Jesus Creed

Jesus Creed

Aldersgate UMC 2

posted by Scot McKnight | 3:05pm Wednesday June 24, 2009

Sunday evening in our last session Dr. Dennis Perry, the lead pastor at Aldersgate UMC in Alexandria VA, asked me a question that went like this: what are your impressions and what would be your advice to Aldersgate? My response was immediate because Kris and I were struck by this at Aldersgate: the church was perhaps the most intergenerational or multi-generational church we’ve ever been in. There were infants and little kids and junior and senior highers and young adults and all the way up to 90something. What was especially honoring to us was the number of conversations about Jesus Creed we had with such a spread: a young mom who told me she and her 2 year old daughter say the Jesus Creed everyday to an elderly man and woman who spoke with me about how much it had helped them.

Which leads me to something we so appreciated: the folks at Aldersgate had read the Jesus Creed book, had church-wide Bible studies, and were keen on the value of saying the Jesus Creed in order to live it out — and it is helping them. This makes everything different for us. Here’s a good example: Andreas Barrett, the worship leaders, wrote a song version of the Jesus Creed that was moving for both Kris and me.


GWPkwy.jpgThe church folk were extremely generous in their hospitiality. Jason Micheli invited us. Jason is a talented preacher and theologian and his grace was present all weekend — and so were his two little boys and wife Ali.  Then the young and impressive intern, Taylor
Mertins, picked Kris and me up at the airport and shuttled us through
Old Town to our home. That meant we met Kristy and Sid Smith, who have opened
their home on the GW Parkway to so many and even invited Kris and me to share Father’s
Day with them and their two 20something adult children — Addi and
Cole. Wonderful special dinner and time with them, including the
hilarious humor of Addi and Cole who competed on who grilled the
better asparagus. A special moment when Sid talked to us about what it
was like to be in DC, about a mile from the Pentagon, on 9/11.

We had a wonderful luncheon Saturday in Old Town at the Chart House, looking over the Potomac, with Dennis and Jason and Kris. We were impressed with the shared leadership and sacrificial approach to one another — if not some good old ribbing of one another — that we saw in Dennis and Jason, and found their careful thinking and prayerful response to pastoral needs to be encouraging. They too have a passion for 20somethings.

I could mention many people, including those who came from other churches for some of the talks, but we are so honored to have been invited to Aldersgate and they are now a part of who we are — and we hope we are part of them. Someday we hope to wander into Aldersgate when we are in DC.  The church has a comprehensive and holistic approach to ministry and I pray its tribe increases in all directions.



Previous Posts

This blog is no longer active
This blog is no longer being actively updated. Please feel free to browse the archives or: Read our most popular inspiration blog See our most popular inspirational video Take our most popular quiz

posted 3:10:39pm Aug. 31, 2010 | read full post »

Our Common Prayerbook 30 - 3
Psalm 30 thanks God (vv. 1-3, 11-12) and exhorts others to thank God (vv. 4-5). Both emerge from the concrete reality of David's own experience. Here is what that experience looks like:Step one: David was set on high and was flourishing at the hand of God's bounty (v. 7a).Step two: David became too

posted 12:15:30pm Aug. 31, 2010 | read full post »

Theology After Darwin 1 (RJS)
One of the more important and more difficult pieces of the puzzle as we feel our way forward at the interface of science and faith is the theological implications of discoveries in modern science. A comment on my post Evolution in the Key of D: Deity or Deism noted: ...this reminds me of why I get a

posted 6:01:52am Aug. 31, 2010 | read full post »

Almost Christian 4
Who does well when it comes to passing on the faith to the youth? Studies show two groups do really well: conservative Protestants and Mormons; two groups that don't do well are mainline Protestants and Roman Catholics. Kenda Dean's new book is called Almost Christian: What the Faith of Ou

posted 12:01:53am Aug. 31, 2010 | read full post »

Let's Get Neanderthal!
The Cave Man Diet, or Paleo Diet, is getting attention. (Nothing is said about Culver's at all.) The big omission, I have to admit, is that those folks were hunters -- using spears or smacking some rabbit upside the conk or grabbing a fish or two with their hands ... but that's what makes this diet

posted 2:05:48pm Aug. 30, 2010 | read full post »

Advertisement
Comments read comments(2)
post a comment
m

posted June 24, 2009 at 9:36 pm


Is there a way to get access to that song you mentioned?



report abuse
 

Scot McKnight

posted June 24, 2009 at 9:42 pm


M, yes, it is being produced … and I’ll advertise it here.



report abuse
 

Post a Comment

By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.

Share this story


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Help

Media Kit

Subscribe

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.