From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


[PCUSANEWS] Dogs, dogmas and other distractions


From PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ECUNET.ORG>
Date Sat, 3 Jul 2004 09:31:47 -0500

Note #8420 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

Dogs, dogmas and other distractions
GA04125
July 3, 2004

Dogs, dogmas and other distractions

Preacher urges worshippers to remember to welcome the lost sheep

by Eva Stimson

RICHMOND, June 3 - Sheep and shepherds were the focus of scripture readings
during worship on the final morning of the General Assembly. So preacher
Chris Glaser began his sermon by talking about dogs.

"I have two very friendly dogs named Calvin and Hobbes," he began.

Glaser, an elder and author of Uncommon Calling: A Gay Christian's Struggle
to Serve the Church, went on to make connections between sheep and dogs.

Once, he said, when his friend, the late Henri Nouven, was planning to visit
him in Atlanta, Glaser asked him, "Do you mind dogs?"

Nouven said he didn't mind dogs "as long as we don't talk about them all the
time."

Confessing that he and other people with pets do tend to talk about them a
lot, Glaser observed, "Pets, like other distractions, can get in the way of
intimacy."

We have other kinds of distractions in the church, he said. "When we try to
talk about controversial issues, we trot out our pet dogmas" instead of
seeking real intimacy and understanding.

Glaser told about a gay man he knew who came back to church after years of
estrangement.  His past contacts with Christians had made him so angry he
couldn't even bring himself to say Jesus's name.

But after attending worship and Bible studies, and talking regularly with
Glaser, he not only was able to say the name of Jesus - he accepted him as
Lord and Savior and joined the church. He even quit his job as a bank vice
president to become the church's custodian and spend more time volunteering
in its outreach ministries.

"It would be too easy to hear this story as that of a lost sheep returning to
the fold," he said. "But it's also a story of the lost fold returning to the
sheep left out."

Good shepherds seek and welcome the lost sheep, he said. "We may have our pet
dogmas, but we can't let them get in the way of welcoming each other."

This story and many others may have photos, media, video clips that can be
found at http://www.pcusa.org/ga216/.

To subscribe or unsubscribe, please send an email to
pcusanews-subscribe-request@halak.pcusa.org or
pcusanews-unsubscribe-request@halak.pcusa.org

To contact the owner of the list, please send an email to
pcusanews-request@halak.pcusa.org


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home