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From the Diocese of Newark
Regular Updates on
Bishop Beckwith's Vision and Values for the Diocese
Can be found on the Diocesan Website: www.dioceseofnewark.org
As we get ready to participate in America’s annual Sabbath of offering thanks, I invite you to ponder my thoughts about vision and values for the Diocese of Newark. I have not invented them; I have simply named what has been very easy to see in my relatively short time here. I am grateful that the passion to seek Christ and serve others is so palpable and vital in this unique corner of God’s vineyard.
Vision and Values for the Diocese of Newark
and an invitation to live into them
A guiding and galvanizing prayer
O God, help us to claim our mission: to stand with the living Christ at the gates of hope. Not the prudent gates of optimism, which are somewhat narrower; nor the strident gates of self-righteousness, which creak on shrill and angry hinges; but a very different, sometimes very lonely place. It is the place of truth-telling, about our own souls first of all and its condition; the place of resistance and defiance, the piece of ground from which we see the world both as it is and as it could be, as it will be; the place from which we glimpse not only struggle, but joy in the struggle – with the Christ who sets us free; and we stand there, beckoning and calling, telling people what we see, asking people what they see. In Christ’s name we pray. - Adapted from a prayer by Victoria Safford
The following has emerged from my prayer and reflection, and from what I have seen and heard in my visits and conversations during my tenure as bishop of the Diocese of Newark since January, 2007 (and to a lesser degree, from my 11-year sojourn as a priest in the diocese from 1982-93). I have been humbled and inspired by the passion and commitment that is incarnate in congregations and individuals across the diocese. There is a level of courage and creativity, in both faith and witness that – from my perspective as a new bishop, needs to be supported and encouraged. The values emerge from the vision – and they are listed in the order that I have experienced their importance.
Vision
THE DIOCESE OF NEWARK – STANDING WITH THE LIVING CHRIST AT THE GATES OF HOPE.
Core values
Worship—“Enter gates with
thanksgiving; go into God’s courts with praise.” Psalm 100.3
Worship gathers and grounds
us as individuals and as a community. Worship has the capacity to quicken
the souls who come through the “gate of holiness” – and
transform them into disciples of hope as they re-enter the world.
Questions to consider:
• What is your worship designed to do? What is its intention?
• How is the worship experience creating disciples of hope?
• How does each congregation design liturgy that invites the gift
of mystagogia (which is the experience of living more deeply into the mystery
of the divine hope), and then evaluate it?
• How best to use space, music, silence, language and, movement
in the context of worship – for the soul’s health and transformation?
Spiritual formation --“Pray also for
me, so that when I speak, a message may be given to me
To make known with boldness the mystery
of the Gospel.” Ephesians 5.19
Spiritual formation is a commitment
to live more intentionally as a person of faith – incorporating discipline
that brings into alignment one’s interior and exterior life.
Questions to consider:
What sort of regula (a regular discipline of prayer, study and ministry) are
you
called to live into?
• What study – of the tradition, the sacred texts and the
historical witness do you need to do in order to stand at the gates of hope?
• What support do you seek and need to live creatively?
• How well do you know the context of your home, community or school
– and their gates of welcome and exclusion?
Justice/nonviolence – “and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, love Kindness, and to walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8
Justice is the insistence
that the gates of hope are open – and not hidden; and that the
gates are open in equal measure for all. Foundational
to the witness of justice is a
commitment to non-violence – which is the resistance
to a system, practice or ideology that
creates victims
Questions to consider:
• Where and how do you walk the walk as a disciple?
• Who is at the gate that hasn’t been invited in? Why
is that, and what can – and will, you do about it?
• How do you identify the violence in yourself – and in your
context – and how can you non-violently stand in the face of it?
• How do you work with the living Christ to set people free?
Radical hospitality -- “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it.” Hebrews 13.2
Radical hospitality
means that all are welcome. All the time. Radical hospitality
means that we will not only welcome the stranger; we will seek out the stranger
-- and work to develop a process that transforms us all into neighbors.
Questions to consider:
• What are the specific forms of hospitality you use in your life?
• What discipline do you employ to identify secret passwords or
practices at your gates – and how do you disarm them?
• How does your hospitality reflect the South African notion of
ubuntu – I am because you are?
• How do you create an environment of hospitality that enables
you to see the face of Christ in everyone?
I invite you to ponder and pray with these questions – using them as catalysts for deeper reflection and as invitations to a more fierce commitment -- for yourself and your congregation -- to stand with the living Christ at the gates of hope.
In peace,
+Mark Beckwith