|
|
|

Bishop Robert E. Fannin preaches for morning worship on
May 6 at General Conference.
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
|
Bishop tells conference ‘It’s a spiritual matter’
May 6, 2004
By Danette Clifton*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) – Bishop Robert E. Fannin told the 2004
United Methodist General Conference that “most of the
questions, concerns and opportunities facing the church
are spiritual matters.” |
In his sermon during the May 6 morning worship service,
Fannin, episcopal leader of the Birmingham Area, also
told those gathered, “The world is craving to hear the
Good News, and we need to find the spirit and the
enthusiasm to say, ‘He lives, He lives and He lives in
the United Methodist Church!’”
During the service, worshippers experienced the global
nature and spirit of the United Methodist Church with
the music of the Mytischi United Methodist Church Choir
of Moscow, Russia. Before the sermon began, the
congregation stood, held hands and sang, “We were
baptized in Christ Jesus.”
|
During the sermon, Fannin told worshippers, “We the
people called United Methodist and we the people called
Christian must recapture in our words, actions,
programs, worship and vision a spirituality that speaks
to today’s world.” He continued, “I believe that as new
generations of seekers for truth, we must once again
merge mind and heart so as to speak with authority about
the story of Jesus and His love.”
|

A United Methodist choir from Moscow leads morning worship
at General Conference.
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
|
Fannin told a story of meeting a woman at a car rental
counter who had recently visited a United Methodist
church and reported to him that the service was the
“deadest thing” she had ever attended. He warned the
conference that if she, and other seekers like her,
visit another United Methodist church, no matter what
its style of worship, it will depend on “the presence of
the Spirit” whether these seekers will want to become a
part of that community of faith.
He also challenged the General Conference with the words
of John Wesley, founder of the Methodist movement: “Give
me 100 preachers who fear nothing but sin, and desire
nothing but God, and I care not a straw whether they be
clergy or lay, such alone will shake the gates of hell
and set up the Kingdom of God upon earth.”
Fannin told the delegates from around the world, who
have spent the last eight days debating and voting on
various issues, “If we cannot agree that our primary
task is the presentation of Jesus Christ as Lord and
Savior, then some of you got on the wrong bus, came to
the wrong town and the wrong conference.”
*Clifton is director of communications for the
North Alabama
Conference.
Top of Page
|
| |
|
|
|
|
Copyright 2003 | Methodist Laity Reform
Movement
|
|