Happy New Year!  As I
write that, I am mindful of how easily that can roll off someone’s tongue and
how much it can miss the mark of the reality that many are living.  Last year, many people wished me a happy new
year.  But neither they nor I had any
idea of the unexpected challenges, grief and loss that would come in 2012.  Likewise, when I wish people happy new year
now  - we have no idea what lies ahead of
us.  Some of us are struggling –
spiritually, emotionally, financially, relationally ….. and some of us are
doing that in great isolation.  Happy new
year? Well maybe not a superficial hallmark greeting .... but as people of faith we do extend confident prayers for one another that the new year will be blessed.
We have a tradition at my church of praying over the
calendar at our New Year’s day service. 
We talk together about some of the things that are likely to happen in
the months ahead, but mainly we simply consecrate each day of the year to God in the
knowledge that so many unexpected things may happen.  As a community, when difficult things happen,
it is not uncommon to remind each other, “Remember, we consecrated this day to
God.”  We live, as a community, in the
remembrance that we serve Emmanuel – God with us.  We live in the knowledge that God enters and
exits each day with us.
During our mini-retreat for New Direction, several of us
gathered to reflect on 2012 and to look with anticipation towards 2013.  And I can honestly say that I am as excited
as I have probably ever been in my years with New Direction for what lies ahead.  For many years, I have been leading change in
our organization.  But, as I have
thought, prayed, reflected, spoken and taught about generous spaciousness in
the last year, I find myself feeling a paradoxical sense of restful
anticipation.  Generous spaciousness is
where New Direction is supposed to be, it is what we are supposed to be about,
it is what we need to model, share, and promote. 
 
We acknowledge that Christians who love Jesus and care
deeply about the Scriptures arrive at different conclusions about gay marriage
for Christians.  In this acknowledgement,
we commit ourselves to nurture spaces that give room for people to wrestle
with, clarify, and live in alignment with their beliefs and values concerning
faithful discipleship for gay people.  In
the midst of this spacious place, we want to point people to Jesus, to
encourage vibrant, intimate relationship with our Trinitarian, relational
God.  We want to support people as they
grow in discernment, in spiritual disciplines, in living out obedience,
faithfulness, justice and love in their day-to-day lives.  We want to bless people to experience
gracious freedom as they serve God with their whole life.  We want to see people know joy, grow in being
peace-makers, and work for the common good of those around them.  We want to put first things first and not
allow second-place things to divide, fracture or disrupt our unity as sisters
and brothers in Christ.
Generous spaciousness is a way of being together in the Body
of Christ.  Gay marriage, as such, is
simply one case study.  But there are so
many realities in our complex and pluralistic world that challenge us in our unity
as Christians.  Learning to listen to one
another, learning to clothe ourselves in a deep humility, learning to extend
grace to one another in the midst of the tensions of disagreements or different
views, learning to discern the voice of the Holy Spirit and trust his leading -
these are spiritually formational opportunities.
Last year I had so many opportunities to meet gay people who
had either drifted away from connection with church community, were feeling marginalized or
like they didn’t really fit in their congregation, or were frustrated with the
lack of space and opportunity they experienced in their church.  The sparks of faith were not dead, but rather
than fanning these sparks into flames – the church was quenching them.  This has motivated me all the more to be bold
in sharing the message of generous spaciousness.  
The idea that Christians disagree on a moral matter is
nothing new in the church.  Paul dealt
with it.  And instead of making a
pronouncement about what was the RIGHT position – Paul implored the sisters and
brothers to treat each other gently and to make room for people to follow their
conscience.  He recognized that people
were coming from very different backgrounds and experiences – and his priority
was that people would have every opportunity to grow in the knowledge and grace
of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Truth is we need one another in the Body of Christ – as painful
as it is at times to encounter perspectives that differ from our own.   Iron
sharpens iron.  We need each other to
challenge our tendency to get lazy, selfish, and complacent.  We need to hold one another accountable to
get back to our prayer closets, back into the story of Scripture, and back to
extending forgiveness and grace to each other.  
We need each other to really learn how to love.  Jesus told us that it was easy to love our
friends, and by extension to love those who agree with us.  But he called us to a higher standard – to love
our enemies.  To love those who are
different than we are, those we disagree with, those we would tend to judge
negatively and evaluate as missing the mark.
Generous spaciousness challenges us to grow up.  It demands a level of maturity where it isn’t
all about us and our correct way of interpreting things.  Generous spaciousness honours the people
Jesus honoured – the last workers in the vineyard, the prodigal sons, the folks
from the wrong side of the tracks.  Generous spaciousness staggers us as we realize WE are the ones who are recipients of such outrageous grace.  It
challenges us to live incarnationally – to strip ourselves of the privilege we
have and to identify with those who lack such privilege.  And it is really hard.  It costs us. 
It is uncomfortable.  It exposes
our fears, our judgments, our insecurities.
But generous spaciousness, I am more convinced than ever,
smells a lot like Jesus.  It isn’t about
control or fear or pride.  It is about
giving room to one another to encounter Jesus, to share with each other the
ways that Jesus is impacting our lives, and to encourage each other to love
Jesus more deeply.
So in the year ahead, we are planning on talking a whole lot
more about generous spaciousness and the way that it can bring hope and
encouragement to our sexual minority sisters and brothers in the church.  We hope to get across Canada and offer
seminars in a number of major cities.  We
are also preparing for a spring conference/retreat with generous spaciousness
as the focus.  This year I’ll also begin
working on my thesis for my doctorate with the focus being, you guessed it, the
impact of generous spaciousness on how a congregation navigates a discussion on
gay marriage.  And, by hook or by crook,
I will get my book manuscript published this year – the title being, “Nurturing
Generous Spaciousness:  A Response to Gay
Christians in the Church”.
I know and love gay Christians who are navigating their
journeys of faith in Christ in a variety of ways.  I want to encourage their faith, in full
confidence that God who began a good work in them will bring it to
completion.  And I commit, in 2013 and
beyond, to do what I can to expose, address and remove the barriers that would
keep sexual minority Christians from finding their place in the community of
faith and from growing as vibrant disciples of Jesus Christ.  New Direction, with every resource available to us, will be out there, faithfully day-after-day, talking about generous spaciousness as a way of life that will help the church live out the good news of the gospel in more hospitable, generous, and fruitful ways.
-wg
-wg

Wendy, this is encouraging. I'm looking forward to promoting your (forthcoming) book -- I predict it's going to be a real game changer!
ReplyDeleteAll the best for the seminars and conference! I'm looking forward to reading the book, too - praying for a publisher to step up and take it.
ReplyDeleteWendy, This blog and the work of New Direction has been a wonderful encouragement to me, being a mom of two gay children and coming from a conservative christian background. I'm looking forward to New Directions in 2013! thanks, Shelley
ReplyDelete