Worshiping communities remain ‘new’ when people find life in them

 

Pastor and evangelist inspires, challenges New Worshiping Communities gathering

September 23, 2017

We are living in the “between” of the beginning and the end. Because of our tendency to want to control time — to want to know when things begin and end — life and ministry can be hard.

Juan J. Sarmiento sharing a moment with Sera Chung during worship at the opening worship of the national 1001 New Worshiping Communities conference. (Photo by Paul Seebeck)

This was the essence of the opening sermon and plenary talk from the Rev. Juan J. Sarmiento at the recent national gathering for 1001 New Worshiping Communities (1001 NWC).

Speaking on the conference theme “Living, Dying, Rising,” based on John 20:19–23, Sarmiento, associate director for mission with The Outreach Foundation, said the disciples were dealing with “shattered expectation” when Jesus showed up.

“When it is difficult for us to control [living in the “between”], it is important for us to remember there is a beginning of God coming into the reality of our lives,” said Sarmiento.

Sarmiento believes this matters to new worshiping communities because they are entrenched in the incarnation — helping people touch, smell and see the experiential reality of God’s glory, grace and truth in Jesus Christ.

“It is beyond what we can comprehend,” he said. “But nevertheless, day by day you are bringing the realities of God’s grace to the tangible realities of our communities.”

Because God makes possible the reality of the church coming alive, Sarmiento said, “life matters.” Suddenly the world is not just a detached, random place. The world is now a place where God is at work — the world in which Jesus came to dwell. With God implanted in the church’s midst, life will never be the same, as we come to understand that we are not the initiators of mission and not the ones planting churches.

“God is the initiator,” said Sarmiento. “God has already done the planting; our job is to find where God is embedded in our lives and in our communities.”

As we deepen our understanding that matter and life matter, Sarmiento hopes that understanding becomes personal to new worshiping communities. By recognizing that people matter, because life comes from God, we show up where God is with people facing difficulty or injustices.

“God sent Jesus into the world and the Spirit to move wherever it may be,” said Sarmiento. “Where are people — who might be uncertain and afraid — sensing the presence of God in community?”

Sermon notes from a participant at ‘Living, Dying, Rising’ after Monday night’s opening message at the national 1001 New Worshiping Communities gathering. (Photo by Abby King-Kaiser)

Sarmiento encouraged those gathered to join in where the Spirit is, to recognize that while matter and life are profoundly significant, “it is a matter of the Spirit” when we participate in the work of the Spirit.

“This 1001 NWC is a wonderful movement, but it is not about our power to have better musicians or create more appealing worship,” Sarmiento said. “Instead, it is about creating space for people feeling beat-up, broken, rejected and excluded, for those appreciated only for what they own or the status they have attained.”

Sarmiento said he has seen how, in spite of these difficulties, it is best time ever for the church that “is thriving around the world.” He’s been present in African churches that celebrate God’s grace and rest for those who are weary; in Latino and Asian churches that are attentive to God’s creative mission in ways that move people beyond themselves, and in people’s own common experiences of loss or pain.

“Our worshiping communities are truly ‘new’ when people are finding new life in them,” said Sarmiento. “May we respond with confidence and urgency and come together to be re-created in Christ, and be sent as ‘missionaries of God’s shalom’ in both our ministries within our communities and around the world.”

Paul Seebeck, Mission Communications Strategist, Video and Digital Asset Management, Presbyterian Mission Agency

Today’s Focus:  New Worshiping Communities

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff

Jason Peterson, PILP                                                                                          
Sherri Pettway, PMA

Let us pray:

Loving God, we are glad to reach out with good news to disciples and to would-be disciples around the corner and around the world. Inspire us to venture into new places of witness and service, all in obedience to Jesus Christ. Amen.

Daily Readings

Morning Psalms 56; 149
First Reading 2 Kings 2:1-18
Second Reading 1 Corinthians 4:1-7
Gospel Reading Matthew 5:17-20
Evening Psalms 118; 111


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