Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
GRAND RAPIDS, MI (June 15) - Brenda Salter McNeil preached.
Several hundred people shouted amens. They also applauded – often. When
Salter McNeil was done, she had inspired them with the call to live "a
gospel that is powerful enough to be believed again."
That kind of living will bring reconciliation not only between humanity
and God, but also among people, many of whom have come to believe the
church to be redundant. That kind of living will require people to
depend on the power of the Holy Ghost and give up their own power and
control over others. That kind of living, she said, will make a new
people one.
Reconciliation requires a divine mandate, she said. The text says that
Jesus "had to go through Samaria," Salter McNeil noted, but it wasn't
because there was no other way to reach his destination. Jews almost
never traveled through Samaria, choosing to go around the region. "He
could have taken the detour like anyone else," she observed.
Drawing on the meeting's theme, Salter McNeil stated that "Everyone to
Everywhere is not a good idea - it's a God idea." Because most people
are reticent to go anywhere, let alone to uncomfortable areas, "There
has to be something bigger than us that makes us do what we don't want
to do."
Reconciliation also requires a real need on the part of the church for
others. Jesus' request for a drink "was not a conversation starter,"
McNeil Salter said. "This was not a way to start an evangelistic
conversation!" Jesus was parched.
The American church will need to recognize that it needs the gifts of
other people, including from Africa and Latin America. Churches and
individuals will need to recognize their need of those around them.
By Jesus expressing his need of the woman, she could enter into a real
relationship with him, McNeil Salter continued.
Reconciliation requires intentional interaction with diverse people.
Jesus sat down when he had a pretty high expectation that he would have
an interaction with the woman, Salter McNeil said.
Reconciliation will require risk-taking. Jesus talked to a woman who has
been hurt by everything he represents, including being Jewish and a
male. He was risking that she would spit at him. "She couldn't believe
it when Jesus asked to drink from her cup. They've spat on her and
called her worthless."
Reconciliation will require counter-cultural social action. Jesus knew
he was breaking social, cultural and religious rules, Salter McNeil
said. "Be counter-cultural. Do something different," she implored.
Reconciliation requires relinquishing power. "This is where the rubber
meets the road," she says. In the text, Jesus has all the power over the
woman, but "Jesus turns that on its head." He gives the power to the
woman by asking her for a drink, especially when he could have made his
own water.
Too often churches operate with the attitude toward ethnic groups with
different social customs that "you can come to our church, but you have
to know who's in charge here," Salter McNeil lamented.
Reconciliation requires authentic spirituality. Too often the church
focuses on debatable issues, but Jesus says, "Your majors are the
minors," Salter McNeil said. "Soul change leads to social change." That
is something God does through human beings and is not accomplished by
people debating issues.
Reconciliation requires reciprocity. When Jesus told the woman about
living water, he was saying he knew she had been mistreated by others
seemingly like him, but if she would give him a chance to change her
view of him, she would experience something new, Salter McNeil said. He
was telling her, "I want to satisfy your deepest need; I know you are
not a bad person."
Reconciliation requires bridge people. Salter McNeil pointed out that
when the disciples returned, their reaction told the woman she was not
welcome, but still she went back to inform her people of the person who
just might be the messiah.
"The Annual Meeting is begging us to do the same thing," Salter McNeil
exhorted. When she finished, the gathering gave her an extended standing
ovation.
During other portions of the worship service, which focused on the
necessity of the new birth, attendees heard from pastors of two church
plants and a long-established church that has experienced recent
revitalization.
The gathering also celebrated the Bringing My World to Christ
initiative, where prayer lists created by individuals throughout the
Covenant are brought forward to a central place for prayer. Flowers were
distributed that represented groups of people being prayed for.
There was a lot more going on at the well. And there was a lot more
going on when Salter McNeil preached.
(Editor's note: Salter McNeil is the founder of Salter McNeil and
Associates, a racial and ethnic reconciliation training, consulting, and
leadership development company in Chicago. She is the co-author of the
book The Heart of Racial Justice: How Soul Change Leads to Social
Change. She also is seeking ordination in the Covenant.)
'Live a Gospel Powerful Enough to be Believed'
By Stan Friedman
Preaching from the story of Jesus and the woman at the well, Salter
McNeil declared that "more than one thing happened at that well." Not
only was the woman reconciled in her vertical relationship with God, but
it was the beginning of a horizontal reconciliation with others. "She
was reconciled to Jesus, a Jewish man to whom she said we don't have
anything in common."
She added that most churches ask, "How do we get them to come to us?"
The real question is, "How do we get us to go to them."
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