Showing posts with label Dr Tom Spence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr Tom Spence. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Moderator Report December 2024

 

Moderator Report

December 2024

 

This year is almost in the books, but we celebrate Thanksgiving, Advent, and Christmas before it’s all done. We should count our blessings, rejoice, pray, and give thanks regardless of our circumstances.

Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18

 

Our standing committees have not met, but we have had activity in these functional areas.

Missions.

We helped 6 families with Thanksgiving baskets who are members of or connected to our congregation. We also helped several others with food from the pantry. In the past, this committee thrived on those new to the congregation, most of whom have moved. Many missions still produce good fruit, but we do not have a viable committee.

Worship.

The Community Service was held on Sunday Evening, 24 November 2024. One member of our congregation was present. The liturgist list for 2025 is posted.  I confirmed our standing order for Palms.

Education

We have not had a curriculum review beyond the teacher level for over twenty years. We have tried on multiple occasions to have a Sunday School Superintendent’s Report without success. VBS is an educational activity that has continued under the direction of a core group since it was revitalized in 2008. In the year ahead, the session may want to consider dissolving this committee.

A membership class is planned for 18 December 2024.

Building and Grounds.

The status of spraying our acreage will be reviewed this month, with quotes for service or other options. Last month, the session decided to continue spraying to some degree, desiring not to regress to previous sticker levels. This is an agenda item.

We still have a long pew in the fellowship hall. This is an agenda item.

Much of the session business has involved acting as a building and grounds committee. Derrick Walker has been replacing lights. Larry Walker does most of the plumbing (sinks and toilets), but no one has a general and ongoing situational awareness of the building.

Fellowship

On 4 December, we had a one-pot meal and decorated the church building for Christmas. A second Wednesday one-pot meal is planned for 18 December. There are plans to make this a game night as well. We have a finger food fellowship following an evening Christmas worship service on 22 December. It has been a while since we experienced fellowship in the course of doing things greater than ourselves.

 

Other

Annual Report. Information from the clerk and the December 2024 Financial Report is required to complete this. It is due by the end of January 2025.

Finances.

QR Code Link to Online Giving. Are we there yet? Agenda item.

At the last meeting, there was some confusion about the backpack ministry accounting and payments. In previous years, what was not expended during the current FY was approved to be liquidated with a check to Kendra Walker for off-season buying. This year, the payment was not made for FY 24 but posted as an advance for FY 25. A review of the past 2 years noted that less than $400 was disbursed to this ministry. Of this, at least $350 was from designated offerings, not budgeted funds. We have many options, among them to do nothing differently and see if this creates a shortfall later or address this now. Agenda Item.

The session has previously rejected this, but I would ask that we reconsider a budget committee for 2025 so that the elder retreat doesn’t have to begin from scratch.  

Tom Personal.

Projects in Search of a Champion.  

Dates for Planning Purposes.

Friday, June 1, 2018

Burns Flat Cumberland Presbyterian History

Preface

This is a history in the making.  It was written in short segments over almost 2 decades, some parts having more life to them than others.  At some point, a historian needs to put everything into coherent form up to a certain date, perhaps 2025 or 2030, applying all the rules of historical writing that are included here--in what are truly first and second drafts of history.  Their context is short-term.


A second point here is that the pastor should not normally be the historian.  Someone who will transcend the terms of multiple pastors, knows the history of the denomination and the local community, is exceptionally literate, and has a heart for history is the preferred choice.  Some congregations may be blessed to have this person.  Others may find the search long and arduous, but note, the return on investment is fantastic. 
Elmo Guthrie



Elmo Guthrie was that person for the Burns Flat Cumberland Presbyterian Church for much of this church body’s life.  Tom Spence has been the historian since early this century.  There are gaps in coverage and recording, but a genuine effort to present the character of this local group of believers has prevailed.




Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Burns Flat, Oklahoma 73624

You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.    Matthew 5:14-16


History is the recording of past events and experiences.  This history was originally compiled by Elmo Guthrie in the early 1990's.  While there may be a few gaps in this history and some accounts less precise than desired, the story it tells is clearly one of faithfulness.  This is a church with humble beginnings that grew to its present size based on faith alone and one that believes that we are just getting started to do God's work in our community and beyond.

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Just a short note from Pastor Tom

This is the day that the Lord has made. 
Let us rejoice and be glad in it. 

Our entire lives are to be filled with thanksgiving and praise for God.

  For the Christian there is no such thing as despair.

  Christ has overcome the world!

  He made us.  We are his.

  He loved us more than we can even imagine.

  We didn’t deserve it.

  That’s grace.

  So how are we to live as people who were loved when we didn’t deserve it? 

How are we to live as people who are being shaped in the likeness of Christ?  How are we to live?

The short answer is abundantly.  To understand abundance, we must set ourselves on a daily course to become God’s light and love in this world.

To live this life fully, we must time and time again give fully of ourselves, even when we think there is nothing left to give.

To be truly rich we must first be rich towards God.
You don’t learn this stuff from the world.

We serve a Master—there’s a term that Americans don’t like—who tells us to be first we must be last.
He tells us to be servant of all.
That’s really tough medicine.  Sometimes it’s just too tough.

But we don’t just through in the towel.
God has given each of us his own Spirit to walk beside us daily.

Each of us has direct access to God.
Each of us is called to be a member of the Body of Christ.
Each of us is called to grow closer to God individually and to worship him with other believers.

We don’t go to church.
We are the church!

Jesus told us that we are the salt of the earth.
He said we are the light of the world.
He told us to take a message of good news to the entire world.

We as followers of Jesus Christ are truly strangers in this world.
Our God-inspired way of living makes us foreigners in a self-centered world.

But we are in good company.
Prophets and saints alike have been rejected by a world governed by sin.
We are obedient to God and that makes us different—it makes us uncommon.

We are destined to be brothers and sisters of Christ.
God ordained this before the creation of the world.

So let us profess our faith in Jesus Christ.
Let us surrender to God’s perfect will and be shaped as God intended.

Let us love others as God has loved us.



The Spiritual Autobiography of Tom Spence


The following seems like it was yesterday.  It was among my first assignments once I answered God's call.  It still speaks to how quickly God can take those whome he called and set them on the course he prepared before the foundation of the world.




The Spiritual Autobiography of Tom Spence
May 2008

I begin in the present.  I am the stated supply of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Burns Flat, Oklahoma.  One year ago I became the moderator pro temp[ore] of our session and was instrumental in the formation of a pastoral search committee.  At that point, I did not envision that I would be the fruit of that search.  That is not to say that I did not expect to fill the pulpit on a regular basis.  I did.  I also expected to reassure the congregation that we would be just fine, that the head of our church was not the pastor we didn’t have but Christ himself, and that Christ would still be the head even when we did find a pastor.

I knew that I was called to be moderator.  I knew that we were a larger church than when I filled the pulpit between pastors before (2003) and that I would need more help filling the pulpit.  I discovered that we had grown more than in our numbers.  Our ministries had grown and were still growing.  I knew that I needed to be more involved—more than just filling the pulpit, preparing the bulletin and newsletter, and more than just waiting to see what the search committee would find.  I was called to minister to this congregation.  Still, I did not expect God to call me to full-time ministry.  In hindsight, I was in denial—ok, blind—to the fact that God was calling me.

In December 2007, several of the elders, search committee members, and some others from the congregation found our way into the vacant pastor’s study.  This was following an evening service and this was an impromptu continuation of the fellowship that had begun that evening.  Someone asked if I had considered the ministry.  The conversation became dominated by that topic.  I told everyone that I thought my ministry was to serve the congregation while we searched for another pastor.  I did tell them that I would ask God if he was calling me. 

I asked.  He answered.  People that previously had not said much to me, told me this was my calling.  Instead of the cordial nice sermon remark at the end of the service, people hugged me and simply said, go get ordained.  People gave me this message in places other than church and many were from other congregations and some were pastors from other denominations.  None of them knew of my promise to pray about this. 

I would have preferred an email from God, marked important—better yet:  URGENT!  In fact, after praying, I checked my inbox more frequently than normal.  My answer was to come from God’s people not my computer.  My choice was simple.  Kick against the goads and continue to pull my own yoke or accept the one Christ offered.  I knew the answer.  In a single night, I began my trek to the ministry.  I searched the denomination website and was disappointed that there wasn’t much there, but I picked a couple email addresses that I thought were appropriate and I also emailed George Estes who had worked with our church in a period of revitalization and whom I kept in the loop on various things going on in Burns Flat.  He guided me to Dr. Campbell and the appropriate committee of my Presbytery.  I completed pastor information forms and sent them to the denomination, Red River Presbytery, and made one for our search committee.  One of the first things I learned as a Marine officer was that an officer must never be timid and that was the last thing that I was at this point.  I had my marching orders and wasn’t going to be indecisive.  I take comfort in that my Marine Corps background was in perfect harmony here.  God did not give us a spirit of timidity.

At the time I gave my package to the search committee, I discovered that they had a candidate that many were excited about.  I gave them my packet in a sealed envelope and asked them not to open it if they were actively pursuing a candidate.  I knew that I was called to the ministry, but not certain that it would be to my home church congregation.  The last thing that I wanted to do was cause any dissent in the committee.  At the elders retreat a few days later, I asked for the session’s blessing and endorsement to pursue ordination via the program of alternate studies.  The session was as excited about my choice as I was.

Some paperwork, interviews, intelligence, and psychological evaluations and reports, meetings, and more meetings later bring us to present day:  Tom Spence, stated supply at Burns Flat Cumberland Presbyterian Church, endorsed for the PAS by Red River Presbytery, and ready to dive headfirst into this program.

My childhood involved attendance at churches all over the United States; most of them were Disciples of Christ denominations.  Sunday School and Vacation Bible School were important events in my life.  I was baptized as an adult in the Episcopal Church and married by an Episcopal Navy Chaplain, but most of my adult life was spent in the Presbyterian Church with a few ventures into Baptist congregations.  I had never heard of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church until I moved to Burns Flat in 1999.  The first service I attended told me that this would be our church home.  Before joining, I invited the Pastor to the house and we discussed several things.  I wanted to make sure of the central beliefs of this denomination and to make sure it wasn’t some off-the-wall sect.  Jim Fisk was the pastor at the time and he gave me a one-minute history of the denomination and answered my questions.  He was interested in how a Marine officer had reconciled being a professional combatant and a Christian as his son was currently serving in the Army. 

A significant part of my adult life was as a U.S. Marine Corps officer.   I see no dichotomy between battle and serving God.  God has called many to battle.  While my time in a combat zone was only one year out of twenty; preparing for battle on a daily basis has helped me in my current spiritual journey.  I truly enjoyed my time in the Marine Corps.  Among other things, I learned to be a life-long learner in the Corps.  To learn and master new skills every year is still a passion of mine.  To teach, train, mentor, and see the fruits of your efforts in young men and women is an experience that few enjoy to the extent I experienced as a Marine.  I believe that my time in the Corps was a blessing from God.

I have no road to Damascus experience.  I was taught, I believed, and I have grown in my faith.  That’s not to say I have not had trials.  I have and for the most part they have strengthened me.  Those that have not are because I struggled against what God wanted me to do.  Surrender is a tough word for a Marine to pronounce, but I learned when I surrendered all to Christ, He gave me victory. 

All in my family are saved.  Sharman, my wife, and I both love our church family.  She is an elementary teacher and that is also her ministry.  Burns Flat is a town with a large transient population.  Many children that she teaches have parents in prison, using drugs in their presence, or absent from their lives.  Much of the love that these children receive comes from Sharman in the classroom.  We cannot go anywhere in southwest Oklahoma without getting hugged by knee-high people.  I have also become an expert shopper of crayons, pencils, and folders.  If K-Mart is having a blue light special on school supplies during PAS, I will need a 1-hour excused absence to go buy a cubic meter of crayons. 

Both my children, Heather and Christopher, are out of the house and doing their best to make their own way in the world.  I have no grandchildren yet, but cherish the fact that God through his grace has better prepared me for that role now that I know Him better.  My body is 52 years old and I put it through some pounding during my time in the Corps; but, my excitement to pursue full-time ministry is as intense as any I have experienced.  I get out of bed in the morning ready to see what God wants me to do today!

Semper Fidelis!


Tom Spence