Bulletin Letter for June 2, 2013
Dear Friends,
Congratulations to our graduates whom we
honor this morning and congratulations to our many family members and friends
who are celebrating graduations this spring.
I am reminded of the “founder of American
Methodism”, Francis Asbury, who had an unlikely “graduation.” When Asbury was
born in England in 1745, his mother determined that he would serve God is a
remarkable way. She believed that he would someday lead the Church of England;
he would become the Archbishop of Canterbury. From his infancy, Asbury’s mother
read the Bible to him, sang hymns and prayed over him. His education prepared
him to go to university and then become a minister.
But in his late teens, Asbury went to a
preaching house and heard a Methodist preacher. By the time he was 18, he was
preaching at Methodist gatherings across southwest England. He was 26 when John
Wesley called for preachers to go to America. He set sail and never returned to
England.
Asbury “graduated” from ministry training in
his homeland as America settlement was expanding west. In 1776, when war broke
out, he was the only Methodist pastor who did not return to England. For 45
years, he preached, founded churches, and was one of the first bishops in the
American Methodist Church. It is estimated that he averaged 6,000 miles per
year on horseback bringing Christ wherever he went. When Asbury came to America
there were 10 Methodist pastors and 600 Methodists. When he died in 1816, there
were 695 pastors and 214,300 Methodists.
Our graduates today may have a plan; they
may even be doing what their family expects of them. But where God is
concerned, there can be surprises. God can use our gifts and our skills to
change the world. My prayer for our graduates and for each of us is that we
would be open to the call of God.
Blessings,
Pastor Sherry
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