Governor Rowland and the Wellspring School of Leadership

The Wellspring School of Leadership is just about to complete its first--and very successful--year of operation. We have had ten students make their way through the first five courses of the Year One curriculum. In fact, just last night I wrapped up teaching the course offering assigned to me--"Dynamics of the Kingdom." I found the interaction with the students fun and stimulating and encouraging. We had students from their twenties to their sixties--and every decade in between.

The Advisory Board for WSL has completed plans for the Year Two curriculum and are in the process of planning for the long-range growth and development of the school. Those meetings are very exciting--I am expecting big things down the road for this school. I can honestly say that in all my years of ministry working with this board has been the most interesting, stimulating and productive committee experience I have ever had.

Right now I want to tell you about an upcoming event related to the school. On May 12 we will host our inaugural Seminar on Christian Leadership. Doors will open at 6:30 for hors d'oevres and music and conversation in the Wellspring cafe. At 7:30 former Governor John Rowland will speak on the topic "Leading by Faith in a World that Doesn't Believe." We will also hear some brief testimonies from some of our current students. The presentations will be followed by a dessert reception in the cafe. You can register and get tickets for this event by going online:http://www.wellspringschoolofleadership.org/ The early bird price of $30 for the event is good through April 30.

Some have asked, "Why John Rowland?" "Why a disgraced former governor who spent time in prison for his corruption while in office?"

These are good questions.

When the controversy surrounding Governor Rowland was coming to a head his pastor, Will Marotti, called for a public show of support for the governor on the steps of the capitol. Mr. Rowland, in the process of facing his actions that ultimately led to his imprisonment, had been be-friended by Pastor Will. The governor had turned to Christ for forgiveness and for a renewal of purpose and restoration of his moral compass. Pastor Will called and asked me to join him and other pastors in a show of support for the governor. I refused--in fact, I urged Pastor Will not to go through with his plans.

Why? And why would I now endorse the Governor as a speaker at our Seminar on Christian Leadership?

I refused to go to the capitol when the governor was in trouble, because I believed he needed to answer for his offenses. I did not doubt his faith nor his intentions to turn his life toward a more righteous course--I had no way of guaging his heart or his intentions. But I did not think it right or appropriate for the church to endorse publicly someone who had betrayed the public's trust.

Now, however, Mr. Rowland has owned his failure in office by his resignation and by serving his sentence handed down by the courts. Now, he has gained some valuable perspective of how he got to where he sabotaged his own career and betrayed the trust of the electorate. Now, he has begun to mature in his faith and to reclaim a sense of purpose for this season of his life.

The Bible is full of stories of leaders who stumbled and failed along the way in their journey of faith and service to the Kingdom of God. The Bible is full of stories of redemption and restoration. We preach this almost every single week and believe it every single day.

So, we welcome former Governor Rowland to the WSL Seminar on Christian Leadership May 12. And I heartily encourage you to come. It will be a full and enriching evening. Mr. Rowland is not being invited to speak on politics, per se, but about leadership in the public square. I am personally looking forward to meeting the Governor and hearing what he has to share.

We have invited several other leaders and prospective students from the area to come and hear more about the Wellspring School of Leadership. I hope you will be there to greet them!

Pastor Rick

Holy Week and Passover--Thoughts and Considerations

This coming Sunday, April 17 begins Holy Week, the observance of our Lord's final week and passion preceding his resurrection. This year it also coincides with the festival of Passover, which falls on April 19--of course because it is a Jewish observance, it begins at sundown the evening prior. I have been thinking a lot about these great celebrations of the faith for a lot of reasons this year, not least of which is my new friendship with Rabbi Cliff Librach of United Jewish Center in Danbury. That friendship has been a great surprise and blessing. I have learned much from the good rabbi and my life personally has been enriched. (By the way, Rabbi Cliff will be back again to teach enrichment classes on the Hebrew Bible on three Wednesdays in May--4th, 11th, 25th) But let me get back to my reflections on Holy Week. This year at Wellspring we will have our annual observance of Maundy Thursday at 7:00 pm on Thursday, April 21. Pastor Joel Shirk will minister to us that evening as we prepare to gather around the Lord's Table to remember our Lord's sacrifice for our salvation. The word "maundy" is from a Latin root that is similar in meaning to our English word "mandate." Jesus mandates us to observe his table and remember him. Let me remind you that Jesus did this as he was celebrating Passover with his disciples. We believe that his death on the cross for our salvation is the fulfillment of the Passover when God delivered his people Israel from Egypt. It is a perpetual festival, called in Leviticus "the Lord's Passover." In other words, it is not simply Israel's Passover--it is the Lord's festival that is now opened for us to celebrate in the sacrifice of the spotless Lamb of God, Jesus, for our forgiveness and liberation from sin. Then on Resurrection Weekend, Saturday@5 and at both Sunday morning services we will celebrate Jesus' resurrection from the dead. This mighty act of God serves as the vindication of Jesus' obedience and is his triumph over sin, death and hell that he makes available to all of us who believe. We are using the term, Resurrection Weekend, both because we now have a Saturday evening service--and also because we are seeking at Wellspring to move beyond the term "Easter." Why, you are probably asking, would we want to move beyond using a term that has been traditional and is on everyone's calendar? Good question. Two reasons are predominant. Number one, "Easter" is at root a pagan term and is associated with an ancient germanic goddess "Eostra." All of the essentially pagan associations with Easter that have to do with the spring equinox, like eggs and bunnies and flowers and butterflies, are caught up in this term which speaks of the pagan rites of the renewal of nature. Resurrection is the transcendent victory of Jesus over the forces of this fallen world. It is not about nature--it is about the breaking in of the supernatural dimension of the Kingdom of God to accomplish salvation and renewal of this fallen planet. Secondly, "Easter" speaks not only of syncretism with paganism, it also represents a divorce of the festival from its Jewish roots. At the first Council of Nicea, the church convened under the direction of Emperor Constantine. Among other things, at that council they established a separate reckoning for setting the date of Easter. In large part this was motivated by an express desire to separate Easter from its Passover roots. Constantine wrote in the letter calling for action: It appeared an unworthy thing that in the celebration of this most holy feast we should follow the practice of the Jews . . . For their boast is absurd indeed, that it is not in our power without instruction from them to observe these things. The specific issue had to do with when and how to "set the date" for Easter in the church. At that council the church moved formally to de-link the festival of resurrection from Passover--motivated by overt anti-Semitism. Yet Jesus celebrated Passover with his disciples in preparation for the cross to provide salvation for Jew and Gentile alike. For some of you this may seem like a minor detail. But Ephesians tells us that God's desire is for a united humanity of Jew and Gentile to come together in Messiah Jesus. Institutional anti-Semitism in the church has for centuries warred against this express desire of God and it needs to be addressed and rooted out of the church. At Wellspring this year we are doing two things to contribute to that end. First, we are speaking of this highest celebration on our spiritual calendar as Resurrection Weekend--not Easter. Secondly, at our Maundy Thursday service, when we gather to observe the covenantal meal Jesus gave us from the Passover Seder we will repent of the de-linking of "the Lord's Passover" from the celebration of our Lord's resurrection. I will lead in that prayer of repentance and we will give all of you an opportunity to "sow into" that repentance in an offering we will receive with which to bless the United Jewish Center in Danbury. I plan to carry this offering to present to Rabbi Cliff and his congregation on Friday, April 29 when I preach there at their Sabbath service. You are all invited by Rabbi Librach to attend those services, by the way, and I hope many of you will come to pray for me and to release blessing upon those folks on that evening. (You can go to www.unitedjewishcenter.org for more details.) Shalom and Resurrection blessings to you all--the Lord is risen indeed! Pastor Rick

Wellspring--Random Reflections

This morning during our staff prayer meeting we just had an amazing time listening to all that the Lord is doing here at Wellspring and through Wellspringers to touch lives with the goodness and power of God. This past weekend conference on Abounding Hope was an amazing time! God was so manifestly present in all the gatherings. We had great speakers and they had an important message to share, but a lot of what happened occurred when the congregation was turned loose to encourage one another and to minister to one another. A lot of what happened occurred during worship times when we just went after the Lord in praise and adoration and then watched the Holy Spirit lead us into different initiatives. Steve and Wendy Backlund serve at one of the great congregations in America, Bethel Church in Redding, CA. They are used to great seasons of worship and exciting expressions of the Kingdom of God in their midst. But they had really great things to say about the atmosphere and worship they were able to enter into during their time at Wellspring. I hope you are encouraged to hear that--I am! Let me share some other things we heard today in staff prayer. One of our high school teens was so encouraged by what she heard this weekend that when her grandfather complained of debilitating back pain on Sunday afternoon, she gathered the rest of the family to pray over that back. She figured she didn't have to be some big prophet or preacher to release the Kingdom. So they prayed and her grandfather's back was touched--pain gone! Recently someone in our church was diagnosed with 70% of his heart not functioning--blockage and no blood to 70% of his heart. Constant chest pain and greatly restricted activity. After one of our prayer teams prayed for him following communion a few weeks ago, his heart was fully restored! After a stress test two days later the doctor called him stunned--"This has never happened before! Your heart is fully functioning." A "random" encounter in the mall led to a couple of our members praying for someone who had just been diagnosed with MS. That same person came to Wellspring the next day and received more prayer. After tests the doctor told him--"No more symptoms, no more indication of MS!" We also heard of someone telling a parent who had their child in to see their pediatrician, "You should go to Wellspring and have your child prayed for." Here is the interesting thing--none of us know who that person was who recommended Wellspring. He doesn't go here, he has just heard about our ministry. He was cleaning the fish tank in the doctor's office and overheard a conversation and said--"You should go to Wellspring." This is all awesome stuff. And this is only part of what is going on. Wow! One last thing before I sign off of this post. This coming Sunday I will be preaching on I Corinthians 14--a very interesting and (historically) controversial chapter. It talks about Spirit-led worship and charismatic expression in worship gatherings. I am looking forward to exploring this passage with you. Then, the following Wednesday evening, April 13, I will be taking questions during our enrichment course, "Going Deeper in I Corinthians.." Pastor Rick

First One Belongs to the Reds!


Baseball is an amazing game. Yesterday's opener was like a parable. It was three hours of slogging climaxed by a timely piece of slugging. The first two Brewers homered and the Reds fell behind and stayed there until the final pitch. That's when Ramon Hernandez hit a three-run home run to give the Reds their first lead of the game and a walk-off victory. Here's the punch-line of the parable: If you keep persevering, breakthroughs come! Off-day today. Savor the victory and keep persevering because "hope does not disappoint!"