Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
GRAND RAPIDS, MI (June 16) - The newly ordained and commissioned
Covenant pastors in black robes crossed the stage over which hung a
banner proclaiming the vision of "Everyone to Everywhere." They
received new Bibles and were vested with stoles that signified their
yoking to Christ for ministry.
They stood before the hundreds of people who gathered this evening as
part of the 121st Annual Meeting of the Evangelical Covenant Church, the
very people who earlier today had approved the calling of these
individuals "as teachers, ministers of the Word, and shepherds of the
flock" and who now prayed for them.
That Spirit is not tame, she said, as evidenced by what happened to the
disciples huddled in a Jerusalem home nearly 2,000 years ago. "This is
not a quaint little dove, this is not a comforter," Miller said. "There
was a fire, not in a burning bush, but in a whole house."
On that day, the Spirit unified the disciples by giving them the ability
to speak diverse languages in order to proclaim "the mighty works of
God," noted Miller, adding that the same Spirit will give the newly
ordained and commissioned ministers the same power.
In Jerusalem, the pastors had no idea what the future held for them, and
neither did the people on stage, Miller said. What she did know was that
they had their work cut out for them.
She shared an old story handed down in her family that tells of an
important visitor who received a tour of an underground mine. Upon
descending the long shaft, he was surprised to find a large draft horse
in an open area of the mine and asked how the animal could possibly be
transported underground and back to the surface. One of the miners
informed the visitor that the horse had made the trip only once – as a
colt. It was in the mine that the horse ate, worked and had people to
pet him. It was there that the horse one day would be buried.
Miller said the horse's situation might appear sad, but "it's not so bad
when you get used to it.
"It's not that bad when you get used to it," Miller said. The new
ministers, however, have the charge of guiding people who have grown
accustomed to the banality and are unable to imagine any other future.
Miller began doing that work when she was ordained 25 years ago. In his
introduction of her, President Glenn Palmberg told the gathering that he
had been the Dean of Students at North Park Theological Seminary when
Miller asked about transferring to the school because the seminary of
her previous denomination didn't allow women to become pastors.
Miller helped pioneer the way for women, Palmberg said. Although the
Covenant had voted five years earlier to ordain women, "they were not
always given full opportunity."
She would go on, Palmberg noted, to be the first woman officer in the
Covenant's history, as well as a pastor, author, spiritual director,
preacher and teacher, "and a good and faithful servant."
Pastors Ordained, Commissioned in Final Service
By Stan Friedman
Of differing genders, ethnicities, ages, shapes and sizes, they were
witnesses to the words preached earlier by Mary Miller that "the Holy
Spirit pours forth unto all of us in the image of God."
"We kind of have the same thing today," Miller continued, as evidenced
by the "blue haze" seen coming from nearly every home in any area of the
country. "People go to work, come home, eat, watch TV, and go to bed."
She added that the next day, "People go to work, come home, eat, watch
TV, and go to bed."
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