Jesus put another parable before them, saying, “The kingdom of heaven is like a grain of mustard seed that a man took and sowed in his field. It is the smallest of all seeds, but when it has grown it is larger than all the garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.” He told them another parable. “The kingdom of heaven is like leaven that a woman took and hid in three measures of flour, till it was all leavened.” Matthew 13:31–33
God can do great things from small beginnings. In fact, Jesus teaches through many parables that this is the normal way his kingdom functions. Throughout the history of the church we see this pattern time and time again. God takes the humble efforts of his people and does great things. Whole movements have begun through a simple prayer service. Whole nations have come to faith in Jesus through the efforts of lone missionaries. Over a billion people identify as followers of Jesus, and it all started with twelve disciples and a few thousand folk in Jerusalem. And God has done great things here at All Saints! We began as a small group meeting in someone’s home, and have flourished into the wonderful community we are now. All Saints began as a church plant trusting that God was calling us to mission in the world, and now we are sending out another group to plant a new church. I’m excited to announce that The Table will begin weekly worship on January 12th at 4:30 pm. As many of you know, we’ve spent the last few months in the discernment and planning stages. As we’ve gotten closer to launching, 25 members of All Saints have committed to forming the launch group and begin worshipping together on Sundays! We will initially meet in the chapel of Galloway House (located behind the main All Saints building). This is a wonderful space for our initial size, and there is something truly poetic about returning to the chapel where All Saints worshipped many years ago! As we grow, we plan to eventually move over to the main building, worshipping alongside All Saints as an evening congregation. So, what have we been doing the past few months? Well, like a seed germinating and growing its first roots in the ground, there are a lot of unseen things that need to be in place before a new church is planted. For the last few months, we’ve worked hard on building a vision for our ministry, solving logistical challenges, and researching ways to connect with our community. I’ve had immensely helpful phone calls and meetings with Anglican Church planters around the country, and recently visited an innovative church planting movement in Chattanooga, Tennessee. We’ve also been hard at work building a website, logo, and all kinds of materials a church needs. We had productive time working with the vestry on a 2020 budget for The Table, and they have been immensely helpful in getting us headed in the right direction. Most of all, we’ve spent time in prayer to seek the Lord’s direction and encouragement as we prepare to begin. It has been wonderful to know how many of you have been praying for us! Please keep praying for God to guide and bless this new ministry. We are very excited to begin worshipping together and welcome new folks into the Anglican way of following Jesus! Once we’ve been meeting for a bit and gotten into a rhythm, I’d love for folks from All Saints to come check it out. But please, don’t everybody show up at once, or we won’t have room for you all!
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“The LORD has done great things for us and we are glad.” Psalm 126:3 Lately I’ve been thinking about all the Lord has done for All Saints these many years. From a Bible study meeting in a living room 16 years ago, through many twists and turns, the Lord has grown All Saints into a thriving, multi-generational congregation that continues to draw all kinds of folks into the Anglican tradition of following Jesus. Audrey and I often remark in awe that our once quiet halls are filled with the laughter of children, that families continue to grow, and that every time a bishop visits we have an impressive group of folks desiring to commit to the Anglican Way. Surely the Lord has done great things for us! And our story is not unique: The Lord is doing something exciting through the Anglican Church in North America! The ACNA has transformed over the last few years into a movement increasingly focused on church planting, evangelism and deep discipleship. In conversations with our bishops, it’s not hard to hear their excitement about reaching those who do not know Jesus with the transformative power of the Gospel.
For the last few years, we’ve been talking about the possibility of planting another church in Springfield. I’m sure that sometimes, it has felt like all we’ve been doing is talking about it! But there has been significant prayer, discernment and waiting on the Lord for his timing and his plan to become clear. Through many developments over the last year, it’s become clear that the Lord is calling us to step out and begin the process of planting another church. Whenever we baptize children in the Anglican Church, I’m often struck by the way the liturgy reminds us that we are baptizing them into a complex reality that is both individual and communal. Something is going on between them and God, but sometime is also going on between us and them. They are baptized into the death and life of Christ, but they are also baptized into the communal life of the Church, becoming part of us And while the Christian life is fundamentally a personal life of faith, repentance, obedience and worship, God calls us all to live that life out in a community who believes, repents, obeys and worships. Baptism is a personal reality, but it is not a wholly individual reality. We are all baptized into community.
Where Christians live together in community there are mutual responsibilities, like loving another, bearing with one another and forgiving one another. And baptism into community involves responsibility as well. Our baptismal liturgy reminds the parents of those baptized that they are responsible to raise their children in faith, to teach them the “basics” and to guide them into the mature life of a committed disciple of Jesus. The parents serve as a core sphere of discipleship, but they are embedded within a broader community who also share responsibility for their lives in Christ. The children are responsible to come to faith in Jesus Christ as their Savior and commit their lives to him in faithful obedience. But the congregation doesn’t get off the hook in our baptismal service! The parents are not the only active players in their children’s spiritual development. Instead, we all are asked as a community whether we will do all in our power to support those baptized in their life in Christ, and we often loudly and eagerly affirm “WE WILL”. How do we flesh out the promises we’ve just made? I’d like to suggest four major ways that we can support the children of All Saints and their parents in their journey of discipleship. When people speak of spiritual gifts today, the discussion tends to revolve around the seemingly more miraculous gifts of speaking in tongues, physical healing and words of prophecy. And while it’s understandable to focus on these phenomena, the church often disconnects this discussion from a broader understanding of gifts in the New Testament. If we speak about the so-called “charismatic gifts” within a broader context of the general gifts (charismata) that God gives to the church, it allows us to better understand the relationship between fundamental Christian identity and its expression in gifting, and we can see clearly the relationship between individual gifts and their use in building up the Church.
At the most basic level of the Christian life, the scriptures clearly speak of salvation itself as a gift (Romans 6:23, Ephesians 2:8). The message of the gospel is God gave us a restored relationship with Him that we did not deserve and could not obtain on our own. Through faith in Christ, we are brought into a new reality, we are literally “In Christ”, and in him we have every spiritual blessing, forgiveness of our sins, and the hope of eternal life with him (Ephesians 1:3-14). As a sign that we have been brought into this new reality, we have been given the Holy Sprit to dwell within us. On the day of Pentecost Peter speaks of the Spirit coming as a gift from God to dwell in those who repent and place their faith in Jesus Christ (Acts 2:38). The Scriptures are clear that the Holy Spirit is given to all those who come to faith and repentance in Jesus Christ, and that it is the work of the Holy Spirit in us that convicts us of sin (John 16:8), teaches us how to understand and apply the wisdom of scripture (John 14:26) and to turn from sinful habits and grow in holy living (Romans 8:12-14). |
The Rev. Nathaniel AdkinsArchives
December 2019
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