October 3, 2024 Devotional

Woe to those who make unjust laws, to those who issue oppressive decrees,
to deprive the poor of their rights and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people,
making widows their prey and robbing the fatherless. — Isaiah 10:1-2

The weight of the moment was palpable and poignant. The anticipation that had been growing in intensity over the past decade was coming to a profound nexus that I knew would be unlike anything I’d ever experienced. As the music began in the convention center in San José, Costa Rica for the Convening General Conference of the Global Methodist Church, those gathered looked upward to the God who delivers, and there was a single spark that ignited a new movement of God in the, “…Methodist extraction” (David Watson) of the historic Christian faith. Not only did we recite the Apostles’ Creed in heart and mind together, but we worshipped. Truly worshipped.

If that sounds too dramatic and just a word picture of something that wasn’t quite so all-consuming, there are a plethora of other testimonies to it. Leaders whom I respect and look up to have described this first gathering of Global Methodists from around the planet as ground-shaking and life-altering. And the weight I felt in that moment was heavy.

A little background might be in order: When asked to serve on the Transitional Leadership Council for the Global Methodist Church in March 2020, I had absolutely no idea what that would mean. When I left a March 2020 meeting with 40-50 others in Atlanta, we made the decision to take the next step in praying for and trying to figure out how to build a new Methodist denomination that honored God and was true to the historical authority of scripture, the only prayer I prayed on the plane ride home was, “Lord, if you ask, I will say yes.” For the next four and half years, that ‘yes’ would be a consistent opportunity for God to work in us, through us, in spite of us, and in some cases, without us even being aware of this powerful move of the Spirit. As I stood on the edge of this gathering-come-to-fruition in Costa Rica, it all just flooded through and out of me. Despite my best efforts, the tears came. They came for so many reasons: the hours of prayer and reading, the good decisions and the bad, the people we’ve met and the places we’ve been, and the fact that this was yet another transition. The weight of the moment should not be overlooked or underestimated.

The caution from our verse for today reminded me again of the last four years. God is very clear that holiness and righteousness are not only important, but are essential to reflecting God’s glory in the world. Holiness is being set apart for the purposes of God on His terms. Righteousness is allowing the love of Christ to not only keep us in full relationship with God, but to launch us into the world to show grace and mercy so that God would draw all people to Him. The General Conference spent days perfecting and voting on church structure and laws into which we will live as Global Methodists. But let’s not lose sight of the holiness and righteousness which is our first calling from God through Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit. Nothing we set in place as laws or structures are what saves anyone. Jesus is the one that saves and He alone, by the very moving of the Spirit in grace after grace. Woe to us if we ever turn what God has started into a dead sect of laws and decrees that oppress the poor and the widows, either figuratively or actually. The weight is heavy, but as Jesus said, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” (Matthew 11:28-30)

Friends, we will hear more about and reflect on the Convening General Conference in the months and years to come. With Jesus, this movement will change the world, and I for one welcome the weight of it all for the sake of the kingdom. Will you join together in holiness and righteousness for the sake of Jesus?

~Steve