Regional
Methodists join us in our
120th birthday celebrations
METHODISTS
from as far as the Philippines and East Malaysia to the east,
Sri Lanka to the west, and Myanmar and West Malaysia to the north,
came and participated in the 120th Anniversary celebrations of
The Methodist Church in Singapore.
Their presence lent an international
flavour to the week-long Aldersgate Convention 2005, the highlight
of the celebrations which attracted them in the first place.
Not only did they come to attend
the Aldersgate Service at the joint premises of Faith Methodist
Church and Queenstown Chinese Methodist Church on May 24, they
also participated in the May 27-28 seminar which explored the
richness of our Methodist worship and liturgy, and listened to
three top Wesleyan scholars - the Rev Dr William Abraham of Southern
Methodist University, the Rev Dr Geoffrey Wainwright of Duke University,
and the Rev Dr Karen Westerfield Tucker of Boston University.
And, like all good Methodists, they joined the congregation in
singing lustily at the Hymn Festival which rounded off the Aldersgate
Convention at TA2 on May 28.
Ms Rebecca Kathleen Vidal, Lay Leader of the Pangasinan Philippines
Annual Conference of the Baguio Episcopal Area of The United Methodist
Church, the Philippines, found her participation at the Aldersgate
Convention a "good opportunity of growth and renewal as we
continue ministering for Christ with our people".
Another Filipino participant, Ms Ana Susan Flor Vidal-Erguiza,
Lay Leader of her local church, said the convention had helped
her to become a "better teacher and leader".
Both of them were nominated by Bishop Dr Benjamin A. Justo, President
of the College of Bishops of The United Methodist Church, the
Philippines, who could not come.
Bishop Dr Hwa Yung of The Methodist Church in Malaysia, who was
also unable to come, was represented by the Rev Lu Chen Tiong,
a music and worship lecturer at the Methodist Theological School
in Sibu, Sarawak, in East Malaysia.
The Rev Lu was nominated by his Principal, the Rev Dr Liong Yuk
Chong, who said he persuaded the Rev Lu to go to the Aldersgate
Convention knowing that it would "enrich and enhance our
Wesleyan theology and worship."
The Aldersgate Service, which launched the Aldersgate Convention
2005, attracted about 1,000 worshippers, whose hearts were warmed
by a banner-carrying procession into the church by the clergy,
all dressed in their robes.
Five ministers were each given a Bible for completing 25 years
of faithful service. Eight other retired ministers, who had not
received their Bibles in previous years, also got theirs during
the service.
Bishop Dr Robert Solomon delivered the sermon entitled "What
Do You See?", based on the text from Zechariah 4, the same
book and chapter from which James Thoburn, the founder of Singapore
Methodism, preached his very first sermon at the Town Hall, now
Victoria Theatre, 120 years ago ("Not by might, nor by power,
but by my Spirit, saith the Lord" - Zech 4:6).
What do we see, asked the Bishop. "Perhaps we see small,
insignificant things. Who would have believed in 1885 that the
tiny work begun would grow to such significant proportions and
spread to Malaya, Indonesia, the Philippines?"
Bishop Dr Solomon referred to the vision given to Zechariah and
said the vision was about the Messiah, the Church and the divine
Mission. The vision resembled scenes of the old temple where the
light of the lampstand was maintained every day, and light was
the symbol of God's light in the dark world.

The Bishop told
the congregation that because God supplies His never-ending and
never-exhausted resources to the Church, the Church would be resilient.
"God's resources are far superior to human ones. We must
solely depend on God. We must understand the implications of the
Gospel, and the nature and mission of the Church."
Referring to the Church and its divine Mission, Bishop Dr Solomon
reminded the congregation: "You shall be witnesses to the
ends of the earth. The Gospel shall be preached to all
The Great Commission will be completed
because it is God's work, says Bishop
"The Great Commission will be completed because it is God's
work. He initiated it and He maintains it. He supplies the oil.
Without Him, we will fail.
"Let us go on and reflect God's light to the nations. We
are called to be sons and daughters of oil (anointed ones) to
serve the Lord of all the earth, whose eyes range throughout all
the earth. As Wesley had said, 'The world is my parish'.
"Let us therefore recognise how precious the Church is to
God, and be full of light as we depend on His grace entirely to
maintain this light which is to shine among the nations.
"As it says in Luke 12:35, let us be dressed ready for service
and keep our lamps burning, like men waiting for their master
to return."
More than 160 participants took
part in the two-day "Methodist Worship in Context" seminar
at Methodist Centre on May 27 and 28.
There were 11 workshops led by pastors and church workers on various
topics for those planning and participating in worship.
These workshops supplemented a set of four lectures on Methodist
worship by the Rev Dr Wainwright and the Rev Dr Tucker. The two
US seminary professors discussed topics relating to the liturgical
forms and evangelical freedom which Methodists have inherited
from John Wesley.
The other teaching segment of the Aldersgate Convention comprised
a series of three enlightening talks on the evenings of May 25-27
by the third guest speaker from the US, the Rev Dr Abraham. The
talks were respectively entitled "Faith and the Promises
of God", "Faith and the Personal Experience of God",
and "Faith and the Power of God".
Aldersgate Convention 2005 closed aptly with beautiful Wesleyan
melodies and joyous singing from the choir and band participants
as well as the congregation at the Aldersgate Hymn Festival at
TA2 on May 28. It testified one more time that Methodists are
indeed a singing people.