Showing posts with label moderator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moderator. Show all posts

July 09, 2025

(Re)Generate: Visions and Dreams

 Disclaimer:  This is from the transcript of the video of my fellow participants from Moderator Carmen Lansdowne's (Re)Generate program found on YouTube - just google (Re)Generate : Visions and Dreams or copy and paste this into your browser: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=byz5dEHDBnk
No photo description available.Rev. Frances Kitson, Minister at Whitehorse United Church: I want so badly for  this church to have hope not because I'm a PollyAnna and not because it's like a pie in the sky possibility. But I want this church to have hope because that is our God-given gift, that is what God offers us. You know so many people give what they can and have raised their children in the church and are watching the church, the specific congregation they've been in for decades dwindle. They remember the people who used to be in those pews, they have children who live in town who are not in those pews, and they ask themselves "What have they done wrong?" And the truth is they have done nothing wrong, they have been good and faithful servants in a world that has changed around them and the fundamental story of our faith is that death is not the end, that impossible ridiculous and scandalous new life arises from the ruins and the rubble of broken hearts and dreams and futures and if I can make a magic wand and give us all the sense like in our viscera in our blood and in our bones that the God who raised Jesus Christ from the grave is not done with us. That is what I want, that is my vision, that is my hope, that is my passion, that is my dream and that is my prayer for the church.Rev. Wonder Chimvinga, Pine River United Church, Ripley, Ontario: my vision is to create a vibrant inclusive and spiritually enriching community where individuals everyone from diverse backgrounds feel welcomed supported and inspired to grow in their faith and I dream of leading with innovation, empowering new leaders in my church in the wider community and addressing unique needs of my congregation and the community at large.

Rev. Katie Aven, Minister of Bedford United Church: My bold vision is that the United Church of Canada will have this incredible invitation to anyone who is seeking, that we will have the warmest of welcomes, that people who come to our churches will feel transformed whether it's a Sunday worship, a community meal, a youth group, a pickup badminton game, a spaghetti dinner, whatever it is, that experience in the community will be transformative and we know that the transformation of the human heart is the most important change that can happen in the world and so I think that's what my bold vision is, that the United Church of Canada is going to be this agent of change for the human heart.

Rev. Catherine Stuart, Minister of Children, Youth and Young Adults for the Atlantic Regions: I think one of one of the dreams that I have for the church is that we would come to understand that just because things aren't the way they have been that we're not dying, that part of it might need to change but that there's something good that's going to come from all of this.  I think a lot about what happened in 1925 and the excitement that was in that arena the excitement and yet the nerves of “ will this thing work?” but they had vision and they had dreams. You know our history hasn't been perfect, it's caused some harm, it's done some hard things but I think I want for the church that same excitement, that same sense of “we're in this together and God's going to do something through us”. We might not always know what that is .

Rev. Hoeun Lee, Minister of First United Church, Waterloo, Ontario: when I just started taking Regenerate program with the moderator and I drafted the capstone project, and one congregant responded to that with “this is just a dream” and after one year, there is real progress like turning things around. We witness the change, the progress that we are making and so now the dream is not just a dream, it's a vision to guide us to move forward. Out of bold dreaming, there can be a clear vision.

Rev. Tori Mullen, Growth Animator of Eastern Ontario: I really hope that for my that when she's at a place in her life where she wants to dig deeply into spiritual questions and find community and find an affirmation of her gifts, that there is a church that might not look like the churches we have today, but that there is a presence of spiritual community committed to deep spirituality, bold discipleship, and daring justice that she gets to call her spiritual home.

Rev. Lindsay Mohn, Youth and Young Adult Minister, Living Skies Regional Council: my vision and dream for the future of the United Church is that when someone feels like life is hard and they're lonely and they need to feel an experience of being loved by God and by God's people, that they would know they could find that at any United Church across Canada. This life can just be so hard at times and we need each other and we need God and I hope that my dream and my vision would be that people would just know they could find that here.

Rev. Rick Gunn, Minister of St. Luke’s United Church, Upper Tantalion, Nova Scotia: my vision and dream for the future of the church involves becoming really confident in being Christian. I think we are in this postChristendom world but I'm almost getting tired of saying and thinking that because I do sense the Spirit through people coming through my church's doors and conversations out in the community that Christians who are inclusive and welcoming and affirming and really embracing mutuality and diversity.  We’ve got to get stronger at being that voice in the world.

Rev. Sarah Chapman, Minister of Eglinton St George’s United Church, Toronto, Ontario: my vision and dream for the United Church of Canada is to be at the tables of spirituality, to be a an option for people to engage with a deep faith, with community where they can find belonging and then also play within their spirituality, opportunities for people to engage their spiritual health or wellness are on the rise.  People are longing for those spaces and they're looking everywhere and so I long for the United Church of Canada to be really bold in showing up to the tables where people are looking for that type of care to their spirituality and then being a potential option or fit for them.

Rev. Mitchell Anderson, Lead Minister at St. Paul’s United Church, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan: my dream for the future of the United Church is that we would be a church that is a place for all Canadians from every walk of life, of every background and especially as we see the future of what Canada is, becoming a younger and more diverse country enriched by people coming from all over the world, drawn in by a country that is welcoming and inclusive of all, where different types of people can live well together, where we speak different languages, where we eat different foods, practice different cultures and are all one.  That is what God is calling the United Church to be, a church that is younger and more diverse, a church that practices that inclusion and a church that speaks to the hopes of Canadians of future generations in the way we have for the generations past.

Rev. Anna Constantin, Senior Minister, St. Paul’s United Church, Edmonton, Alberta: my call, my passion for church is the multigenerational aspect of the church where everybody is welcome at the table. I really hope and pray and I believe this is God's dream of how do we have abundance at this beautiful table because everybody is there and if they're not there, let's talk about why, let's figure out how we're inviting them, let's listen to their prophetic voices to see what is happening there, because I guarantee that there God's voice is working there too and that we'll all be transformed.

Rev. Erin McIntyre, Minister of Knox St. Paul’s United Church, Cornwall Ontario: my vision and dream for the future of this United Church is to have a vibrant denomination that meets folks where they're at and inspires them to be bold disciples with deep spirituality and who are not afraid to stand up on matters of justice. I envision a denomination that seeks to serve the communities of faith and the regions to ensure that they are healthy and growing and doing the work that they love to do that meets the needs of their communities, that helps to grow disciples and grow faith and inspire folks and just be a presence in the world.

What is your Vision and Dream for the United Church?


June 17, 2025

Suffering and Endurance, Ew Ick!

“We know that affliction produces perseverance; and perseverance, proven character; and character, hope. And such a hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us.” - Romans 5:1–5 

Ew yuck! Who wants to suffer for any reason?  Who wants to have to endure anything? In our quick fix world, pain, physical, emotional or mental pain, is to be avoided at all costs.  Pain should be drowned or denied or ignored or ended.  Endurance? Give me a break!

One man knew how affliction led to hope, not just for himself, but for many.  Despite our society saying otherwise to him, he was determined endure for the sake of his faith, and even the United Church of Canada. The Very Rev. Dr. Wilbur Howard is a name you might not be familiar with, but to many who knew him, he was unforgettable and inspired great hope! Dr. Howard was born on February 29, 1912, in Toronto, a leap year baby. Like many African Canadians, his father and brothers worked as porters on the railroad, for low wages and long hours.  They were often called “George” instead of their real names, and were banned from the union until they founded their own. As a child, Howard was invited to go to the United Church by a neighboring white family and went faithfully for the rest of his life.  He discovered that he was called to be a minister but racism was rampant.  The Canadian Armed Forces were just starting to accept people of African origin as soldiers.  While the rest of his classmates went off to preach in churches during the summer, Howard was sent to a church camp as a counsellor, even though there was a dire shortage of ministers due to conscription. In 1941, when Howard was 29, he became the first Black person to be ordained in The United Church, but for the next 24 years, no one would take him. Instead, he was administrator for a Boy’s organization similar to the YMCA, and edited Sunday school resources, including the controversial New Curriculum of the 1960s. Then, in 1965, at the age of 53, he finally got the call — to team ministry at Ottawa’s Dominion-Chalmers United.

Howard worked hard for the church and for Canada, often focusing on children and youth ministries.  He was also a member of the Refugee Status Committee for the Federal Government. He was President of the John Milton Society for the Blind in Canada, and Chairman of the Ontario Advisory Council on Alcohol and Drug Concerns. In 1974, Howard became the first, and to date only, Black Moderator of The United Church of Canada. In 1991 he was received into the Order of Ontario and in 2001, he  passed away.

The Broadview Magazine article written in 2018 said:

“He … exhibit[ed] a renowned wit. When elected moderator, for example, Howard quipped, “They had to decide when the commissioners vote ‘Black’ on the ballot whether they meant John Black [a fellow nominee] or me.” Some say this sense of humour is what helped Howard cross racial boundaries.

“He had a respected place in the life of the United Church. And if there were some congregations that didn’t choose to give him a chance, he didn’t dwell on that,” says Very Rev. Bruce McLeod, 89, who served as moderator before Howard and knew him well. “He was a private person. He certainly wasn’t a crybaby. He wouldn’t appreciate his story being used to say, ‘Oh, wasn’t that awful about Wilbur Howard.’ He wouldn’t appreciate that because he didn’t think it was that awful.”

But this isn’t the only opinion that exists on Howard’s silence. “I can see that he had been bruised in terms of racial prejudice and that there was a vulnerability there,” Douglas Lapp told the Globe and Mail after Howard’s death. “Maybe that was why he was so private.””

Talk about affliction producing perseverance! It must have been hard to be both a respected leader of a large denomination and also a person who faced racism on a daily basis.  And while Howard didn’t dwell on it, other ministers have been speaking out about how it is still difficult to this day.  That same article said “Rev. Marlene Britton … moved to Canada from Barbados in 2013 and first settled in Alberta. During her search for a ministry position, she sat before a church’s three-member hiring committee and took part in an interview that she felt was normal. She was later told she did not get the job because the committee thought the congregation was not ready for a woman. But a few months later, she learned the same congregation had hired a woman — and the new hire was white”  Rev. Paul Walfall, also from Barbados, who has preached in this very church when he was president of Alberta North West Conference, spoke out at the last General Council three years ago about the racism that he and other ministers were experiencing not just from Canadians but from the United Church.  For this year’s meeting in Calgary, all commissioners had to take rigorous training on equality, diversity and equity, with six facets: Challenge Assumptions, Question Biases, Notice who’s missing, Value All Voices, Aim for Equity, Live Out Our Commitments.  Each of these is thought-provoking and not something we can find quick fixes or easy answers for.  They may even produce some affliction while we wrestle with how to nurture hope for everyone in our communities of faith in the future.

Rev. Walfall also has spearheaded an ambitious project, “Here from the Beginning”, a travelling exhibition that quote “showcases the contributions and experiences of Black people within the United Church, amplifying voices that have long been overshadowed by the dominant narrative. This is a celebration of faith, history, community and The United Church of Canada.” End Quote.  It will be unveiled in Edmonton from July 27 - August 2 at Pilgrim United Church before travelling across Canada as part of the United Church’s commitment to becoming an intercultural church. If you are in Edmonton, please check it out.

The many stories of people like Walfall, Britton and Howard can inspire us and help us also live into a deeper commitment to being intercultural, to being more aware of our assumptions and more curious about those who are missing in our pews. They show us the spirit of Truth and how it really does lead to great change.  Howard did not father any children, but in some ways he fathered a deeper understanding of what it means to persevere in the face of great injustice, and his example can inspire hope for us all in these dark times.  “And such a hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us.” May this be so for us all!