Transition Team: Small Group Meeting Information and Sign-up

The Transition Team invites you to participate in an upcoming small group meeting. The purpose of these gatherings will be to further discuss issues of importance related to our ministry together and to better reflect your voice in our Ministry Site Profile (MSP). Our finalized MSP will be reviewed by pastor candidates who are looking for a church that will be a good fit for their unique leadership qualities and gifts for ministry. 

Please click here to view the meeting locations, dates, and times and to sign-up to attend a small group meeting that works best for you. 

We encourage you to sign up as soon as you’re able to ensure a meeting location and time that works best for you. Each gathering will be limited to 10 participants. In addition, two Transition Team members will be present at each meeting to guide the discussion and record meeting notes. 

Home hosts for each gathering will provide beverages. We invite small group attendees to bring a light snack to share. 

One area of discussion will relate to what we’d ideally like our next pastor to focus on during their first year of ministry and how we as a congregation will support them in those focus areas. 

We’d also like to share with you some trends from The ‘Leader We Seek’ survey. Please click here to view summary charts and graphs.

With gratitude, 

FELC Transition Team 

FELCTransitionMinistry@felcaustin.org

A Note from the Council President

Friends in Christ, 

Pastor J Mills resigned as transition pastor of First English, effective January 31.  He is currently on vacation.  

While his resignation comes as a surprise to some, at the monthly council meeting held on Tuesday, January 16, a motion was offered, discussed, and put to a vote, to not extend the covenant with Pastor J.   That covenant ends on March 19, 2024.  The motion carried, and Pastor J was aware the covenant would not be renewed.  

It is clear to me from Pastor J’s message to our congregation on Thursday, January 18, that he has been deeply impacted.  We should take the time to read his message carefully for observations and objectives that may be valuable.  

As a council, it is our prayerful responsibility to work and listen with the best interests of our congregation in mind. 

It is my firm belief that our congregation is strong, and that we will move forward with enthusiasm and vulnerability.  We encourage everyone to share your views and join in this work. The council is working on next steps in this transition ministry.

With prayer, 

Nancy Neuse

FELC Congregation President 2023 

Transition Team Update Feb. 7, 2024

The Transition Team is continuing our work! One trend that emerged through some survey data is a desire to gather together for a bit more in-person discussion. The Transition Team is in the process of coordinating a handful of in-home small group discussions to take place during the last two weeks of February. Once all gathering locations, dates, and times are confirmed we will provide you with a way to sign up for a small group location that is convenient for you. These discussion groups will help to further reflect your voice in our Ministry Site Profile (MSP), so we hope you will plan to join one of the discussion groups near you! In the meantime, the Transition Team continues to move forward with drafting our responses to the MSP questions. We will have our next team meeting this Sunday, February 11th. As always, feel free to reach out to us individually or at: FELCTransitionMinistry@felcaustin.org

With gratitude, 

FELC Transition Team 

FELCTransitionMinistry@felcaustin.org

Transition Update Feb. 1, 2024

Hello from the Transition Team! As Allen mentioned at the Annual Meeting on Sunday, we had a lengthy meeting last week where we talked through recent events, began to analyze survey data trends, and reaffirmed our working plan going forward to complete the Ministry Site Profile (MSP). Our team will continue meeting regularly as we work to finish up the MSP which we aim to bring to the Council for review this spring. One trend that emerged through some survey data is a desire to gather together for a bit more in-person discussion. The Transition Team will be setting up a number of in-home small group discussions throughout the city in the coming weeks. These discussion groups will help to further reflect your voice in our Ministry Site Profile, so we hope you will plan to join one of the discussion groups near you! Stay tuned for more detailed information about when and where these small groups will take place. The Transition Team’s next meeting is planned for February 11th. As always, please feel free to reach out to us individually or at: FELCTransitionMinistry@felcaustin.org. 

With gratitude, 

FELC Transition Team 

FELCTransitionMinistry@felcaustin.org 

Transition Team Update Jan. 18, 2024

The Transition Team thanks you for completing “The Leader We Seek” survey! This week we will begin to process the results of the survey which will help us complete a meaningful portion of the Ministry Site Profile (MSP). We have information to complete certain parts of the MSP while other sections are moving forward in draft form. Once completed, the Transition Team will work in concert with the Council to review a finalized MSP that will get sent to the Synod. The Transition Team will meet again at the end of next week to review draft portions of the MSP. We look forward to offering additional updates at the Congregational Meeting on January 28. Feel free to reach out to the Transition Team at FELCTransitionMinistry@felcaustin.org. 

With gratitude, 

FELC Transition Team 

FELCTransitionMinistry@felcaustin.org

Transistion Team Survey

Epiphany and New Year greetings from the FELC Transition Team!    

As the 2024 opens, we invite you to engage with us in our transition process by completing a brief survey, which will close on January 14th, at 5:52PM (sunset). Your responses will assist us with “The Leader We Seek” portion of the Ministry Site Profile (MSP). The survey provides a way for you to communicate what ministry gifts and leadership qualities & characteristics are important to you in our search for pastoral leadership at FELC. We invite you to take a few moments of quiet to complete the survey with an open mind and a prayerful heart.    

“God of yesterday, today, and tomorrow we hear our lives reflected in the stories with you of our past; we experience our lives now, with you, through each other and those you call into our midst; we experience hope in your call to us now and in all our tomorrows. We ask your Spirit to guide our stories, o God – help us hear you in them as we enjoy them again, mourn them again, and dream through them again. Remind us that our stories are yours, as we are yours, called to serve our Siblings. Keep us building your stories, in Christ. Amen”  

  Access Survey Here  

Survey closes on 14Jan    

With gratitude,   The FELC Transition Team
felctransitionministry@felcaustin.org  
Allen Jensen, Barbara Schutz, Elizabeth Zimmerman, Erin McCracken, Lillian Rodriguez-Coburn, Nikki Northcutt, Randy Baden, Tim Adkinson, and Pastor J. Michael Mills

Transitional Ministry

The first Adult Forum focused on the Transitional Ministry of FELC (including the future Call Journey) will be held this coming Sunday, August 20, at 8:30 AM in the Fellowship Hall. Pastor J will be offering clarity on the journey to date as well as opportunities for getting our feet wet in the future of this ministry. If you have questions that you would like to have addressed during this forum, please forward them to Pastor J at pastor@felcaustin.org. As preparation, Pastor J would like to share with all of us some words that seem appropriate for the last seven months of growth we have experienced; Pastor Hannah Adair Bonner is a Methodist Pastor and has an active blog regarding many of the ministry realities of this 21st Century.

To encourage everyone’s attendance for this very important gathering, the “Hospitality Team” will begin serving breakfast at Sunday, August 20, at 8:00 AM in the Fellowship Hall. Please join us for fruit salad, coffee, juices, “Lutheran Breakfast Casserole”, muffins, and other sweet breads (Including vegetarian & gluten-free options).

Child-care will be provided by Jenn Cook, our CDC Director, from 8:30 – 10:00 AM.


Public Facebook Post by Hanna Adair Bonner, 21Jun2021

“This post is for my Queer church [folx]… but the rest of y’all can eavesdrop. Last week, I started physical therapy to try to get myself back to full-functioning after a 20 foot fall this year. For the past few months, every time my back started to hurt again, I shut down everything. If it was bad enough, I would try to lay still for days and hope it would stop. I was terrified, and every time the pain came back, I was convinced that I was broken again and that I’d never heal. 

I did not understand what was happening in my body, or which parts of me the trauma had hurt. No one had ever explained it to me. No one took the time. The broken bones were obvious, but they were actually the first to heal. It was the deeper tissue that wasn’t making any progress, because I would not let it move and I would not let it heal. 

I did not know what was wrong with me, and I was not getting the help I needed, so I gave up trying to ask for help. 

Until last week, when I finally got a great physical therapist, who took the time to explain to me what was happening inside my body. He seemed totally convinced that I was going to be fine, and I started to believe it too. 

Every time I had felt pain, I thought it was the bones, and I rushed to protect them. In doing so, I shut down the healing. The physical therapist explained that I was living my life too guarded. I was afraid of being broken again, so I was guarding that entire part of my body. I did not use my abs to sit up, I used my biceps to push myself up. I did not bend at the waist, I squatted with my quads. My arms and legs became a wall, protecting my core – they got stronger, while the rest of me got weak. 

My back muscles – the ones responsible for my stability – atrophied, and I never helped them come back, because I interpreted the pain of healing as the pain of brokenness. My fear of being broken forever kept me from being able to recover. 

My physical therapist could poke at my back and tell me the places that I had not let heal, because they were the places that were still tender, where I had shut down whenever they started to move and repair and heal. 

“You’re moving so guarded. We’ll work on that.” 

I’ve been thinking about how we as Queer [folx] in the church have been moving in ways that are guarded, moving in ways that we have learned to move in order to survive and fend off the most vicious attacks. We intended to protect old brokenness, but we are actually blocking new healing. 

I want to say to you today: We won’t be broken always. I want to believe that enough that you begin to believe it too. The way that my physical therapist believed me into believing. 

I’ve been thinking about all the trauma that we’ve experienced, and the ways that we cannot even begin to understand the places that it has harmed us. I’ve been thinking about the walls that we build as Queer [folx] in the church, ESPECIALLY my context, the United Methodist Church… ESPECIALLY those of us who are clergy. The way we use other parts of ourselves, and other emotions to guard what is tender and keep it from feeling anything… unknowingly keeping it from healing. 

When I came out, my mother told family members, “Well, Hannah can just stay celibate.” She was very content with viewing a future for me where I would never use the muscle that is my heart, where it could atrophy for all she cared. If I listened to her, I would go through life feeling always that I was broken, never beginning to heal. So I keep trying to use it, clumsily and anxiously pushing through the pain, struggling to remember to breathe, trying to be less guarded, asking for the help I need. I believe my heart is a powerful muscle, and I want to use it well. 

We church kids have built up a lot of defenses, afraid of experiencing and re-experiencing our deepest griefs – when the pain shoots up to 7 or 8 or 9 on a scale of 10. But maybe we’ll find that if we push through the 2 or 3 or 4, we can actually get ourselves down to a 1. 

We’ll never heal if we are too afraid of the process, too afraid to ask for the help we need, too afraid to start somewhere, too afraid of the pain to be able to feel the joy. 

We won’t be broken always… I want to believe that enough that you begin to believe it too. 

Cheers, Queers 🥂 I absolutely adore you.” 

FELC Transitional Pastor

As we move through our time of ministry transition, we welcomed the Rev. J. Michael Mills (he/him/his). Pastor Mills was recommended by Bishop Sue Briner after an extensive search of transitional pastors.

The congregation executive committee and council convened Zoom meetings with Pastor Mills. We found him to be engaging, thoughtful, personable, a deep listener, and possessing a passionate heart for the welcome and joy of the gospel of Christ. We are excited to welcome Pastor J.!

The congregation has contracted with Pastor Mills for a ministry among us that is part-time. He will engage in our congregation and community every week and will preside and preach about twice every month. We will continue to have the liturgical leadership of Bob Karli, Tim Lincoln, and Brad Fuerst. Additionally, Pastor Mills intends to welcome guest preachers to FELC.

We welcomed him as our transitional pastor on Sunday, March 26.

Pastor J. prepared a narrative biography. You can read it by clicking here.

We anticipate a fruitful time of witness, renewal, and growth together.

Holy Fork in the Road Ministry: ways of connective transitions

There continues to be transition in congregations; events we are growing to experience as both never ending and good, in one way or another. Whether evidenced by pastors retiring or taking new calls, transition is a key time for all of us to be intentional with the Holy Spirit to discern who we are now vs. who we were pre-pandemic (or the last time we called a pastor).

Looking at transition as a constant, in both large or small parts in every community, we invite ourselves to be open to where God is calling us as an invitation to change. The Southwestern Texas Synod accompanies congregations in the transition process with resources and counsel, including consultations on how we can all become more inclusive and vibrant as we move into the future.

In a traditional sense we have some congregations that move from transition to call processes with an intention to tweak what they have been doing and continuing on. Increasingly, we are finding many of us are at what we are calling a Holy Fork in the Road: “business as usual” is no longer an option.

Through a grant from Lord of Life in Austin, which closed earlier this year, we are able to have two part time staff people: Pastor J. Mills and Pastor Johnene Cunningham who invite our congregations in transition to explore what it might mean to be a resurrection people, in earnest. Holy Fork in the Road Ministry is asking the question of legacy as a precursor to letting go of (flipping) barriers between God and God’s people.

Focused on engaging congregational agency, community networking, and corporate healing through deep discernment in the Word, we are uplifting our baptismal journeys: as stewards of ministry in our contexts; as communities of faith reconnecting with our neighbors for ministry. that focuses outward; and as groups of saints and sinners that need healing in order to renew our baptismal joy in service to God and those God calls us to love.

Holy Fork in the Road Ministry invites us to explore invitations to Rebirth (radical change) or Resurrection (holy closure).

You are invited to experience this ministry through perspectives of those who have made, or are familiar, with that journey.

Our thanks to the staff and congregation of First English in Austin for offering space and hospitality for the recording of these outreach resources as they live into this radical welcome, reconciliation, and rebirth.

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Welcoming the Transitional Pastor

Pastor J. Mills is moving into his office at FELC! But, where’s the pastor today? Out in the community meeting folks. He joyfully anticipates being welcomed on Sunday morning, March 26 in worship and hospitality. Be at FELC at 10 AM – onsite or online.