Thursday, October 31, 2013

Fearlessness of Our Foremothers and Forefathers: Part 2 of 4 from a Stewardship Series for the First Baptist Church of Williams

Acts 7:54-60
54 When they heard these things, they became enraged and ground their teeth at Stephen. 55 But filled with the Holy Spirit, he gazed into heaven and saw the glory of God and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. 56 "Look," he said, "I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God!" 57 But they covered their ears, and with a loud shout all rushed together against him. 58 Then they dragged him out of the city and began to stone him; and the witnesses laid their coats at the feet of a young man named Saul. 59 While they were stoning Stephen, he prayed, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." 60 Then he knelt down and cried out in a loud voice, "Lord, do not hold this sin against them." When he had said this, he died.

            Fearlessness. That’s the word that comes to mind when I reflect on this story of Stephen, the first martyr of the Christian Church. Stephen was fearless. He was fearless as he did great signs and wonders among the people. He was fearless as he stood up to those who argued against him—“those who belonged to the synagogue of the Freedmen (as it was called), Cyrenians, Alexandrians, and others of those from Cilicia and Asia” (Acts 6:9). He was fearless as he faced the conspiracies of false witnesses and endured being brought before the high priest in order to answer for those trumped up charges of blasphemy. He was fearless as he boldly proclaimed the truth of the gospel, the reality that God does not dwell in houses built by mortal hands, and he was fearless as he retold the history of how God’s prophets were persecuted by God’s own people. He was fearless in the face of rising anger and the grinding teeth of hatred. He was fearless as he gazed towards the sky and saw a vision of Christ standing as his only witness to the testimony of faith he had given, and he was fearless as he shouted to the lynch mob, "Look…I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God!" He was fearless right to the very end, for even as the rocks ripped his skin and crushed his bones he was fearless enough to forgive his executioners, just as his Lord had done from the cross on which he himself had been executed: "Lord, do not hold this sin against them." Stephen was fearless, and it was his fearlessness that cost him his life, but it was that same fearlessness that helped to start a fire that spread across the empire and the known world. His critics, his accusers, his murderers, even his own death could not stop the good work Stephen had started with the Good News of God’s in-breaking kingdom. Fearlessness: that’s the word that comes to my mind when I reflect on Stephen’s story, and it is a word that comes to mind when I reflect on others’ stories in the history of Christ’s Church.
            Fearlessness is a word that comes to mind when I think on the life of Francis of Assisi in the thirteenth century. St. Francis was fearless as he abandoned the wealth and luxury of the life that was his for the living in order to live among and serve the poor. Fearlessness is a word that comes to mind when I think of that radical Augustinian monk, who on October 31, 1517 walked up to the church in Wittenberg, Germany and nailed his 95 Theses  to its door; fearlessness is the word to describe that same monk, Martin Luther, as he stood before a panel of his accusers at the Diet of Worms, and, when asked to recant his writings on the gospel of Christ, he said, "Unless I am convinced by Scripture and plain reason - I do not accept the authority of the popes and councils, for they have contradicted each other - my conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot and I will not recant anything for to go against conscience is neither right nor safe. God help me. Amen."[1]
            Fearlessness is the word that comes to mind when I think on our Baptist forbearers. Thomas Helwys was fearless when he wrote to King James I (yes, that King James) declaring that “the state could not act punitively in religious matters against the heretic, the non-Christian, or the atheist.”[2] Roger Williams was fearless when, in the 1640s, he began the colony of Rhode Island, a colony in which the first Baptist church in America was established and a colony with a reputation for religious liberty for all. Fearlessness describes Baptist pastor John Leland and his fight for religious liberty and his influence with James Madison and Thomas Jefferson. Williams and Leland were both fearless with their radical idea of a nation that promoted religious liberty and the separation of Church and State.[3]
            Then there are those fearless forbearers whose testimonies rest closer to us on the slide rule of history. In 1832, Eleanor Macomber was the first single woman funded directly by the Mission Board of the Triennial Convention (the forerunner to the Southern Baptist Convention); she was appointed as an evangelist and church organizer in Burma. In 1849, Harriet A. Baker became the first single woman appointed by the four-year-old Southern Baptist Convention; she was appointed to Canton, China. It wasn’t until 1872 that another single woman would be appointed to the mission field; it would be two single women in fact: Lula Whilden and Edmonia Harris Moon. You likely know Edmonia’s sister better than you know any other missionary: her name was Charlotte Diggs Moon, but folks just call her Lottie.[4] If you’ve grown up in a Baptist church in the last century you’ve no doubt heard the stories of Miss Lottie’s fearlessness, the way she shared the gospel in a foreign country, the way she lived with the people (there’s even a story surrounding her death that she starved to death as the people she served were also starving).[5] These first single women, Baptist, missionaries were fearless as they took the gospel to foreign people in strange lands in a time when women were less than empowered by their Christian brethren.
            Of course, some of you in this room know firsthand the kind of fearlessness it takes to do the kind of radical, empowering, risky, gospel-inspired, Christ-honoring things that can lead to just a touch of controversy.
If you take the paper (whether in print or online) there’s still a good chance you might have missed it. I promise it was there though, on page 2A of Thursday’s Anniston Star. Here are the first three sentences of that little almanac article from October 24, 1988: “In northern Calhoun County there’s little to set the First Baptist Church of Williams apart, and no hint of the controversy that has surrounded it since Sept. 25. That Sunday saw six new deacons ordained—four men and two women. The ordination of women at Williams came as a shock to some Baptist churches in the county.”[6] This church took the fearless move to ordain Peggy Hamby (a woman who could tell me the sky is green and I wouldn’t bother to look out the window to know I’d believe her!) and the late Dean Norton to serve as deacons to this congregation. It was a fearless move that led to one of the highest attended meetings of the Calhoun Baptist Association at Parker Memorial in Anniston, where a vote of 331 to 269 caused the association to refuse to seat this church’s messengers and expel this church from membership in the association.[7] After the vote was taken, the members of this church that were in attendance (perhaps some of you in this room) did not raise shouts of protest, but instead—with the quiet dignity I am coming to learn defines this community—“left quietly through a side door.”[8]
That fearless act twenty-five years ago in many ways has come to define this congregation, but not how you might think. Rather than being known as the Baptist step-child of Calhoun County, among sisters and brothers in other Christian traditions in our county, this congregation has the reputation of being welcoming, loving, encouraging, missional, progressive, intelligent, and—above all—Christ-centered. That fearless act did not come without pain, without consequence: this congregation—and Peggy and Dean especially—was exposed to less-than-loving words and thoughts from others in our county, and there are still those who hold a less-than-favorable opinion of this congregation (which may not have been helped in the minds of those who hold such opinions when word got out you called me as your next pastor!).
Furthermore, that fearless act was not undertaken without a great deal of prayer, research, and the study of Scripture. I know because I’ve read the account of Lee Messer, a former member of this church, as he recorded it on our church’s history:
 Since being directed to reconsider our position by the Calhoun Association…we have again prayerfully researched and studied the Scripture; consulted credible biblical scholars and have scrutinized publications of other mainstream biblical authorities; examined local, state, and national precedents; and reviewed the history of the Baptist Church (sic) with particular emphasis on the role of women in the early Baptist churches. Relying upon the guidance of the Holy Spirit, we still unanimously concur with our original decision to permit any qualified and elected Christian to serve as a Deacon Family Minister. Albeit we are not the only Baptist Church (sic) in the State Convention to elect qualified women as deacons, we feel comfortable to have women serve in this vital calling.
We believe that our selection is biblical.[9]

            It was a fearless, biblical act that has lead us to where we are today as the First Baptist Church of Williams.
            There is a great legacy of fearlessness behind us, friends. There is the fearlessness of those patriarchs and matriarchs of Scripture: Noah, Abraham, Moses, Ruth, Esther, the prophets, Mary (Jesus’ mother), the apostles. There is the fearlessness of all those sisters and brothers throughout the history of Christ’s Church who have boldly risked so much in order to live the life Christ calls us all to live, to proclaim the gospel with our words and actions. There are those familiar examples of fearlessness that occupy these pews and live in the spirit of this congregation. Above all else, there is the fearlessness of our Lord himself as he willingly laid his life down and died upon the cross as the Lamb of God who came to take away the sins of the world.
            We have a great legacy of fearlessness for God’s kingdom behind us, but what can we do to add to that legacy today? What bold actions might God be calling us to do as a congregation? What bold actions might God be calling you to do?  Over the next few weeks as you prayerfully consider how you will be good stewards of your time to the ministries of this congregation and as you prayerfully consider how God is calling you to be good stewards of the financial needs of this congregation, take time to reflect on the legacy of fearlessness left by those who have gone before us in the history of Christ’s Church. Spend time with the Scriptures; listen for the voice of the Holy Spirit. Don’t confuse the simple writing of a check or having your name listed on a committee as a fearless act for Christ—do something! If you’re limited by illness, income, or circumstances beyond your control, then pray with boldness! Pray that God will use this congregation to do new, fearless things for God’s kingdom.
May we continue the fearless pursuit of bringing God’s kingdom to earth as it is in heaven. May we boldly follow the call of the Holy Spirit no matter the consequences. May we all give of ourselves to the kingdom work of Christ’s Church as the First Baptist Church of Williams. And as we look forward to celebrating 163 years with our Homecoming celebration next week, may we reflect on the way God has used the fearlessness of this congregation in the past, and may it empower us to fearless acts of generosity, grace, forgiveness, and love. May we all seek together to be fearless for Christ.
Let us pray…
           




[2] Bill Leonard, Baptist Ways. Judson Press: Valley Forge, PA (2003) p.9.
[3] Ibid., p.130-131.
[4] Ibid. p.176.
[6] from The Anniston Star. October 24, 2013, p. 2A. (Emphasis mine).
[7] Wayne Flynt, Alabama Baptists: Southern Baptists in the Heart of Dixie. The University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, AL (1998) p.586.
[8] from A People Who Shared a Vision: History of the Church at Williams, 1850-200. Higginbotham Printing: Anniston, AL (200) p101.
[9] Ibid. p.97.

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