As a child, my mother moved my sister and me to Mason City
from Des Moines after our father died suddenly of a heart attack. We were
suddenly poor. A local Lutheran Church reached out to us, inviting us to
worship services, Sunday School, and catechism classes. Members gave us rides
to church and often invited us to Sunday dinner. At fall stewardship time,
members were asked to bring food to share with the needy in the community. Mother
gave my sister and me each a can of soup to take to the church’s offering. At
Thanksgiving, I was surprised when our family also received a food basket from the church. I learned at that young age
that in the Christian community it is not that some are the givers and others the
receivers, but that all have something to offer, and, together, we all are receivers
of God’s generosity. Together we are called to reach out to the community to
those in need.
In recent
years, my husband and I helped support an inner-city congregation. Courageously
and generously that small congregations for years had been serving its
neighborhood. Most of its members were
young, in fact, youth! (Many
congregations would give anything to have that percentage of young people!) The
youth had been taught to give and all gave almost ten percent of what they had.
They were sharing God’s healing love. With the love and nurture of the
congregation, many of the young people, were successful in school and beyond. But
still, it was clear that this small, lower socio-economic mission congregation would
never become totally self-sustaining. It
was closed last year.
The story of
the church is one of community. We are called to share God’s healing love in
Christ’s reconciliation through personal and communal servanthood. We are
called to mission through the generations. All are in need. And the neediest have gifts. Not one of us as
individuals or as congregations is totally self-sustaining. By the Spirit in
the name of the Resurrected Christ we have been called to have all things in
common and to use everyone’s gifts. How can we courageously and generously be
the body of Christ as servants in the world?
The essence
of the early church, upon which all generations of the church since have been
built by the Spirit, was hearing the Word taught and preached, baptism, the
breaking of bread, prayers, and generous hearts for caring for each other. And
the church grew. The history of the Church is not of individuals but of
community. Together God gives us generous hearts to build up the body of
Christ.
“All who
believed were together and had all things in common; they would sell their
possessions and goods and distribute the proceeds to all, as any had need.”
(Acts 2:44-45)
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