Council leader challenges bishops to put hope into action
By Linda Green*
Nov. 3, 2006 | MAPUTO, Mozambique (UMNS)
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Bishop Janice Huie, Council of Bishops
president, wears African attire to show solidarity with United
Methodists in Mozambique. A UMNS photo by Linda Green.
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Now is the time for United Methodist bishops to lead the church in
putting hope into action, to address the needs of a world struggling
with a "powerful spiritual hunger," the president of the Council of
Bishops told her peers.
Bishop Janice Huie gave that challenge Nov. 2 in an episcopal address
to more than 70 bishops attending their first meeting outside the
territorial United States. She focused on hope, leadership, vision and
risk-taking in calling her colleagues to act.
"We live in a threshold time," said Huie, who leads the
denomination's Houston Area. "Globally we face a new context for
ministry" that includes the challenges of poverty, disease, hunger,
violence, war and genocide, greed, suicide, school shootings and
ecological destruction. Despite the despair and chaos, people are
seeking God's word, she said.
"A deep and powerful spiritual hunger is present all over the globe,"
she said. It is being satisfied in both constructive and destructive
ways, but the common element in that hunger is the "deep human desire
for hope," she said. People hope for peace and a better or transformed
world, she said.
She noted that the council expresses hope in its mission statement of
leading the church to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the
transformation of the world, and she asked how the bishops might more
effectively lead United Methodists into "that future of hope."
Quoting the Alban Institute's Gil Rendle, Huie said the work of
leadership involves shaping both the hope and fears of people, and
directing the positive and negative energy so that it flows with purpose
and meaning.
"Leaders shape hope when we offer vision to the church," she said.
"We shape hope when we help people dream big enough to be faithful to
God and to capture their own imaginations."
She said she imagines the 10 million members of the United Methodist
Church beginning a new church every day somewhere in the world. The
church can reach and save the world's children and lead the effort to
eradicate poverty, malaria and HIV/AIDS - "the killer diseases," she
said.
"If the Council of Bishops wants to shape the hope and fears of the
people of the United Methodist Church over the next few years, now is
the time to step forward," Huie said. "Now is the time to put hope into
action.
"God gives us hope. The Holy Spirit gives us courage."
Vision is critical
Huie told the council members that they individually and collectively
must have a vision that is bold and comprehensive enough to be part the
vision God has for the world. She said people don't get excited about a
"vision you can pour into a teacup" or is "focused on institutional
maintenance."
Hope becomes action, she said, when a vision that "changes and
reshapes futures for Jesus Christ" is seen. Vision needs a plan, money
and people to carry it out, which involve taking risks, she added.
Because making disciples is risky, Huie told the bishops that if they
expect United Methodists to take risks for Jesus Christ, then they need
to do the same.
"Not many people are going to step out into a new future when leaders
are focused on the rear-view mirror of institutional survival and
self-preservation."
Noting that a new vision will have resistance, she reminded her
colleagues that as Moses and Jesus faced obstacles, they need to "be
prepared to shape people's fears. We need to do a lot of listening and a
lot of loving."
The meeting in Maputo is the international council's first outside
the territorial United States. The council met in Puerto Rico in 2002,
its first meeting outside the continental United States.
The bishops' presence in Africa, Huie said, shows "the reality that
the United Methodist Church is a global church" and indicates
solidarity.
"By our very presence, we affirm with our African sisters and
brothers that although the Council of Bishops is made up of different
nations, languages, cultures, styles of worship, ways of dress, we are
also one body - the Body of Christ.
With offices in Washington, the council comprises 69 active bishops
and 100 retired bishops; they are the church's top clergy leaders in the
United States, Africa, Europe and Asia.
*Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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