āThis is my fifth day in office. I was told āyouāre supposed to speak about the state of the church.ā I donāt think there is much I can say.ā
That was how Rev. Joel Boot, interim executive director of the Christian Reformed Church, started his address to Synod 2011 on Saturday evening.
Boot recounted some events of the last few weeks, a whirlwind that found Boot planning to finish out his ministry career in the congregation he has served for 19 years. Instead, he now leads the denominationās administration for the next two years.
Bootās appointment comes on the heels of resignations of both the executive director and the director of denominational ministries in the past two months.
āGod called,ā Boot told delegates. āHe came to my door, kicked it off its hinges, and said, āI have something in mind for you that you didnāt know about.ā It was unmistakable.ā
Boot said the Board of Trustees asked him to do three things: accomplish the business of the church as expected of the executive director, provide wise counsel and a healing presence for staff, and analyze the culture and organization to develop a thriving ministering community.
He paraphrased that for delegates as: do absolutely everything possible, perform miracles, and develop and display omniscience.
āIām nervous. Iām scared. Iām uncertain. Iām uncomfortable,ā Boot said. āBut over the past five days, I have begun to sense again the state of Joel Boot. I am not my own, but I belong body and soul, in life and death, to my faithful Lord and Savior.
āHe held me in his everlasting arms. I have never in my life been as aware of being prayed for as the last two weeks. And then, in his grace, God sent me here this week.
āThe 188 or so of you, and many devoted staff people, ā¦ sacrificing your time and energy, opening your heart, available to God, enjoying this work, giving up vacation for [the equivalent of] a marathon council meeting of 70 hoursā¦ if that doesnāt say something about the state of the church, I donāt know what does.
āIt says, we belong to our faithful Lord and Savior, at home and here, church and classis, classis and synod. I can say with confidence, the state of the church is good. The future of the church is certain. The hope of the church is boundless. Because the arms of God are everlasting and they are beneath and around us all.
āNext year, I may be able to add more detail, but I have never had more confidence than I have right now that the church, and we, are in Godās hands. Therefore, the state of the church is great.ā
Delegates responded with a prolonged standing ovation.
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About the Author
Gayla Postma retired as news editor for The Banner in 2020.