September 2025
- Eric Marshburn
- Aug 27, 2025
- 3 min read
I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received. Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to one hope when you were called; one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all. But to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it. Ephesians 4:1-7
There’s a little Greek word (pas) which makes almost 1200 appearances in scripture. It translates as the word, “all.” While its meaning is always determined by its context, we see it on full display in Paul’s letter to the Ephesians. (see above)
Finding connections is in our spiritual DNA. For Methodists, the choice is not faith OR good works; it is faith AND good works. Likewise, it is personal holiness AND social holiness; works of piety AND works of mercy; knowledge AND vital piety; sacramental AND evangelical expressions of grace. For me, it is both “traditional” AND “progressive.”
Wesley was a “traditionalist.” His feet remained firmly planted in the church into which he was born and died. The instructions he sent to the fledgling Methodist movement in America were drawn with little change from the Anglican Articles of Religion. But Wesley was also a progressive. He preached in the open air, licensed women as preachers, opposed slavery – all outside the box for the church of his time. I fear a church that is not both deeply rooted in tradition but also open to new and often more faithful expressions of what it means to be a follower of Jesus. I do not want to live in an echo chamber. I appreciate both those voices calling me to faithfulness to the scriptures and tradition AND those voices calling me to a more faithful understanding of the faith. Both have shaped and continue to shape me.
I am grateful to be a part of a church that has brought me comfort when I needed it but, perhaps more importantly, a church that has made me uncomfortable when I needed to be made uncomfortable. It took those other uncomfortable voices in the church to lead me to a more faithful understanding of the Gospel. My reluctance has become gratitude for those other voices through which I have heard God calling me to a greater faithfulness to Christ.
For me, the cornerstone of John Wesley’s theology is the conviction that the love of God was in all and for all. Against any view of limited grace and atonement, Wesley declared the universal love of God for all. His life’s work was spent among those who the established church had written off. Our passion has been more about building bridges than about building walls. I love the words of the Charles Wesley hymn: Come sinner to the gospel feast, let every soul be Jesus’ guest, ye need not one be left behind, for God has bidden all humankind.
It has been said that Methodists talk too much about grace. Maybe we are guilty of that charge. But I, for one, am glad that we do. Are we a perfect church? No. Are we in need of reform? Lord, yes. I don’t know a church that isn’t or doesn’t! However, I choose to stay at home in the church that made a home for me.”
Blessings and Peace!
Pastor Eric

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