Every four
years, a group of people come together for a somewhat
strange gathering for the uninitiated: it is called
the General Conference of The United Methodist Church.
At this gathering, there will be representatives from
across the world, who have traveled to pray and worship
and debate and learn and eventually to make decisions
that will affect all members of this large group, over
eight million strong.
The process
is slow, laborious, often tedious, frequently frustrating.
Because we are international in scope, and because there
is high value placed on diversity and openness and careful
listening and cultural sensitivity, simple motions on
the conference floor may take hours to "perfect"
before they can be voted upon. Every delegate (about
1,000) has the privilege of speaking to every motion.
Most don't exercise that privilege, thank goodness,
but all know it is theirs if needed.
The United
Methodist Church has been described as a "wide
umbrella" able to offer covering and space for
people of radically divergent opinions. As I heard one
person say recently, "Senator Hillary Clinton and
President George Bush are both United Methodists. If
they can both fit under that umbrella, then we have
room for just about anybody!"
Underlying
all those radically divergent opinions, however, is
one common mandate: we are all called to make disciples
of Jesus Christ. Every one of us. As United Methodists,
we work through this mandate held together by something
called "the connection."
"The
connection:" it's the glue that holds and preserves
us. It's the connection that holds us up when someone
begins to fall. It's the connection that leads us to
rush to the aid of others when tragedy strikes. It's
the connection that gives Christians from a big city
in the US a sense of love for Christians from rural
Africa, and vice-versa.
As part of
that connection, I was privileged to hear Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf,
President of Liberia, a small nation in Africa, speak
last week. This powerful woman, born and reared in Liberia,
educated in schools established and supported by The
United Methodist Church, has stepped in to lead a country
left devastated by the previous president, Charles Taylor,
now exiled from that country. The challenges she faces
boggle the mind—85% unemployment, a economy ruined
by the greed and corruption of the former president,
mass illiteracy, poverty so intense I personally can't
even imagine it.
With courage,
conviction, presence and power, President Johnson-Sirleaf
and her administration are beginning to make inroads
to recovery. As I listened to this woman speak, I became
even more aware of the responsibility of every Christian,
not just one called to political office, to work to
fight injustice and help bring peace to the world. How
often we pray, “thy kingdom come, thy will be
done, on earth as it is in heaven.” God has called
each of us to connect with one another and to help bring
about the kingdom of heaven on earth—a place of
justice, righteousness and hope. Let us all have the
same courage that President Johnson-Sirleaf evidences
as we live as God's men and women in this world.