🌍On this World Communion Sunday, I want to tell you a little bit about the work of Global Ministries.
Global Ministries is the common witness of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) (our denomination) and the United Church of Christ. Our two denominations have a formal partnership, working together with a common staff, budget, programs/projects, and governance in our presence and witness with international partners throughout the global community.
Global Ministries currently works with about 250 partners in nearly 90 countries. We join hands with international partners and walk together in mutual love and respect with our siblings around the world.
Just by being part of First Christian Church, you are part of the work of Global Ministries. By being in covenant with other Disciples of Christ congregations, this is a part of our ministry.
In addition to the work of the Global Ministries office, some of our regional churches have their own Global Ministries committee. In 2018, in southern California, I was invited to be the chair of the regional Global Ministries committee in the Pacific Southwest Region.
I accepted, but there was just one problem: I knew very little about what that global ministries committee did.
Fortunately, most of the members of that committee had lots of experience. They had the knowledge. They just needed someone to keep them organized.
So I sent our reminders of our meeting dates, I made the agenda for each meeting and sent those out, I kept us focused on the agenda, and I followed up each meeting by sending out the minutes. These things, I could do.
And, little by little, I learned about the ministry that the committee did.
Over the years, the committee had developed partnerships with ministries in several different parts of the world. One of those places was Puerto Rico.
🌍And a few months after I became chair of that committee, I found myself on an airplane bound for San Juan, with other members of our committee. Our purpose was to help communities in Puerto Rico in their recovery from Hurricane Maria, which had hit the island 18 months earlier, killing 3,000 people, and destroying the infrastructure of the island.
Mission work in the 21st century flows two ways. We were there to give and receive. We offered our labor and our presence, and we received from the people we worked with their gifts of faith, determination, and knowledge.
Once upon a time, mission work was seen as something that went only one-way. White Americans or Europeans believed that they had all the answers, and that “primitive” people in less developed countries were in need of guidance and direction. We went there, and we told them what they needed and what they needed to do. It was condescending and colonialistic.
But gradually, the church learned—and is still learning—to accept the gifts and the leadership of our partners in other countries, and to let them guide us.
The Disciples of Christ have a long history in Puerto Rico.
Well over 100 years ago, we sent missionaries to Puerto Rico. I’m not sure whether those missionaries followed old patterns of missionary work, or were starting to embrace new ones, but they worked to establish the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Puerto Rico: a wholly separate denomination from the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in the United States and Canada; but obviously, the two denominations have strong ties and historical roots.
And we have a lot to learn from one another.
While in Puerto Rico, we attended Sunday worship in one of their congregations. The preacher that day was a pastor who I had heard preach before in California; the only difference was that, in California, he preached in English. Here, in Puerto Rico, it was in Spanish.
I didn’t understand much. The sermon seemed to be about the paralyzed man who was lying on his mat next to the pool, hoping to be healed by Jesus. I heard the preacher say “Quieres ser sano,” and I understood that phrase: “Do you want to be healed.”
Later in the sermon, another phrase caught my attention: “No es fácil, pero es posible.”
It’s not easy, but it is possible.
To be honest, I wasn’t exactly sure what the preacher was talking about. Was he talking about the paralyzed man starting a new life after being healed by Jesus? Was he talking about the road ahead for Puerto Rico, as they continue recovering from the hurricane? Was he talking about something else?
I wasn’t sure.
But then I thought of how those of us from California were struggling to understand everything that was being said, not only during that worship service, but throughout our time in Puerto Rico. And I thought of how we are called to work together, for our mutual healing, and for the healing of this world, especially with people who are so very different from us. People who worship in other places, in other languages.
No es fácil, pero es posible.
And I thought of the difficult task facing the church in so many places today, when so many are turning away from religion, while so many others are embracing a religion of judgment and condemnation and greed that is so far removed from the way of living Jesus taught. It’s become so hard for churches—churches like ours—just to exist, just to sustain their ministries, year after year.
It’s often so discouraging.
And yet: no es fácil, pero es posible.
The amazing thing is that it’s now been over seven years since I went on that trip… and, as you can see, I’m still influenced by it. I’m still reflecting on it, and the lessons I learned.
That’s one of the benefits of modern missionary work.
We have so much to learn, all of us. So many gifts to receive, and so many gifts to share.
🌍World Communion Sunday reminds us of the gifts of Christians all over the world, who gather in unity around the Lord’s Table. It reminds us that there really is just one table around which we gather. In some places, it is smooth and polished, while in other places, it is rough and worn. But it is one table, and we are all united around it.
As we receive the gifts of Christ’s body and blood, we remember that we are just one part of the body of Christ, as our Disciples of Christ identity statement says; and we share with one another the unique gifts that each of us has to offer.
To help churches celebrate World Communion Sunday, the Global Ministries office offered up some reflections, including one by Michael Kalito, who is the executive director of Theological Education by Extension in Zambia.
His reflections focused on 1 Corinthians 12, our scripture for today; and I want to share, briefly, some of his reflections.
Michael Kalito notes that, in 1 Corinthians 12, the apostle Paul does several things. First, Paul celebrates unity in diversity.
Paul states that just as the human body is one, though it has many parts, so is the body of Christ. He further points out that through baptism in one Spirit, all believers — Jew or Greek, slave or free — are made one. Thus, the mentioned diversity is not a threat but a gift for the unity of the church.
Secondly, Paul mentions the necessity of every member.
From Paul's perspective, no part of the body can claim it doesn’t belong (“Because I am not an eye, I do not belong…” No!). Inferiority complexes and exclusion have no place; every member is essential.
Thirdly, Paul talks about interdependence and mutual care. The stronger cannot despise the weaker (“I don’t need you”). On the contrary, weaker or less "honorable" members receive greater honor and care, just as hidden but vital body parts are protected. Amazingly, in Paul’s language, when one member suffers, the whole body suffers; when one rejoices, all rejoice.
What an important lesson that is for us today, as we debate who deserves to have their rights protected and who doesn’t; who has the right to health care, who has the right to due process, who has the right to food or shelter, who has the right to even be part of the ongoing conversation taking place in our country…
Then Paul highlights Christ as the source of unity.
In this regard, the church is not just like a body; it is the body of Christ. Paul brings forth the reality that believers are individually members, yet collectively part of Christ’s living presence in the world.
One thing that American Christianity is lacking is a wider perspective; the type of perspective that one gains when exposed to ideas coming from contexts other than our own. It is so beneficial to be in relationship with Christians from other cultures and nations, to work with them, and to learn from them.
🌍Here in our sanctuary and in the centrum, there are flags from many nations. They were put in place last Sunday after worship, which means they were already in place when the youth met last Sunday evening…
And I asked the youth if any of them knew what countries the flags were from.
Boy did they surprise me! They were able to name almost all of them. They knew more than I did.
Turns out we have some big soccer fans among our youth, and they recognize the flags from the uniforms the soccer teams wear.
We also have, here in our sanctuary, bread, representing the different types of bread that Christians all over the world eat. Bread made from wheat, corn, rice, and other grains. Bread in many shapes and sizes, with various textures and flavors.
And it’s all so beautiful, don’t you think? Just look at the arrangement of bread. It’s pleasant just to look at! It’s pleasing to the eye. It’s like a bouquet of flowers, with different, complementary colors, that just strikes us as beautiful.
Imagine how much more pleasant it is to God, to look upon humanity, with all our colors, shapes, textures, and all the different ways we dress, and the different languages we speak. What delight God takes in human diversity… and even more so, when we gather around a common table in peace and unity.
There are so many calls to build walls and fences that divide; but here, on this day, we are reminded that the way of Jesus isn’t about building walls and fences; the way of Jesus is about building a table… a table where everyone is welcome… a table of love and fellowship and unity… a table of peace and friendship…
…a table where Christ shares with us gifts of love and life, and where we share with one another, giving and receiving the gifts each of us has to offer.