CHRIST
IN WINTER: The Irrelevant Reminiscences of An Old Preacher—
I think all the annual conferences of The United Methodist Church have finished their confabs for this year now. The purpose of this annual assembly, of clergy and lay members from each congregation, is to make plans for next year, and to get a retrospective of the year past.
In our winter years, we get a retrospective of the events of all our years past.
In my first appointment after seminary, I was standing around at a break in some ministerial meeting, chatting with my colleagues. One was the pastor of a large and prestigious church. He was less than a year from retirement and so prone to looking backward rather than forward. He gave some advice to those of us who were young and looking forward.
“You young fellas need to trust the bishop and the cabinet,” he said. “They’ll do right by you. They always gave me better appointments than I deserved.” [1]
I pointed out that obviously we could not trust the bishop and cabinet, because if they gave him better appointments than he deserved, they gave some of his colleagues lesser appointments than they deserved. You couldn’t be all that pleased or trusting if you were in the latter category.
He was totally befuddled. He didn’t understand at all what I was saying. That, of course, was because he didn’t mean what he said.
In addition to the false modesty to which all men, and women, of “the cloth” are prone, he was just saying, “I accept my past.” His was not a rational, truth-in-a-scientific-way statement. He wasn’t doing arithmetic; he was doing forgiveness. He was forgiving the bishop and the cabinet and his congregations and himself for all that was past.
Rather than the usual mantra of “forgive and forget,” I suggest that it is better to forgive and remember. Remember the facts of your past, or your past loses meaning. But forgive the reality. Accept the gift. We need to remember the facts. Those are reality. But reality, when it is applied to memory, is overrated.
In my winter years, I have learned that rationality is not usually helpful in understanding things that are primarily emotional.
Paul Tillich said, “Forgiveness doesn’t change the facts, but it does change the meaning of the facts.”
Forgive the facts. Forgive the past. Accept that which is better than you deserve.
John Robert McFarland
1]
The system is changing, but traditionally in Methodism, ministers are not hired
by the congregation. They are appointed by the bishop and the cabinet, which is
the District Superintendents glommed together. We can’t request a particular
appointment, and we have to go where we are sent, although we can sometimes
weasel out of it. From the beginning of American Methodism through the first
half of my career, there was no negotiation of any kind. The bishop told you
where you were going, usually through the DS, and that was all there was to it.
Sometimes you weren’t even told; sometimes you didn’t know until the
appointments were read on the last day of the annual conference where you would
move the next week.








