Monday, August 30, 2010

Radical Hospitality and Extravagant Generosity

Unidos por Cristo is a mission church; it is not self-sustaining. Our ministries rely on the hospitality and generosity of other churches, individuals, the Greenville District, and the North Carolina Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. The hospitality and generosity take various forms, but I would like to highlight two United Methodist churches in Greenville:

One of these churches sends a check every month marked "pastor's salary," for which I am very grateful. This same church, when I went to visit to thank them for their support, told me to consider their missions team as my extended staff. Wow! I have staff!

The second church has said (if churches could talk), "You need to transport 7 people? Here's a 15-passenger van! You need a place to stay? Here's a house!" I'm not kidding. At the beginning of my time here, I spent the night with another pastor at her parsonage in Washington. However, for the past few weeks, she's had a mold problem at the parsonage that still isn't completely gone. I mentioned to another pastor about needing a place to stay, and he suggested the retreat house of this church. A block away from the church, it has 5 bedrooms and 3 full baths. The kitchen is stocked with disposable kitchenware. Many small groups affiliated with the church meet at the house, so there are tons of chairs. There are also tons of books, as it is a retreat house. This house is such a blessing! When I went to pick up the key one time from the church office, I mentioned my need for a vehicle that held 7 people. Five youth, my husband, and I were going to a ballgame and we would not all fit in my RAV-4 or my husband's '98 Mustang. The church office staff told me to fill out a short form and let them copy my driver's license, and I could borrow the church van! Ask and ye shall receive!

1 comment:

  1. Welcome to being a pastor and knowing that people will really come to the aid of a minister and their family!

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