Dear Winter Park Family,
I meet monthly with the pastor search committee. Perhaps, we should adjust the name of the committee to reflect the current reality that the pastor has been found! Indeed, readers such as you might wonder: why is our pastor still meeting with the pastor search committee? The answer is: as this group was my introduction to Winter Park Baptist Church it seems rather natural to simply touch base with them and talk about how things are going. We will stop meeting soon enough. In the meantime, however, I have enjoyed these gatherings as I find this group of people to be a helpful sounding board.
My most recent Baptist News Global publication came out Monday morning on their website - https://baptistnews.com/article/who-exactly-is-the-pastor/. As this is my first published piece with Winter Park Baptist, I wanted to have a few sets of Winter Park Baptist eyes on it before I submitted it to be considered for publication. While I am much aware everyone will not agree with every opinion or conviction I have, it is important to me that I represent Winter Park Baptist Church well in the eyes of our people. At this most recent meeting of the, shall we now call it, pastor-found committee, we engaged in rich conversation over this now published piece. Everyone was pleased with it. So, I submitted the piece to Baptist News Global.
We then moved on with our discussion. One of the pastor-found committee members asked me if, after two months, there had been any surprises in relation to the church. I pondered for a moment and then responded, “Yes, the passion in our congregation surprises me.” I went on to explain that the degree of passion in the congregation, for Christ-centered ministry, equals my passion. Indeed, your passion encourages me and challenges me. I feel it when we meet for coffee as well as when we gather for worship on Sunday mornings. I see your passion as you express your desire to help others in the name of Jesus. I hear your passion as you share with me your wish for Winter Park Baptist Church to grow in discipleship and number.
I also feel, see, and hear your passion for Christian faith as you interact with my sermons. I have taken a bit of an early risk in that I decided to lead you to consider Winter Park’s vision as a church. The confidence to take this early risk came from several of our people telling me that Winter Park needs a vision. When I asked what the vision should be, everyone responded with a form of, “I am not sure.” So, in sermons from Acts 15 and now Romans 14, I proposed a vision for our church that centers around Christian hospitality. The response to these sermons has not surprised me. The responses reflect the makeup of our congregation as we are not a monolithic group. Many of our people have thanked me profusely for these sermons. Others, always with respect, have expressed concerns. I am flattered by both responses as it means the congregation is listening. I get the impression there is not much drifting present on Sunday mornings! In fact, one person, who is fully on board with these recent sermons, informed me that she has been thinking about last Sunday’s worship experience until her head hurts. Still my heart!
At this point I simply thank you for engaging with my sermons as I put much effort into them. When I let them go, I give you a part of me. And I say, hang with me! Hang with me whether you are on board or have hesitations. There is at least one more sermon to go as this Sunday (9-17-2023) I plan to preach from Romans 14:13-23. One expressed concern with the model of Christian hospitality that I propose, based on my interpretation of Acts 15 and Romans 14, is: where are the brakes? Is Christian community a free-for-all where everyone does as they please?
Last Sunday, while not the emphasis of the sermon, I said that Paul does not suggest that everything goes. Paul himself had non-negotiables such as his understanding of circumcision. This Sunday, the sermon will focus upon what governs behavior within Christian communities. As we shall see, from Romans 14:13-23, we are not free to do just as we feel at all times. That is not how authentic Christian community works, not at all.
So, hang with me! And remember, as we approach Sunday, Christian hospitality is not easy. Indeed, there is more to it than a smile and an invitation as important as those things are. But, oh my, it is beautiful to behold when put into practice. Hospitable churches accomplish two tasks that are dear to our congregation: hospitable churches please God and hospitable churches grow.
In Christ,
Paul