
With the question, “Are you ready?” Bishop Jeremiah J. Park opened the 211th session of the New York Annual Conference at Hofstra University Arena. The theme for the June 9-12 gathering, “For Such a Time as This: We Are Building Up a Healthy Body of Christ,” is an ongoing exploration of the conference’s vision statement.
In his episcopal address, the bishop struck a prophetic tone by insisting that what the church needs is “urgent, trusting and radical change.” Hard choices will need to be made. We can’t keep doing the same things in our attempts to make disciples for Christ. “Change is coming, change is evitable,” Park said.
Park looked to John 15 for three words – fruit, abide and love – that can inspire the change that needs to come in the church. He urged the gathering to “rebuild our connection with Christ” by choosing to abide in him. Our life as Christians is all about Jesus Christ and his love. “We’ve been chosen by Jesus Christ to go and bear fruit,” Park said. “It is a privilege and joy, not a burden.” We must revive love and joy in our churches, otherwise “what’s the point?”
The bishop reported that despite the difficult financial climate, more churches had honored 100 percent of their shared ministry apportionments than in 2008, allowing the conference to fulfill 100 percent of its General Church apportionments for the sixth year in a row. Average Sunday worship attendance also increased, as did the number of members who joined by profession of faith.
Park also announced that the conference has committed to create 30 new faith communities in the next three years; six will be started in 2010, 12 in 2011 and another 12 in 2012. The new starts this year range from urban foreign-language congregations to a rural trailer park community.
“We are destined to be a growing church again,” Park said. And referring to Isaiah 43, he asked, “Are we ready to do God’s new thing?”
Bishop James E. Swanson Sr. of the Holston Area was the guest preacher for the combined commissioning and ordination service. With a powerful combination of humor, directness about God’s call, and a bold voice, Bishop Swanson brought the crowd to it feet numerous times. He urged all to listen for the consistent call of God. “We are all commissioned to carry the Good News to a bad news world,” he said. He advised the candidates to trust in God and to put their lives in Jesus’ hands; “God would make a way . . . You’ll set New York Annual Conference on fire!” UMC bishops Alfred Johnson and F. Herbert Skeete, as well as ELCA Bishop Robert J. Rimbo of the Metropolitan New York Synod, participated in the commissionings and ordinations.
The “healthy body of Christ” was evident in the more than 5,000 adults and children who came to Saturday’s “Momentum of Ministry” festival, which began with interactive events in three tents outside the arena. The attendance exceeded Bishop Park’s 2009 challenge to fill the arena with 5,000 new witnesses for Christ. He had invited all those who had become church members since 2004, the year he began his episcopacy. And they came – by busload, by carpool and by commuter train. The churches processed under an explosion of colorful banners into the arena, where they were engaged and energized by the powerful preaching of Bishop Swanson. Hundreds responded to his altar call and came forward to commit their lives and their work to Christ. To emphasize the connection between spiritual and physical health, Bishop Park took off his jacket and dropped to the stage as the crowd enthusiastically counted out 120 pushups.
For the first time, the annual conference was telecast, via live Web streaming, enabling friends and family around the globe to witness the opening session, and the memorial, retirement and ordination/commissioning services.
Other highlights at conference included:
Among legislation passed on consensus was a call for action on immigration reform, and support for a living wage campaign and global health initiative for mothers and babies, and a mandate to correct and republish past conference journals. Legislation approved by floor vote included the imperative to respond to hate crimes, a call for equality in ministry, and the request for a Judicial Council decision on the right of some clergy to marry. A petition asking that the NYAC apologize for the church’s stance on homosexuality in advertisements was ruled out of order by Bishop Park.
Membership in conference churches stands at 115,813, a decrease of 2,782; average weekly Sunday School attendance was 10,707, down 638. But weekly worship attendance rose by 342 for a total of 37,072, and professions of faith increased by 53 to 2,328.
Joanne Utley / Editor, The Vision