"Long and Slow"
My wife, Kris, and I have three boys;
Kyle is 24, Michael is 21 and Eric is 13. On a Tuesday evening this past
September, Kris and I were driving to Eric’s eighth grade back-to-school night.
Kris said to me, “This is our 35th back-to-school night.” I said, “What!?”
Kris answered, “This is our 35th back to school night. We have never
missed a back to school night. If you count all three boys this is the 35th." Only a Mom could possibly remember and calculate such a thing.
My friends, how long does it take to
raise a child? How long does it take to form a Christian? How long does it take
to build a church? How long does it take to create a more just society? How
long does it take to bring peace?
My charge to you, the congregation
and friends of the Market Square Presbyterian Church, is to continue the long
and slow journey of faith you have been on since 1794. Continue this long and
slow journey of faith. These words “long and slow” are important. I am
borrowing them from a classic book: Eugene Peterson, A Long Obedience in the
Same Direction. Eugene Peterson is a Presbyterian minister, now retired and a prolific
author writing in the area of biblical spirituality and Christian formation. I
never met Peterson; Tom did during their days together long ago in Baltimore . Peterson’s
book “A Long Obedience in the Same Direction” is an old book that has become a
classic for pastors and church leaders. The book is a beautifully written
reflection of biblical spirituality for ministry today. The outline of the book
is taken from the fifteen Psalms of Ascent, Psalms 120 to 134. This collection
of Psalms are all pilgrimage Psalms, probably originally used by the Hebrew
people as part of their daily prayers while they were making pilgrimage up to Jerusalem . Peterson
develops this image of pilgrimage for us, for our Christian journey in the
Church. The task of ministry today, the task of being the church today is a
long and slow task. This to me seems to be a vitally important word as you turn
the page to a new chapter and begin a new relationship with a new pastor. The
task ahead of you should be a long and slow journey together which builds each
one’s individual life in Christ, which builds up slowly and authentically a new
pastoral relationship and which continues your long journey building the
church. I might add, of course, that this long and slow journey should also
continue your abundant and generous participation in the ministry of our
presbytery.
I am not going to develop it now,
but it would a fruitful discussion to consider the many ways that this
Christian commitment to long and slow is deeply counter-cultural today. Our
culture is obsessed with speed, what Peterson calls “today’s passion for the
immediate and the casual.” In the face of all of that, I am asking you to be
long and slow together, building up one another, building up the church, and
slowly ushering in a more just world. Thanks be to God in the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
Mark J.
Englund-Krieger
Tom
Sweet Installation Service