Reaping What We Sow
It is autumn. The blood moon was glorious and harvest season is upon us. While assessing the bounty of the summer’s labor and preparing for winter, I think about the scripture from 2 Corinthians 9:6 – “But this [I say], they who soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly; and they who soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully.”
This year has been one of sowing the seeds of hope for our CHHSM family. The work of maintaining our institutional integrity through good stewardship of resources, engaging deeply with membership and the wider church, and crafting the value proposition for membership promises to deliver a rich harvest of possibility for the future.
Likewise, the September gathering of the 2015 Nollau Institute class members was a testament to the wisdom and dedication of our future servant leaders in health and human service ministry. Their communal exploration of faith-based leadership is already beginning to bring great treasure to our shared ministry. Plan to attend their workshops at the CHHSM Annual Meeting in March for a glimpse of their collective wisdom.
The long history of servant leadership in the UCC and at CHHSM is well documented and recognized as one of our deepest gifts. A premier proponent of this was the Rev. Jerry W. Paul. Throughout his entire career, Jerry sowed the seeds of his wisdom, faith, commitment to CHHSM, and his servant leadership. We benefit from his generous spirit, with the bounty of the gifts he made to so many through his ministry, and his vision for service. In honor of the legacy of his gifts to our shared ministry, we are pleased to announce the renaming of the CHHSM scholarship as The Rev. Jerry W. Paul CHHSM Scholar program. Jamel Garrett will work closely with CHHSM staff, board and membership as he develops his own vision and plans for his future ministry serving those in the margins.
Every time we gather as a community – at the CHHSM annual meeting, as a board, in leadership formation work, as regional and service area affinity groups, and in the wider church – we are sowing seeds for future collaboration, sharing best practices, creating innovative means to serve, and reaping the collective wisdom of faith-based ministry.
Like the season of autumn, we reap what we have sown. Winter allows us to store the harvest so that we can sow in the spring what we have reaped. I look forward to seeing all of you in the months ahead so we can share in the harvesting and the planting of our shared ministry in health and human service.
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