Shiloh Sharings

The official blog of

Shiloh United Methodist Church, Granite Quarry, NC

"Our hands are God's hands. All of us, empowered by the Holy Spirit, are inviting, welcoming, nurturing, and witnessing to all God's children to become loyal and devoted disciples of Jesus Christ. The more we focus on Christ, the more Christ-like we become."

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Prayer Concerns - March 27, 2005

Ruth Watson, Jolene Page, Laurie McCallum and her family, Brian & Heather Ward, Mary Jean Crouch, Eva Dene Scearce, Granny Sheffield, Deanna Glibeau, Reuben, Martha, Deborah Marlowe, Everette Phillips, Andy Clement, Enge Geoletti, Buddy Kluttz, Jay Phillips, Ashley Hunsucker and family, Buna Lingle, Sandy Morgan, Marian Smith, Bill & Norma Hoyle, Jeannette Houston, Amy & Mark Love, Dottie Winkler, Helen Brown family, Joyce Kneip & family, Phillip Hoffner, Pearl Campbell, Brown family, Voneva Brinkley, Joe Romano in Iraq, Wendy Condrey & Jason Merrill, Barry Powlas, Peace, our soldiers and the people of Iraq & Afghanistan, Vada Cameron

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Prayer Concerns for March 20, 2005

Stanley Fouts, family of John & Oscar & Daisy Bost, Joyce Kneip & family, Pearl Campbell, Halance Benfield, Annie Bringle, Jay Phillips, Bill & Norma Hoyle, Marion Melton, Jolene Page, Sandy Morgan, Matthew Clark and family, David Wilhelm family, Dottie Winkler, Don & Nancy Lyerly, Reuben & Martha & Deborah Marlowe, Everette Phillips, Andy Clement, Bill Williams (who fell out the front door on Thursday and down the steps)

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Holy Week Schedule

Easter Egg Hunt, March 19 2005 - 10:00 a.m.

Palm Sunday, March 20, 2005 - 11:00 a.m.
Sermon Title: "A New Kind of King"

Maundy Thursday, March 24, 2005 - 7:30 p.m.
Sermon Title: "Do This in Remembrance of Me"

Good Friday Tenebrae Service, March 25 - 7:30 p.m.
Sermon Title: "Resetting Broken Bones"

Easter Sunrise Service, March 27, 7:00 a.m.
Sermon Title: "A Ray of Darkness"
(breakfast immediately following the service at 7:30 a.m.)

Easter Worship Service, March 27, 11:00 a.m.
Sermon Title: "The Great Reversal"
(scattering of seeds immediately following the service to celebrate new life)

Prayer Concerns, March 13, 2005

Barry Powlas, Jim & Cindy Benefield, soldiers and families, people of Iraq, family of David Wilhelm, the Vartjes family, Pearl Campbell, Annie Bringle, Joyce Kneip & family, Reuben & Martha Marlowe, Everette Phillips, Andy Clement, Heather Redding, Dottie Winkler, Paul Boyd, Robert Ingold, Clarice Brown, Margaret Mills, Martha Ann Barringer, Marion Melton, Anna Lee Smith, Mike McNeely, Boss Fink, Jim & Agnes Lloyd, Eva Dene Scearce, Dean Dull, Deannie Gilbeau, Mr Sifford's family

Monday, March 14, 2005

What does Jonathan do during those two weeks in Gastonia?

Jonathan’s Journals

You’ve heard me say it six times now, over the past three years: “I will be out of town on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of this week for Board of Ordained Ministry meetings in Gastonia. If you have a pastoral emergency, please call my cell phone.” Yes, for three days in February and three days in March, I am at Board of Ordained Ministry meetings. But what does that mean? We know what it means when the pastor goes out of town for annual conference, but what is this Board of Ordained Ministry stuff?

There is an extensive process that candidates for ordained ministry go through before they are ordained. After completing four years of college and three years of graduate school (seminary), candidates submit three sets of papers to the Conference Board of Ordained Ministry. One set of papers goes to the Call and Disciplined Life Committee. Another set of papers goes to the Preaching Committee, and a third set of papers goes to the Theology and Doctrine Committee (of which I am one of the chairs). Members of these committees start reading these papers during January. In March, candidates for probationary membership in the Annual Conference come to Gastonia to be interviewed by these three committees. Candidates must pass the written and oral parts of all three examinations before being admitted into probationary membership in the annual conference. But even after all this, they are not ordained. They are “commissioned” at Annual Conference and begin a three-year period of preparation. At this point, they can begin serving as pastors (or some of them have already been serving as student pastors or local pastors – but that’s another story that I won’t get into right now.)

At the end of the three-year probationary period, candidates come back before the Board of Ordained Ministry in February and do work for the same three committees mentioned above. However, this time through, the standards are higher and a greater level of proficiency is expected. When candidates successfully navigate all three committees, they can be ordained as members of the annual conference in full connection. They can be ordained elder (which is generally what pastors are), or deacons (which is what some youth directors, Christian educators, counselors, or musicians are).

Some of the theological questions that the candidates answer are: What is your understanding of the Lordship of Christ? How has the practice of ministry shaped your understanding of God as it is derived from personal, historical, and biblical sources? What is your understanding of the sacraments? How does one interpret the Bible in relation to the church’s tradition, experience, and reason? What is the role of the Holy Spirit in Christian faith and life? What is the nature and mission of the church? What is your understanding of human nature and the need for divine grace? In preparation for the February and March interviews, I read about 900 pages worth of theology papers, so keep me in your prayers! If this article hasn’t bored you to tears, and you would like to know more, just let me know. I’ll be glad to show you how all of this is outlined in the Discipline.

Well, there you have it in a nutshell. Of course, before candidates come to the Conference Board of Ordained Ministry, they have been approved by the District Committee on Ordained Ministry, of which I am chair in the Salisbury District. The District Committee works with candidates as they go through several sessions with a mentor, complete their educational requirements, go through an extensive psychological examination, and discuss their understanding of their call to ministry. The District Committee meets for two days in December and one day in April.

It takes longer to become an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church than to become a doctor or a lawyer. Be proud of our church and the expectation our denomination places on its clergy!

Peace,
Jonathan

ps: The 2004 Discipline is out! Let me know if you would like to order copies!

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Prayer Concerns, March 6, 2005

Joe Romano in Iraq, Barry Powlas, Jim & Cindy Benfield, Joyce Kneip & family, Pearl Campbell, Annie Bringle, Larry Trexler, Carmen Chestnut, Bill & Carter Chestnut, Williams family, Collins family, Dottie Winkler, Heather Redding, Karen Vartjes and family, Ruth Watson, Jed Spain, Clarice Brown, George Cannon, Kay & Mike Peele & family, Shelva Foy, Jolene Page, Sandra Morgan, Janet & Mike Durant, family of Gertrude Fisher (Annie Marie Seaford’s aunt), Chase Stiller, Jay Phillips, Nic Howard, Mike Phillips, Deborah Marlowe

Please add more names or prayer requests or prayers of Thanksgiving by using the comment button below!

Thursday, March 03, 2005

Prayer Concerns - Feb. 27, 2005

Larry Trexler, Joyce Kneip & family, Pearl Campbell, Annie Bringle, Sandy Morgan, Jolene Page, Doris Kluttz, Elgie Moore, Nic Howard, jay Phillips, Ashley Hunsucker and family, Wayne & Renee Moore, Sandra & Nelson Earnhardt, Wendy condrey, Jason Merrill, Joe Romano, Clarice brown, The Petre family who lost their home this past week (members of Gold Hill Wesleyan Church), Rev. Alfred Rhyne’s family and his church family at Luther’s Lutheran Church, Bill & Norma Hoyle, Ralph Horton, Sr., Boss Fink, Betty Wilson, Margaret & Dwight Lowder, Barry Powlas, Jim & Cindy Benfield, Peace, Effie Hollar