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Listening post explores Native American issues
The Rev. Chebon Kernell was
raised in two spiritual worlds that some
people say have little in common.
He’s a lifelong United Methodist who
responded to a call to Christian ministry
at age 17. And he’s a Seminole Native
American, no stranger to the ceremonial
traditions of his ancestors.
“As a minister,” he said, “I’ve wondered
where to draw the line between the two—
or whether it should even be drawn.”
That issue and others faced by Native Americans in The United Methodist Church were analyzed Feb. 16 at a “listening post” hosted by the denomination’s Native American Comprehensive Plan.
Kernell, pastor of First American United Methodist Church in Norman, Okla., was among 24 clergy and laypeople invited. Participants spent two hours in small group sessions, sharing stories of evangelism in Native communities.
The Native American Comprehensive Plan, one of five racialethnic plans administered by the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, plans to hold similar gatherings across the United States during the next three years. Information collected from the talks will be used to plan a Native American School of Evangelism event sometime between 2009-2012.
Mistrust of the church
No more than 6 percent of the
2.7 million Native Americans in the United
States identify themselves as Christian––
a statistic often blamed on mistrust of the
church.
Mission schools operated on
Indian reservations from the late 1800s
through the first half of the 20th century,
many of them founded by Methodists.
Children were forced to adopt Anglo-
European culture, abandon their tribal
languages and convert to Christianity.
Some participants at the listening post
talked about other Native religious
traditions that thrive in communities
where mainline churches don’t.
“They attract larger numbers of
young people,” said the Rev. David
Wilson, chairman of the plan’s task force
and superintendent of the Oklahoma
Indian Missionary Conference. “That’s
partly because those settings celebrate
who they are as Native people.
Our(United Methodist) church hasn’t
always affirmed that.”
John Shotton, a member of the First
American United Methodist congregation
and council chairman of the Otoe-
Missouria tribe, said in a keynote address
that effective Christian evangelism among
Native Americans must start with
rebuilding trust -often taking at least two
or three years of tireless effort.
Shotton told participants about
Jimmy Kenner, a white Baptist preacher
from Kentucky who moved to Red Rock,
Okla., several years ago to lead a Native
church.
“At first,” he said, “Brother Jimmy
stood out like a sore thumb. But he started
going to tribal funerals, even when he
wasn’t invited, to show respect. He
embraced tribal leadership and told them, ‘I
understand that you have your own
worship style, but I’m here if you need
me.”
That turned the key, Shotton said.
Since then, attendance and activity at the
Red Rock church has picked up, and
Kenner has been asked to officiate at some
funerals.
A spiritual people
“We’ve always been a spiritual
people,” said the Rev. Wil Brown, a member
of the Kiowa and Acoma tribes and former
director of Native American Ministries for
the American Baptist Church. “The task
isn’t to introduce God, but to introduce
Jesus Christ in a way that isn’t offensive to
Native people. It’s a hard nut to crack.”
Brown was one of several people
outside The United Methodist Church who
attended the Fort Worth event. Organizers
hope also to draw participants from the
Native American Church at future sessions.
Unemployment runs as high as 75
percent on some Native reservations, where
high rates of depression, substance abuse
and suicide also are reported. During the
small group meetings, several people
attributed those problems to a lack of pride
in Native heritage.
“Each culture God created has
something to contribute,” said the Rev.
Christine Eastwood, pastor of Pickett
Chapel United Methodist Church in
Sapulpa, Okla.
“God affirmed all cultures on the
day of Pentecost, but that got pushed
aside. We need to regain it. People
shouldn’t have to sacrifice their identity, or
feel ashamed of it.”
Funding ministries
Native American United
Methodists in the Texas Annual (regional)
Conference hold worship services on the
third Sunday evening of each month at
Shepherd Drive Fellowship, a ministry of
Memorial Drive United Methodist Church
in Houston. They also host an annual
Houston Methodist powwow, a social
event celebrating Native heritage with
music, storytelling and tribal dances. “We hope to start a fully functional Native
church,” said Glenna Brayton, who chairs
the conference’s Committee on Native
American Ministries. “But our immediate
goal is just to survive. We’re trying to run
an $80,000 ministry on a $6,000 budget.”
Brayton said the committee gets most of its
funding through the denomination’s Native
American Ministries Sunday, planned this
year for April 6. However, out of 715
churches in the Texas Conference, only 91
contributed in 2007.
Some “listening post” participants said
their congregations would be forced to
shut down without help from non-members
and local businesses.
“Five whole people are actual
members in one of my fellowships,” said
the Rev. Julienne Judd, a pastor in the
Oklahoma Indian Missionary Conference. “But another 175 people drop in every
month or so, and when we’re in need,
they’ve been there for us.”
More help has come when she
least expected it.“One evening,” she said,
“a member won the first pot at the senior
citizens’ bingo hall. I told her, ‘Don’t
forget—the preacher’s accepting your
tithe!’ Everyone laughed at that. But the next five winners weren’t members, and
they all tithed their winnings. They gave
because they’ve still been a part of the life
of the church.” When Native American
congregations have to disband for lack of
support, members aren’t likely to stay in the
denomination, said Judd. “The reality is
that they’ll find another Native church to
go to, whether it’s Baptist, Presbyterian or
Catholic,” she said. “They’re going to find
another gathering of Native people that will
let them to be who they are.”
Telling our story
The comprehensive plan’s task
force met the day before the listening post
to plan projects for 2008. Those include a
Sept. 19-21 Native American Women in
Ministry conference and an October
followup to a Native writers’ workshop held
in 2007.
Last October’s writers’ workshop,
held at the Post Oak Lodge in Tulsa, Okla.,
encouraged participants to express their
Christian faith in creeds, poetry, responsive
readings and short stories. Organizers hope
to attract youth and young adult writers to
the event.
“There are very few Native writers
in society at large, even fewer within the
Christian setting and even fewer
Methodist,” said the Rev. Anita Phillips, a
Cherokee and the plan’s executive director. “We’re still very much an oral people.”
The plan’s task force seeks to publish a
second edition of Voices, a Native American
worship guide first released in 1999. The
revision would include contributions from
the workshop participants.
*Fentum is a staff writer for the United
Methodist Reporter.
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