we will not be able to even sustain what we have at the current levels.
Let me bring the 2011 Episcopal Address to a close with some exciting thoughts for the future:
Laity Retreat
There will be a laity retreat next spring in which Dr. Gil Rendle will be sharing with the laity all the many exciting things he has been sharing with the Extended Cabinet, the Strategic Vitality Task Force, The Bi-Annual Clergy gathering “Tending our Lives”, and with the general church in various settings.  The dates for that retreat are March 16-17, 2012.   I would love to see the Wesley Center absolutely packed to overflowing with laity from across the Conference who are saying, “We’re ready for the new day.”
The beginning of a year of Ministry with the Poor. 
The theme of our Conference is “Ministry with the Poor.”  We are in for an exciting time as we hear from Jorge Acevedo, our teacher/preacher for this Conference.  We have already experienced a very successful “Day of Caring” that reached out across Louisiana with a ministry of care and concern.  We will be receiving your commitments for ministry and money for the coming year as our offering on Tuesday night.  It should be a year unlike any other in our recent history when we intentionally work alongside and “with” the poor to make our state and world a better place.
New recruiting and training for our leaders of today and tomorrow. 
The new “Awakening” event, a weekend of discernment for 16-18 year olds is one of the most exciting new academies on our calendar.  The first one this past January had some 30 youth from across our Conference in attendance.  Look out Louisiana when these outstanding young people enter the ranks of our clergy and our lay leadership!  They won’t take “yesterday’s news” as their mantra.  They will blaze their own trails in response to God’s call.
And there is the new LEAP program (Leadership Excellence Advancement Program)  being offered by the United Methodist Foundation of Louisiana for pastors who have already served 5 years as an ordained clergyperson, and who have at least 15 more years to serve.  Under the guidance of Reverend Janice Virtue, a leadership consultant and educator, this program promises to give our clergy in these specific service ranges new energy, expertise, and commitment to growing a more vital church in Louisiana.  Our first class will be announced on August 15, 2011 and will begin their two year course in learning on September 26, 2011.  Clergy, you have until June 15 to get your applications in!  This will be a “first class” course in Leadership and I urge you to take advantage of it.
Our Disaster Recovery Ministry that has occupied almost all of our energy and attention since 2005 is indeed coming to an end.  That is barring any new disasters that might visit us!  We will be part of a final Hoorah! On Wednesday of this week!  What a journey it has been!
And here’s just one for the road:  Think what we could do if we had a fund that was designated to help pay for the placement of newly graduated clergy in some very specific “teaching churches” where they would be mentored by effective Senior Pastors and by leading lay women and men who know what it means to be a vital and alive church.  If we could take our graduating seminarians and place them in some prepared learning settings such as our most vital and creative churches, think what that practical experience would do for them and for the churches they would serve into the future!  Oh, it would indeed be a great gift to Christ’s Holy Church!
When someone with that vision steps up to the plate and says, “I’d like to help get that fund started”, it will be a blessed new day for Louisiana United Methodism.  I’d love to speak with you if you or someone you know has that nudging call from God to step forward.
Finally, let me speak just a word about the delegate elections that we will have for the General and Jurisdictional Conferences.  Louisiana has been a model Conference in the make-up of the delegations you send to these very important policy-setting conferences.  Our delegations have been inclusive of gender, of age, of racial identity, of theological position, and sociological background.  When you see our delegation, you see a representative face of Louisiana United Methodism.  As we prepare ourselves to vote once again, I ask that you prayerfully consider the makeup of the delegation.  I pray you will continue to make it inclusive and representative, as well as competent, committed, and consecrated to the task before them. This is no place for a popularity contest, but it is the place where the dedicated servants of God can be selected to go and do the draining, difficult, and demanding work of ten non-stop days in Tampa, Florida after they have spent the better part of a year reading volumes, meeting in preparation, listening to the desires of colleagues, and praying fervently for Almighty God’s direction.
The legislation that comes before this General Conferenced will have major impact on the future of the United Methodist Church and of our strength for the work of Christ’s Kingdom.  And the election of a new Episcopal leader for Louisiana, which will happen at the Jurisdictional Conference in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, will be crucial to the ongoing work of the Annual Conference.  I don’t want to dwell on this point.  You know what I am asking you to do.  Please let the Holy Spirit inform and guide your actions as you seek for those who can best represent our Conference in this important work.
And that brings to a close this version of the Episcopal Address!  It’s been a special joy sharing it this year.  You are a superb Annual Conference and you do exceptional work!  We have leaders, both lay and clergy, who are second to none!  I am absolutely humbled and thrilled to be given the privilege to serve with you in Christ’s ministry.  Thankyou once again, for incorporating Kay and me into your lives and for making us part of your faith journey.  We are indeed blessed beyond all measure.
I close with this prayer of Teresa of Avila:
“Let nothing upset you, let nothing frighten you, everything is changing; God alone is changeless.  Patience attains the goal.  Who has God lacks nothing; God alone fills all our needs.”
Amen and Amen