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A Pastoral Letter from Presbyterians for Renewal |
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Written by Presbyterians For Renewal
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Saturday, 10 July 2010 18:31 |
(To download this letter as a PDF file, click here.)
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
Grace and peace from God our Father through our Lord Jesus Christ. The 219th General Assembly is now adjourned. This Assembly faced an overwhelming amount of business. Like their predecessors throughout our history, commissioners responded faithfully and well in several decisions and faltered in others. Throughout these ten days, however, there has been much evidence of God’s continuing grace and power. Now it is our turn, as Jesus’ followers within the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), to understand and respond appropriately to the Assembly actions that most directly impact our ministry and our witness, and to honor and serve Jesus Christ both in our congregations and in our communities.
If you were looking to this Assembly for a “win” you will be disappointed by some actions and elated by others.
- This Assembly voted to remove the “fidelity and chastity” standard for ordained officers (G-6.0106b), an action that requires the approval of the presbyteries in order to be implemented. This action gives us the opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to fidelity in marriage between a man and a woman and chastity in singleness as a standard of behavior for deacons, elders, and ministers of the Word and sacrament. While it is unfortunate that we must face this challenge again, face it we will in joyful obedience. When Assembly actions come before your presbytery, we urge you in the strongest possible terms to see to it your congregation is fully represented and your voice is clearly heard.
- Proposals for non-geographic synod or presbytery structures that would allow congregations to maintain more rigorous standards for membership and leadership while remaining united in ministry within the PC(USA) failed, along with the request to form an additional non-geographic Korean presbytery. Clearly there is continuing misunderstanding of the term “inclusive” among Presbyterians. These conversations are far from over, however, and we are already initiating next steps.
- The Assembly did not approve a potentially catastrophic action that would have granted local option for the solemnization of same-gender marriages to pastors and sessions in states where this is now legal. This action came to the Assembly as a request for Authoritative Interpretation. Had it passed, the decision by the Assembly would have taken effect immediately without the possibility of consideration in the presbyteries. We commend the Assembly for their action not only in defeating this attempt to circumvent the essential deliberative nature of our polity, but by reaffirming their convictions by an even stronger margin when a call was made to reconsider the initial vote.
- Perhaps the most alarming action the Assembly took was to urge the Board of Pensions to extend benefits to the same-gender spouses and domestic partners of non-ordained church employees. If this request is implemented by the Board of Pensions, it will result in a projected 1% increase in pension and medical payments across the board. Please remember that the Assembly can only make this a request to the Board of Pensions. A request has also been made to the BOP for some form of relief of conscience.
No matter the outcome on any single vote, we who follow Jesus must remember that “wining” and “losing” are matters of the body politic, not the Body of Christ. For every “win” in a divided body, there are brothers and sisters who suffer loss, and the Scripture we love and affirm reminds us that, when one part of the body suffers, we all suffer. Jesus Christ has already attained the final “win.” Conveying that truth in biblical faithfulness and missional justice is our central calling.
If you are looking for signs of hope and progress this week, you can find them. The Assembly:
- corrected misguided language in the statement of the 218th General Assembly (2008) on the relationship between Christians and Muslims,
- affirmed the continuing project to retranslate the Heidelberg Catechism in a healthy and exciting partnership with the Christian Reformed Church and the Reformed Church in America,
- dramatically improved 27 key sections of the proposed new Form of Government which will now be considered by the presbyteries,
- took a reasoned stand in speaking to ongoing conflicts in the Middle East, and
- sent the full witness (majority and minority reports) of the Special Committee on Civil Unions and Christian Marriage to congregations and presbyteries for study.
If you are looking for an opportunity to be a clear and faithful witness for Jesus Christ, we have it!
- Efforts to uphold biblical standards were once again defeated in part by the assertion that unity and health in the denomination will be achieved the moment we get past our current debates. To suggest that condoning gay sex among members and ordained leaders will bring unity and peace to the Body of Christ is like saying pre-marital sex will stabilize adolescent dating relationships or an extra-marital affair will help heal a broken marriage. It is a lie, and people on all sides of the issue know it. We are called to be witnesses to the transforming truth of Jesus Christ. Will we rise to the challenge with gentleness, determination, compassion, conviction, and abundant grace?
- Voices that speak with authority including, but not limited to, advisory and advocacy groups, are not met with a substantive challenge when they mislead or misguide the thoughts and actions of commissioners. This happens at every level in our denomination, largely because many of us have opted to disengage from conversation and debate. We who are attempting to speak with the orthodox Church throughout history and the majority Church today are being perceived by some as a dwindling minority in the PC(USA) because we are staying away or staying silent when we have the God-given opportunity, the Christ-given commission, and the Spirit-given power to speak. Will we take these opportunities and be silent no more?
Now is not the time to lay low or even to consider leaving the PC(USA). This Assembly has forestalled overtures and committee revisions that could have had devastating consequences in many of our congregations. Now is the time for truly evangelical voices to speak and lead us toward revival in the name and in the spirit of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Oswald Chambers once wrote,
"Thank God that he does give us difficult things to do. His salvation is a joyous thing, but it is also something that requires bravery, courage and holiness. It tests us for all we are worth… God’s grace produces men and women with a strong family likeness to Jesus Christ, not pampered, spoiled, weaklings. It takes a tremendous amount of discipline to live the worthy and excellent life of a disciple of Jesus Christ in the realities of life (and we add, of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)). And it is always necessary for us to make an effort to live a life of worth and excellence."
—My Utmost for His Highest, devotional reading for July 7th
When the PFR General Assembly Team convened on July 1st, it was with these familiar words. As we close this letter, we commend them now to you:
“Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice! Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near. Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
— Philippians 4:4-7
Presbyterians for Renewal is committed to helping you continue in biblically faithful, missionally minded leadership within the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). Look to us for continuing resources to understand, interpret, and navigate the opportunities we have before us, and to help build networks of faithful witness across the denomination in the strength and love of our Savior Jesus Christ.
The Board, Staff, and General Assembly Team of Presbyterians for Renewal
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The Faith Once Delivered...Prof. Andrew Purves at the PFR General Assembly Breakfast |
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Written by Dr. Andrew Purves, Professor of Reformed Theology, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 01:00 |
Dr. Andrew Purves, Professor of Reformed Theology at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, addressed the crowd at the "PFR Breakfast" at the 219th General Assembly in Minneapolis, MN. His topic: "The Faith Once For All Delivered to the Saints" (Jude 1:3).
To download the audio of Dr. Purves' address, "right click" the file linked below and select "Save as..." To listen in your web browser, "left click" on the play button: Purves Audio (mp3).
The full text of the address is below. (Download the PDF)
I called Paul Detterman to ask what I could say that would be helpful. As we chatted he suggested that there was a sense that the wind had gone out of the sails of a lot of people. There is weariness settling in, he said, that he had not seen before. What people needed to be reminded of, Paul suggested is that the basic truths are indeed true. I wondered aloud to Paul if the weariness was related to seemingly never-ending attempts to reinvent the faith, as if we were tired battle the notion the core message no longer holds. His noisy affirmation across the ether between our phones was confirmation that I had my topic for this morning.
This morning my theme is the faith once for all delivered to the saints. That this faith is always set within specific cultures, and is never culture free, is in no doubt. But it is to the first side of that relation of tension between what is given and what is received that I want to speak.
If I may crib from Chesterton: I have a fancy for writing a theological romance about a Scottish theologian who set out to be a man on the make – as J. M. Barrie once put it. He bought a little boat, for he was a well paid theologian, and set off from the Port of Leith in Edinburgh to sail the theological waters, and perchance to discover a new theological land out there. So off he sailed, hither and yon, until one day he saw land. With great excitement he anchored, and with much huffing and puffing began to explore this seemingly new theological landscape, only to realize he had miscalculated his course, and landed back in Scotland under the impression that it was a new theological island of his dreams.
Too much we have been sailing around and trying to discover new theological lands. By God’s grace may we come home and discover the land of our theological dreams and name it for what it is: confessional orthodoxy.
A Ph. D. student approached me recently to get some solace. He was in a program where he was having a hard time. His faculty was insisting that he had to do constructive theology – whatever that is. (Sounds like inventing to me!) He had been reading some of my books, and in horror, his faculty told him to stop. “Purves is a conserving theologian” (not conservative, note – that would be labeling me, a bad thing to do, apparently). Well, my response to that is: Right on! I confess the faith of the ecumenical creeds; it is not my job to reinvent the faith. They work and they survive, certainly with problems all over the place, yet they do so because they are successful at protecting the central mysteries of the faith.
An odd thing has been happening among us at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary: students are excited about old theology. I don’t mean a return to the 17th century, or even to the 16th; I mean a return to the 3rd, 4th, and 5th, centuries, to the old Greek and, curious to say, to the old Celtic, doctors of the church. Among the hot theologians in Pittsburgh are Athanasius, Gregory of Nazianzus, and Macrina, on the one hand, and Patrick of Ireland, Brigit of Kildare, and the most blessed Columba of Iona, on the other. As new translations makes the old stuff available to an eager generation of students, who eat this stuff up like theological pac-people, the theological landscape is being changed accordingly. Greek and Celtic theology is as passionate debated as the Pittsburgh Steelers.
And what does this theological landscape look like? Once again Arius, who seems not to have gone away, is being battled head on: with Athanasius we confess that Jesus is one in being with the Father. That’s the big deal and the real deal. With Gregory of Nazianzus Trinitarian modalism is rejected in favor of three persons, one God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The creator is the Father, through the Word, in the power of the Spirit. The redeemer is the Son, sent from the Father, in the power of the Spirit. The sustainer is the Spirit, sent from the Father, through the Son. Analogical and relational language indeed, but not a metaphor in sight! With the blessed Macrina we confess a future in glory because Jesus lives. Jesus in the present tense is known as a living Lord. Our sole and soul hope is that we are joined to his life. Calvin called it union with Christ, Gregory, and later Barth, called it participatio Christi, the Apostle Paul called it living in Christ.
The theological landscape at Pittsburgh Seminary is also influence by Patrick who knew that we cannot share in Christ’s communion with the Father, without sharing in his mission from the Father. With Briget of Kildare we are attracted to a faith that expects to find God in the common places amid the ordinary relations and issues of life, and maybe we too will turn bathwater into beer. (That really was one of her miracles – look it up.) With Columba we understand ourselves to live in tension between wandering and settlement, between mission and worship, and between humility and expecting to do great things for God. As the Loch Ness monster fled from Columba’s rebuke, what for us in Christ is the equivalent challenge today?
The point is: the catholic, ecumenical, orthodox, and evangelical faith of the church is engaged. In this regard, I am not a reinventor. It was H. R. Mackintosh, the Scottish theologian who taught in Edinburgh through the first third of the 20th century, and who was as lovely, pious and wise a theologian as one can read, who once remarked that “what faith does is not to create the revelation it apprehends, but to perceive and accept it. The creative activity is on God’s side.” (fn.1) “Theology,” says Macintosh, “is not so much a creative as an interpretative study.” (fn.2) Indeed!
The other side of refusing to reinvent the faith is the acknowledgement that we are, as John Leith used to say, a ‘traditioned’ people. We are numbered among the communion of saints; we are embedded with a people, past, present and yet to come. An individualized, merely contemporized Christian is an oxymoron – I have the same problem with so-called contemporary worship if that means we are not joined to the worship of the whole church, past, present and future; but that’s an issue for another day. Our Christian identity is given through a tradition that reaches back to our election in Jesus Christ from before the foundation of the world (Eph.1:3), to God’s call to Abraham, to God’s assumption of our humanity in, through and as Jesus, and forward to the eschatological consummation when Jesus comes again to gather all things to the Father.
Or, differently, reading scripture, we subscribe to tradition, for through the Spirit scripture is a product of the process of Hebrew and church traditions by which some texts were venerated and others disregarded. And traditions emerged through which these texts have been interpreted. We call them creeds. Singing a received hymn of the church, we subscribe to tradition, if by Charles Wesley, early Methodist tradition, if by Isaac Watts, Reformed tradition, if by Bernard of Clairvaux, medieval Roman tradition. Praying the Eucharistic prayer of consecration with any degree of theological sensitivity, we subscribe to the tradition of the formative Eucharistic thinking of the church. No one reads the Bible, worships God, or serves in Christian ministry from a neutral, non-traditioned position.
We are all traditioned in some manner. Chesterton famous quip is appropriate: “Tradition means giving votes to the most obscure of all classes, our ancestors. It is the democracy of the dead. Tradition refuses to submit to the small and arrogant oligarchy of those who merely happen to be walking about.” We are formed by what has gone before us.
Maturity in Christian life arises from serving as an apprentice to a tested tradition. We need to be taught, and to learn humility before, the wisdom of the acknowledged doctors of the church. As Presbyterians we are apprenticed to Calvin and his successors, but also to those to whom he was apprenticed, Athanasius, Gregory, and Augustine, among others. It is the wisdom of tradition that helps protect us from the heresies and rabbit trails that lie ahead. Certainly, and be in no doubt about this, we engage tradition with a critical mind, but always we criticize in humility and with love, recognizing as we do so that the failure to be critical ossifies and reifies tradition, making it an idol. Even so, we never forget it is only because we stand on the shoulders of giants that we can see a little further than they. When we refuse to do so, we barely see the end of our noses, and pious protestations to the contrary, are most likely in thrawl to cultural, ideological and self-serving influences uncritically received, no matter how righteous, religious and spiritual we feel. The great teachers of the faith are hanging around through the centuries because they have been tested and found to be true witness bearers to Jesus, maybe not possessing the whole truth, but more of it than most others.
Many of you, I am sure, know the famous Will Willimon “story of a church history professor at Yale Divinity School who invited an Orthodox priest to be a guest lecturer in his class. The priest was as dry as a bone, droning on and on about the most obscure details of the history of the ancient creeds of the church. And toward the end, as the class was really looking forward to being put out of their misery, a particularly earnest student raised his hand with a question:
“Father Theodore, what can one do when one finds it impossible to affirm certain tenets of the creed?
The priest looked confused. “Well, you just say it. It’s not that hard to master. With a little effort, most can learn it by heart.”
“No, you don’t understand,” the student responded, “what am I to do when I have difficulty affirming part of the creed – like the Virgin Birth?”
Still looking confused, the priest said, “You just say it. It will come to you eventually.”
By then the student had gone from being earnest to being frustrated and pleaded, “How can I with integrity affirm a creed in which I do not believe?”
“It’s not YOUR creed, young man!” said the priest. “It’s OUR creed. Keep saying it for heaven’s sake! Eventually, it may come to you. For some, it takes longer than for others. How old are you? Twenty-three? Don’t be so hard on yourself. There are lots of things you don’t know at twenty-three. Eventually, it may come to you. Even if it doesn’t, don’t worry.” (fn.3)
Let me now, briefly, put flesh on to this talk of tradition. Too often, I believe, we have too small an understanding of Jesus Christ, and of what it is that he is up to. A tragic feature of far too much church talk and church life in my view is Christological timidity – the sure sign of this is a church walking on tip-toes so as not to make too much noise. “Please don’t notice us,” we seem to say. I wonder if we are no longer staggered, overwhelmed, and shaken to our core any more by a living and acting Lord. We have become a faith largely at home in our culture, with a domesticated and safe Lord. In contrast, Bonhoeffer used to say that when a person was encountered by Jesus the Word, that person either had to die or put the Word to death. Nothing domesticated and safe there! An encounter with the living Lord is the heart of Christian faith. He still meets us along the way and demands and commands our unconditional allegiance.
Being encountered by the Lord is not a neutral datum of experience. Saul, encountered by the ascended Lord on the Damascus Road, did not ask a speculative “Who?” question (Acts 9:5). Even less did he ask a How? question: How did you do that? Or enquire of permission: Does Immanuel Kant or Richard Dawkins say you can do that? Rather, Saul was shaken to his core as he was questioned by the voice that spoke out of the flashing light. When we ask, with Saul, “Who are you, Lord?”, we are trying more faithfully to understand who God is who has revealed himself to us, encountered us, and brought us into relationship with himself precisely in, through, and as this man, Jesus of Nazareth. It is a question put by faith, not by unfaith. It is a question put in Christ, and not apart from Christ.
One way to explore the depths of the “who?” question is to reflect briefly on the four great events that are central to Christian faith: the incarnation (which includes the atonement), the resurrection, the ascension, and Pentecost. The church and Christian faith stand or fall on the reality and truth of these events. They are the historic center of what we confess. Nothing new here, but these four Christological markers define the space within which Christian faith is lived.
First, the incarnation, the becoming carnal of God. This is the ‘downward’ movement of God by which God as this particular man enters history by becoming part of God’s creation, yet without ceasing to be God. It is the event in which faith associates the eternal God with an event in history, and attributes a saving significance to it. It is summed up in one staggering sentence from John’s gospel: “The word became flesh” (1:14). God saves in a human way precisely as this man, Jesus.
God saves as this man: “in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily” (Col 2:9) – this is the truly amazing claim of Christian faith, and we must not back away from its particularity and universality one bit. This man in his flesh is God. Had the Word not become incarnate, Jesus would not have existed. But the One who is the incarnate savior of the world is truly a human being. Conflating the words of Paul, he is bone of our bone, flesh of our flesh, born of a woman, born under the law. The incarnate Word is this man, Jesus, son of Mary. The consequence of this becoming flesh is God as Jesus. Thus we must stress the significance of the incarnate life of Jesus Christ for our salvation. Jesus Christ is in himself our salvation. The inner meaning of the incarnation and atonement can be put this way: not only what Christ does for us, but also who Christ is for us in the unity of his divine and human personhood.
As the incarnate Word, Jesus Christ acts personally on our behalf. He is savior in who he is as well as in what he does. Our salvation takes place within his incarnate life, falling thereby both within the life of God and within human life. It is a personal event, so that it is God who saves as the man Jesus. This is a salvation that penetrates to the depths of the human condition. The atonement then is an act of God personally from within the depth of our humanity and on our behalf. We are healed, we can say, from the outside in and from the inside out.
None of this is to circumnavigate the meaning of the cross, for Calvary remains still the event in which the terrible consequences of our human rejection of God are borne to the fullest extent. I am trying to say, however, (1) that our salvation is worked out within the person of Jesus, and that (2) this means that the life and death of Christ have to be very closely held together in our minds in a personal way, and not apart from who Jesus is. Jesus’ life as well as his death saves; indeed, he saves. The consequence of humankind’s sin-separation from God is borne by Jesus, and borne away, as the enfleshed loving of a forgiving and communion-restoring God. The first marker, then, by which Christian faith is identified in the creedal tradition is that Jesus is the saving incarnation of God, God as the man Jesus.
The second is recognizing the identity and purpose of Jesus in the light of the resurrection. The basic message is this: Jesus who was dead is now alive, raised in his body by the power of God the Father. Resurrected, the crucifixion has not ended Jesus’ ministry. Resurrected, he and his ministry have a future. The resurrection also means this: in Christ there is a future too for our humanity, for what happened to Jesus is what will happen to those who are ‘in Christ.’ When we ask, “Who are you, Lord?”(Acts 9:5) we have to say in response, “He has been raised” (Mark 16:6). Jesus lives!
Jesus was raised in the body. The really significant aspect of this is that there is now a future in Jesus, through Jesus, for creation, for bodies. God has not abandoned our flesh, implying thereby that it really is rather nasty stuff, and not as precious as our souls. We are saved in the embodied fullness of our humanity.
Bodily resurrection means many things. One personal story sums up a big part of my Christian hope: my Father, Brendan and I will meet, with Jesus, in the Kingdom of God. The third marker of Christian identity taken from Jesus is the often forgotten event of our salvation, the Lord’s ascension. This is the ‘upward’ movement of Jesus by which the now alive divine-human Lord returns to the Father to continue his ministry. Sometimes we forget that the history of Jesus does not end with his resurrection. He has yet both a present and a future. The absence of his ascension from our theological, liturgical and pastoral thinking and practice are fatal to living in the fullness of faith. In his ascension he does not abandon his humanity; neither is he Lord apart from everything that has happened between his incarnation and resurrection.
Just as there was much more to be said concerning the incarnation, atonement, and the resurrection, also I limit myself here in order to focus on one important point. By his ascension, the past, incarnate ministry of the Jesus who was raised from the dead becomes, through his Spirit, present to every age and person. The earthly ministry of Jesus which was past and particular now becomes present and universal. The consequences of his incarnation and atonement, cross and resurrection, are contemporized. We speak of Jesus in the present tense.
Without the ascension, Jesus’ ministry remains in the past, even given his resurrection. It is not enough for us to believe that he who died for us is alive again. He must yet reign in power and be present in act. By his ascension he ever lives to continue the ministry he had while on earth. The disciples in this sense are not more privileged than we: the Lord who was there with them is, in his Spirit and freedom, here with us. The loss of the ascension is fatal to our Christian lives; without it we lose Jesus as a present, living and reigningLord.
His ascended ministry is not now something new. As in the flesh he was spiritually present to those to whom he ministered, now ascended he is spiritually present to us through the Holy Spirit – the same Lord, the same spiritual presence, and the same ministry, which has at its core our restoration to communion with the Father.
A major task for us is to find ways to emphasize the ascension in a manner corresponding to the emphasis we put on to Christmas and Easter, because Ascension Thursday is one of the four cardinal markers of Christian identity. Throw Ascension Day parties, give Ascension Day gifts, and gather for worship on Ascension Day, for the Lord lives and reigns. Why would we not do these things?
The fourth marker of Christian identity that defines our faith is the sending of the Holy Spirit. Jesus lived, died, rose again, and ascended to the Father for us and for our salvation. The Father now sends us Holy Spirit in order to join us to Jesus Christ, and to share thereby in who he is and in what he does. This theological point is summed up in the doctrine of our union with Christ, which is the principal work of the Holy Spirit. It was central to Calvin’s theology, as my colleagues Charles Partee, Mark Achtemeier and I have often pointed out in our books.
By our union with Christ, which is the work of the Holy Spirit, we share in Christ’s present life and ministry. What is this life and ministry? Through our union with Christ we share in his communion with the Father and in his mission from the Father to bring others into that communion. Christian life is characterized by the dual consequences of our life in Christ: worship and ministry. This is the meaning of being a Christian. This is the core practical theology of Christian faith.
Who, then, is the incarnate savior of the world? He is the present, acting, and reigning Lord. His name is Jesus; his title is Israel’s Messiah. He is the Christmas, Easter, Ascension, and Pentecost Lord. And his ministry is as it always was: the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit, the work of God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, for us.
Union with Christ is the dynamic basis for all faith and ministry in the church, giving everything a Christological center and content. To be in Christ is a Spirit-given event, which means that henceforth Presbyterians are grace gifted through the power of the Pentecost Lord to confess with the church universal: Jesus is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.
Footnotes: (1) H. R. Mackintosh, The Christian Apprehension of God (SCM Press, 1929), 86. (2) Ibid., 118. (3) William H. Willimon, “Formed by the Saints,” Christian Century 113, #5 (Feb. 7-14, 1996), 137.
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The Marvel of This Night: Improvisations on Christmas Carols Old and New |
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Written by Paul Detterman, PFR Executive Director
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Sunday, 22 November 2009 23:29 |
2009 has been a challenging year. Many people have felt the pinch of economic recession including loss or change of employment and increasing financial insecurity. Others have been affected by natural disasters, still others by serious illness or death. The future seems unclear in many critical areas of our lives. And yet we have the relentless promise of Emmanuel--God with us. No matter what happens in any given year, we celebrate the unchanging truth of God’s unending love.
But God’s promise and God’s love, like so much of the foundation undergirding our lives, can be taken for granted. Christmas can, like any other holiday, fall into a pattern of ritual observance and to-do lists. Then, in his time, God intervene—pushing his reality a little deeper into our daily routines, and when this happens, we catch our breath at a glimpse of his glory. This album is the result of one such intervention. The album title comes from a Christmas hymn by Jaroslav Vajda. In this hymn, God is instructing the angelic chorus: “Before the marvel of this night, adoring, fold your wings and bow; then tear the sky apart with light, and with your news the world endow.” Together they tell the story of God’s promise fulfilled, of human longing, and of the joy each human heart can know only in Jesus ChristThe cover image, the amazing color and span of the Orion Nebula as captured by the Hubble telescope, sets the tone—attempting to capture in art and in music what words alone cannot fully convey, and what undisturbed daily routine can so easily forget; into one Song, Jesus, God compressed the love that rules the universe above. (Vajda, stanza 3) The Marvel of This Night features fifteen original arrangements of Advent and Christmas carols. Together they tell the story of God’s promise fulfilled, of human longing, and of the joy each human heart can know only in Jesus Christ, of our welcome into God’s embrace, and of our commission as Jesus’ people. But individually each carol has its own story to tell—its own unique perspective on the gospel. They span seventeen centuries and several cultures. The jacket liner provides texts for personal prayer and meditation.
As part of our ministry, PFR is now pleased to make this CD available for Christmas 2009 for a donation of only $15. And because of a generous gift that covered all production costs, every penny of this donation goes directly to support the ministries of PFR, including Wee Kirk, NPWL, support for seminarians and CLP’s, new directions in congregational transformation, and an ongoing mission to mobilize biblical, missional leaders and be a witness to the hope of the gospel to and through the PC(USA).
You can request copies of The Marvel of This Night to enjoy and to share with family and friends by clicking below, or by using our contact form. Many people are already requesting additional copies to give as Christmas presents.
I recorded this album on a new large Létourneau pipe organ, a grand piano, and a classic Rhodes keyboard—a sound made popular by Stevie Wonder and Herbie Hancock.
Selections include:
The Preparation:
Watchman Tell Us of the Night blended with O Come, O Come Emmanuel; watching and waiting for God’s redeeming Prepare the Way O Zion; a poem of joyful anticipation set to a happy 16th century tune Gabriel's Message; the “Say what?” of the Annunciation expressed in a blues arrangement of a Basque carol
The Incarnation:
O Little Town of Bethlehem; weaving together two beloved tunes associated with this simple nativity text. Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence; the mystery of ancient liturgy expressed in soft contemporary jazz (sample audio) Angels We have Heard on High; a bright and sparkling reminder of the joy with which the angel choir sang (sample audio) What Child is This; with simple beauty a folk tune relates God’s amazing plan of redemption O Jesus So Sweet, O Jesus So Mild; a meditation on the baby called Jesus: fully human, fully God (sample audio)
The Invitation:
All Poor Men and Humble; a Welsh carol welcomes every human being to come to God in Christ It Came Upon the Midnight Clear; the promise of God-with-us still speaking to longing hearts today Past Three O’clock; the “smile” of Christmas—God will never be finished with joyful surprises! The First Noel; a classic carol bridging “then” and “now” and blending styles and sounds (sample audio)
The Proclamation:
The Earth Lay Dark and Still; a text and tune written for this album; the angels’ song inviting us into a life of worship. I Wonder as I Wander; a haunting meditation on the atoning work of God in Christ—the Cross of Christmas Hark the Herald Angels Sing; our joyful commission to live as Christ’s people, watching and waiting for his return!
The opportunity to imagine and produce this album and the process of creating and performing these arrangements has been an amazing gift of God in my life this year. It is my hope that through this album you too may be reminded of the awesome purpose and love of God.
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2010-2011 Women's Bible Study - Revelation: Awaiting the Bridegroom |
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Written by Network of Presbyterian Women in Leadership
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Friday, 23 July 2010 02:53 |
The Network of Presbyterian Women in Leadership announces a new women's Bible study for 2010-2011: Revelation: Awaiting the Bridegroom
Wars, and rumors of wars. Famine, plague, earthquake, political and societal upheaval. These words describe not only our fearful expectation of the end times, but our real experience of the current times – and the real experience of the times in which the apostle John wrote what we’ve come to know as the Book of Revelation.
At its heart, Revelation is not about revealing dates or names of nation states, but rather about revealing its author and his presence and ways with us, now and in eternity. The bridegroom, Jesus Christ, is writing a love letter to his bride, the Church, with the intention of encouraging us as we wait for his return.
In this nine-lesson study, we will get an aerial view of this world from God’s perspective. We will learn to hear his voice, recognize his ways, and respond to his Spirit’s shaping, so that when he returns in all his glorious wedding raiment, we his bride, will be ready. - Order ($8.00) from the PFR Store or by calling 502-425-4630. You can also contact us by email. - Download the Table of Contents, Introduction and Lesson One. (PDF file) - Download the Leaders' Guide. (PDF file) - Download a promotional flyer to share with your congregation or small group. (PDF file)
Meet the Author
 Susan Porterfield Currie ministers in the area of Spiritual Formation, offering spiritual formation teaching and spiritual direction to individuals and groups in the contexts of one-to-ones, small groups, retreats, and classes. Previously the Associate for Spiritual Formation at The Anchor Presbyterian Church in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, she now lives in Hamilton, Massachusetts, where she serves as the Associate for Spiritual Formation for the Pierce Center at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. Additionally, she’s the Program Coordinator and a member of the faculty of Selah, a certificate program in spiritual direction offered through Leadership Transformations Inc. Susan is married to Dave, the founding pastor of The Anchor Presbyterian Church and now Director of the Doctor of Ministry program at Gordon-Conwell, and is graced with three children, Catherine (24), Roy (21), and Elspeth (17).
Meet the Graphic Designer
 Kathy Larson is the Director of Christian Education and Creative Arts at Good Shepherd Presbyterian Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, wife to Patrick, and mom to two year old Caleb! Kathy enjoys all forms of art, but especially theater—she writes, directs, and produces two full length plays a year. Kathy also has a passion for studying and teaching God’s Word.
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