Christmas Eve Worship

Dear friends, 

I love Christmas Eve.  For my family, Christmas Eve means oyster stew, sugar cookies, and me watching the Pope’s midnight mass as everyone else goes to bed.  Most importantly, Christmas Eve provides the opportunity for worship. 

Worship is one of my favorite parts of Christmas Eve.  I am blessed to be in ministry with a church like Central, who does Christmas Eve so well.  This year is a little different since Christmas Eve is on a Sunday.  On Sunday morning of December 24th at 10:30 AM, we will have one combined worship service in the Sanctuary.  This morning service will not be a Christmas Eve service.  Rather, it will mark the Fourth Sunday of Advent.  As such, the morning service will not have Holy Communion and will not have the traditional lighting of candles.  We will have three Christmas Eve services that evening – Sanctuary services at 4:00 PM and 6:00 PM and a Well service at 4:00 PM.  I look forward to seeing you Sunday! 

Yours in Christ, 

Thomas W. Smith
Senior Pastor

A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols

Dear friends, 

We are well into the Season of Advent, and Central is a busy place during Advent!  One of the many ways we mark this time of year is with our annual Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, which is this coming Sunday afternoon at 4:00.   

Our service of Lessons and Carols is modeled on that of King’s College, Cambridge University.   This well-known annual service is the one most associated with the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols. However, this holiday tradition can be traced to Truro, England where the service as we know it was first celebrated in 1880.  Church leaders in Truro were looking for ways to discourage the raucous celebration of the season in pubs and instead invite people to reflect on the true spiritual meaning of Christmas.  As such, they developed a festive service in which Scripture readings recalled the fall of humanity, the prophetic promise of the Messiah, and the birth of Jesus.  The readings are interspersed with Christmas carols, hymns, and choral anthems.  At Central, we continue this tradition as we hear the story of God’s loving interaction with humanity and sing the songs of the season.   

One aspect of the service is that it offers an opportunity to celebrate and support community ministry.  Each year a representative of one of Central’s partner community ministries participates in the service.  We also receive an offering, which goes to support the work of that ministry.  This year our offering will support Lighthouse Ministries and its mission to help our needy neighbors.  Central was instrumental in the founding of Lighthouse Ministries and this is one of the ways we offer ongoing support. 

After the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, there will be a reception with refreshments in Spears Fellowship Hall.  

All of which is to say, I hope to see you Sunday afternoon! 

Yours in Christ, 

Canceled Due to Weather

Dear Friends,

 

This Wednesday was set to be an exciting time as we resumed Wednesday Night Dinners.  However, out of an abundance of caution, we have made the decision to wait until September 6. While forecasters with the National Hurricane Center believe Idalia will weaken to a tropical storm after landfall, South Carolina could experience four to eight inches of rain, isolated tornadoes, and flash flooding beginning Wednesday. Please monitor your local forecasts and stay informed.

 

As Idalia approaches, I encourage you to pray for those who lie in the storm’s path.

 

Yours in Christ, 

 

Thomas

Sunday Morning Schedule Update

Dear Friends,

This summer we have been engaged in a Holy Experiment. Holy Experimenting is an invitation to find new and more effective ways of fulfilling God’s mission through Central. Those of you who went through the Shift process may remember this definition. Holy Experimenting is characterized by the following:

·     We try new things, trusting that our efforts are focused on contributing to the fulfillment of God’s mission for us.   

·     We recognize that we may not know the outcome, but any outcome can be a step forward.   

·     We adopt a learner’s attitude, staying open to God’s guidance and intervention.   

·     We can quickly pivot and adjust as needs change.   

·     We allow ourselves to try new ways of being church, looking toward faithfulness to God’s mission rather than using the world’s standards of success and failure. 

Any experiment needs evaluation if we are to learn from the results. To that end, we conducted a survey. A link was sent to Central’s entire email list, and 326 surveys were completed. Cards with a link to the survey were also available on Sunday mornings. To summarize the results related to our experience this summer:

·     63.74% called the new worship time “extremely appealing” or “appealing.”

·     6.67% were neutral on the new worship time.

When asked about continuing with a new Sunday morning schedule past the summer:

·     58.16% expressed an interest in keeping the Summer Sunday schedule as it is.

·     17.80% were neutral on maintaining worship times.

When given an opportunity to offer comments, respondents overwhelmingly spoke positively about a feeling of togetherness, especially as it relates to the feeling of a full sanctuary. 

Some respondents expressed concern for the financial implications of an altered schedule. Our records indicate that through July 15, 2023, Central has received $1,071,888.38 toward the operating budget. We received $955,519.38 for the same period in 2022. In other words, Central is $116,368.93 ahead of where we were at the same point last year.

In considering the best way to move forward, three questions emerge as being of primary importance.

1)   At what time should the service be held?

2)   How would changing its service time affect the Well?

3)   What would be best way to promote a strong Sunday School program for all ages?

In seeking an answer to these questions, and having been informed by the survey, I have been in a period of deep discernment. Discernment is different than decision making. In discernment, we ask God what God would have us do. In decision making, we weigh the options and make the best decision we can. Discernment is God-oriented. Decision making is us-oriented. Despite my personal preferences or the preferences of the individual members, whatever we do must be what is best for the entire church. It must be what most effectively empowers us to follow Jesus by loving God and loving our neighbors.

In this process of discernment, the words of Hebrews 10:24-25 came to me, “And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” 

Bearing all this in mind, I am firmly convinced that the best path moving forward is to continue to have one worship time, but to adjust that time to keep our Sunday School program at maximum effectiveness. Beginning August 6, our Sunday morning schedule will be:

9:30 AM                     Sunday School

10:30 AM                   Worship in the Sanctuary and the Well

Throughout our history, Central has been willing to try new approaches in fulfilling God’s mission. I ask for your prayers and patience as we try something new in our mission to follow Jesus by loving God and loving our neighbors. Let us go forward and join God in that mission.

 

Yours in Christ,

Rev. Thomas W. Smith

Annual Conference Report

Dear Friends,

The 2023 meeting of the South Carolina Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church adjourned yesterday. This year’s conference dealt with many matters. The headline-grabbing issues relate to congregations disaffiliating from the United Methodist Church over issues related to human sexuality. I offer these words to lend some perspective to what you may have seen in the news or heard from friends.

By way of review, The United Methodist Book of Discipline does not allow for same-sex marriage, nor does it allow homosexual persons to be ordained as ministers. Only the General Conference, the world-wide legislative gathering of United Methodists, can change these prohibitions. The disaffiliating congregations are doing so out of concern that General Conference may alter this language when it meets in 2024.

Following a discernment process, 113 congregations requested to disaffiliate from the United Methodist Church, representing about 12% of the United Methodist congregations in South Carolina. The Annual Conference approved a resolution of disaffiliation related to these congregations, meaning that at the end of June they will no longer be part of the United Methodist Church and will not be part of the South Carolina Conference. Many of their clergy are expected to surrender their United Methodist credentials and remain in ministry with these congregations. Some of these congregations plan to unite with other denominations and some plan to remain independent.

It was a solemn moment when the names of disaffiliating congregations were read and the members of the Annual Conference prepared to vote. Bishop Holston led the body in prayer both before and after the vote was taken. In his prayer before the vote, Bishop Holston offered these words, “Regardless of what we do in this time, help us to bless each other. Help us to see your grace and your mercy for what it truly can be. And as we make the decision in this place and space, help us not to do it with a heart of anger. Help us to truly seek to be helpful to one another.”

Regardless of what votes are taken and what decisions are made, we are still called to follow Jesus by loving God and loving our neighbors. God is at work and God calls us to join in that work. God is on a mission and our mission is join ourselves and our congregation in that mission. May we, God’s church called Central, be faithful to that call. Let us resolve to join God in mission and work to advance the Kingdom of God.

I leave you with these words from John Wesley, the founder of Methodism. I have shared this quote with you before, but its sentiment is as fitting now as ever. “For opinions, or terms, let us not ‘destroy the work of God.’ Dost thou love and serve God? It is enough. I give thee the right hand of fellowship.” Wesley’s antiquated language reminds us that we do not have to agree on everything.  People can disagree on important issues and still love one another.  Let us commit ourselves to love and serve God together and to love one another. God calls us to be one in Jesus Christ, even when we disagree.

May God bless you and please do not hesitate to be in touch if you would like to have further conversation.

Yours in Christ,

Thomas Smith