Word from Father Kevin: International Day of Prayer

My heart goes out to the many Christians around the world who suffer persecution. In honor of the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church, I offer you this prayer by an (unnamed) Asian woman at the 2016 Lausanne Movement’s Younger Leaders Gathering:

 We pray for our dear brothers and sisters around the globe who are now suffering for the name of Jesus. We claim that no suppression from the authority, no adversity from other religions, no terrorist threat could separate us from the love of Jesus, or the body of Christ. We ask for your true freedom, your true comfort and your true peace and joy to be with those who are restricted by human powers. Remember your children and fight for them and for your glory. And save the crowns of righteousness for them.

Lord, we also pray for ourselves as we bear the torch from the hands of those who gave their lives proclaiming Jesus. Let us inherit the same spirit, the spirit that inspired them and sustained them. Let us keep the memory of suffering fresh so that we can encourage those who are in sufferings. Give us strength and courage to humbly and willingly walk on the same path of Calvary that our fathers, grandfathers and saints of history have walked on.

 (From The Fellowship of the Suffering, by Paul Borthwick and Dave Ripper. InterVarsity Press, 2018.)

Spotlight on Ron & Emily McGowin

Emily and Ron McGowin are both ordained within C4SO — Emily as a deacon, Ron as a priest — and recently moved to Wheaton from Colorado with their three children (William, Emmelia, and Althea) and their black cat, Jezebel (who allows them to live in her home). Get to know the McGowins in today's post:

Where do you live now, and where are you from?

Currently, we live on the south side of Wheaton. We moved here from the Denver suburbs in June 2018 after living there for four years. Before that we also lived in Dayton, OH and Dallas, TX.

What do you do when you’re not at church?

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Ron: Currently I serve two ACNA churches as interim priest. One in Lake Villa, IL and another in Milwaukee, WI. I collect and smoke tobacco pipes. I enjoy all sorts of adult beverages. I have recently entered the creative world of Dungeons & Dragons. I identify as an Enneagram 7w6.

Ron's favorite quote: “You are safe in God’s Kingdom.” - Bp. Todd Hunter

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Emily: I am Associate Lecturer of Theology at Wheaton College. When I’m not teaching or preparing to teach, you’ll find me reading and writing about theology. And when I’m not doing that, I’m spending time with my husband, Ronnie, and our three kids. We love board games and movies and spending time at the library.

Trivia about Emily: I was heavily involved in ballet from kindergarten through my senior year of high school. I spent summers training with different ballet companies and was convinced I was going to be a professional dancer. But, then I fell in love with theology and discerned a calling to some kind of ministry, so I left that behind.

What brought you back to Savior after your first visit?

Emily: It was so warm and welcoming. I could tell my children were wanted and not just tolerated. And I felt I could be truly myself.

Ron: As a priest within C4SO under Bp Todd Hunter, there was never a question where our family was going to worship. However, we love the family feel and Montessori-based children’s formation model.

What passions and skills do you bring to Savior?

Emily: I love teaching—that’s why it’s my job! So, I have skills in teaching, research, and writing. I can preach, too, and have quite a bit of experience doing that from the church we planted in Denver.

Ron: As a priest, I love serving God’s people as they seek to find their place in God’s Kingdom.

Word from Father Kevin: What We Believe

On November 10, I will start a 3-sermon series on the Apostles’ Creed. Yep, theological preaching. Doctrinal preaching. That oh-so-scary word, “dogma”! 

It seems to me that our evangelical churches have had a turbulent relationship with doctrine. Some doubled-down on a doctrinal correctness that became brittle, harsh, and divisive. In response, others became seeker-sensitive and preached about felt needs (“7 tips to a happy home”). So we shouldn’t be too surprised that in a recent survey32% of evangelicals agree that “religious belief is a matter of personal opinion [and] not about objective truth.”

Dorothy Sayers laid most of the blame for this on us preachers: “If the ‘average man’ is going to be interested in Christ at all, it is the dogma that will provide the interest. The trouble is that, in nine cases out of ten, he has never been offered the dogma. What he has been offered is a set of technical theological terms which nobody has taken the trouble to translate into language relevant to ordinary life.”

I will try to do that translation. As I do, here’s how I think Savior can always keep a right relationship to doctrine:

  • Focus on the essentials. The Apostles’ Creed (or its prior baptismal formulas) has been held by all Christians in all places at all times. As we focus here, we will not get sidetracked into arguments over secondary matters.

  • Keep belief where it belongs: in the community, in worship, from both the head and the heart. When we stand each week and say, “We believe,” this is not a merely intellectual statement, it is a love song. We are saying to God, “This is what you’ve revealed about yourself, Lord, and we accept, believe, and rejoice in it.”

  • Don’t apologize for orthodoxy. A church without that spinal column will never stand upright.

 P.S. Want to read a bit more about the Apostle’s Creed? See our resource list.

Honoring the Saints of God

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The story goes in our family that my Dad married my Mom for her grandmother, Edna Cook. It may have been Edna’s homemade pies and caramel corn that kept him visiting her every week for the year my mother was gone serving overseas, but I believe it was her quiet spirit of faithfulness, carved out of hardship, that he was continually drawn towards.

Normally when we think of All Saints’ Day, we consider the “big” saints, like St. Theresa of Avila or St. Augustine. And while those men and women of faith are wonderful examples of the transformative power of the Spirit, we sometimes forget to honor the faithful saints touching our daily lives.

Edna Cook was my great-grandmother, a hero in our family. Schooled only through 10th grade, she married at age 17 as the Great Depression began. Life was challenging for everyone at that time. But just when things should have looked up after World War II, Edna’s difficulties became very personal. After three children, she gave birth to a son who had rH complications; he never developmentally progressed beyond an infant stage.

And then, when the child was about three, her husband fell off a windmill, breaking his back, laying him up for a year. She had no money, an incapacitated husband, a child requiring 24/7 care, and no way of earning an income. Two years later, her son died. But Edna made it through these difficulties because of her great faith. 

Edna prayed for each of her children, grandchildren, and great-grand-children by name, every single day of their lives. She taught Sunday School for decades. After selling the farm, she and her family eventually bought a small country store. She allowed people with difficulties to buy groceries on credit, even though she knew she would never get paid. One of my mom’s friends later acknowledged that her family, which had six children, would have starved if it had not been for Edna’s generosity.

Edna also had her own ministry of writing letters – writing weekly letters to each of her grandchildren in college or on the mission field and monthly letters to every missionary her church and nursing home supported. She also wrote a weekly letter to one of my mom’s friends who spent 20 years in prison. 

In 2016, I painted this picture of my great-grandmother standing in Bakersfield, California’s poppy flowers as a way to honor her great faithfulness, the way her life reflected her core faith. She loved Jesus and gave greatly because her heart was always invested in the economy of Christ. Edna’s story inspires me not to undermine the little things we can do for the Kingdom. It’s about being aware of the needs around us and using the little we may have to love each other.

Spotlight on Emma Shane

Savior is thrilled to welcome several new members this fall! Over the next few weeks, we'll turn the spotlight on Savior's newest members so we can get to know them and welcome them into our community. This week, we meed Emma Shane:

Emma, left, with her sister.

Emma, left, with her sister.

Where do you live now, and where are you from?

I am from Littleton, Colorado, where I am one of 5 kids in my family! I have two older sisters (both are married and live in Denver), a younger brother who is a sophomore at Wheaton, and a younger sister (She is my best friend). I am currently a junior at Wheaton College working towards a B.A in English Literature and a Master’s in Education.

What do you do when you’re not at church?

When I’m not working on classwork, I love to spend time with my friends at Wheaton. I also enjoy painting, running, and reading.

What’s your favorite song?

One of my favorite songs is an instrumental song by Sleeping At Last titled “Sun.” I listen to this song almost every day and I love it because I feel like it describes my relationship with God. It feels like God sings this song over me whenever I hear it, it is a promise of the light-filled life I’m living with Him and the hope of an eternity to delight in Him.

What’s your favorite quote?

“Light itself was your first love: you loved paint only as a means of telling about light” –C.S. Lewis; The Great Divorce

What brought you back to Savior after your first visit?

The extremely long passing of the peace and Marilyn Stewart. The next week I came back and she came up to me at the end of the service. She remembered my name and told me that she had prayed for me that week. I knew Savior was a place where people genuinely knew and cared for each other and I wanted to be a part of a community like that.

What passions and skills do you bring to Savior?

I really enjoy singing but I don’t get many opportunities to sing other than in church. I also really enjoy decorating/building/making spaces more beautiful or inviting.

Note from Sarah: Emma is also a talented visual artist; watch for her painting of her great-grandmother, which will go up on the blog on All Saints’ Day (November 1).