January 17, 2007 By Jeanette Pinkston
DALLAS – The Rev. Freddie Haynes has a message for busy pastors: "If you want
to walk on water, you need to call a time-out." Haynes,
pastor of Friendship West Baptist Church in Dallas, was speaking to more than
500 participants attending the Convocation for Pastors of African American Churches,
sponsored by the United Methodist Church's Board of Discipleship. He took his
text from Matthew 14:22-23. "In verse 22, Jesus dismisses
the crowd and calls a time-out," he said. "Ego will cause you to kick it with
the crowd, rather than dismiss the crowd. Jesus had sense enough to call time
out." When Jesus went to the mountain, he came down with
more power. In this text, he came down and walked on water, Haynes said. Using
a NASCAR racing analogy, Haynes reminded pastors that they, too, must call a time-out
to get refueled. "If you call time out when it's calm, God will keep you calm
in the storm," he said. The convocation, held Jan. 3-6,
was designed to help United Methodist pastors and leaders of African-American
congregations be intentional about focusing on healthy options that connect spirit,
body and mind. (See "Convocation for pastors focuses on healthy connections,"
1/11/07) Know when to get up The
Rev. Kirbyjon Caldwell, pastor of Windsor Village United Methodist Church in Houston,
Texas, inspired the gathering with a sermon on the "Mindset of a Winner. " To
illustrate how a winner thinks, Caldwell showed video clips from the 1976 World
Series baseball game in which Reggie Jackson hit four home runs in a row, and
the boxing match between Mike Tyson and Buster Douglass to demonstrate what to
do when you get knocked down. "When you have a winner's
mentality, you have to know how to get up. When you get knocked down, stay there
for a while, " he said. Quoting favorite Scriptures,
he reminded the group of the importance of walking with the Lord and reading the
Bible. "From this day forward (you can declare), I will
get what I fight for. I will fight for my health. I will fight for my equilibrium.
I will fight for my family. I will fight for a balanced life. I will fight for
an equitable compensation package, " Caldwell said. Convocation
participants went to St. Luke "Community" United Methodist Church for dinner and
an evening worship and communion service, where the Rev. Gregory Palmer, resident
bishop of the Iowa Area, preached from Matthew 26:26. "The
hopes and fears of all the years are met in the cross of Calvary. Hope and fear
came together on Calvary's cross," he said. "We were dead in our trespasses, but
in Christ, we have been made alive. " Participants could
choose from a variety of workshops, including clergy self-care, managing anger
and stress, preparing for the future, faces of depression, the prayer experience,
healthy congregations, recognizing and responding to burnout, exercise, nutrition
and good health, healthy sexuality, and balancing ministry and family. This
was the fifth annual convocation for pastors of African-American congregations
sponsored by the Board of Discipleship. United Methodist
News Service Jeanette Pinkston is director of media relations for the United
Methodist Board of Discipleship. |