A Generation Lost?
The following is a column I wrote for the March 2015 edition of the Anglican Journal, and is reproduced here with permission of the editor.
There was a general feeling amongst the elderly in the
community that a whole generation was being lost. Their adult children had fallen away, and
their grandchildren knew nothing of the faith at all. One of them proclaimed, “O sir … our children
are growing up faithless and our little ones have never been baptized!”
This might very easily be the lament of any of our senior
parishioners on any given Sunday in one of our churches. Yet, these were words spoken to the Rev. Featherstone Osler, the first resident
clergyman of West Gwillimbury and Tecumseth in Upper Canada , shortly after his
arrival in 1837. The shortage of
permanent resident clergy and the failure to build churches over the preceding
thirty years had led to a whole generation of settlers falling away, and their
children never coming to faith at all.
It is into this world that Featherstone Osler was thrust. Recognizing the urgency of the situation,
with a profound sense of calling and a fortitude that can only be considered
remarkable, Osler went about the work of building the kingdom in the two
townships and outlying areas committed to his charge. He wore out more than one horse, proclaimed
the good news fervently, and in twenty years founded twenty congregations,
established Sunday schools, trained bush clergy, and built at least a dozen
church buildings. He could have flagged;
he could have returned to England and taken up a more comfortable sinecure, for
his was a family of means. But no – he
laid hold of the yoke his Lord laid upon him, trusting in the faithfulness of
God, and embracing the hope of the kingdom.
Our age is not so different.
We lament the loss of a whole generation in the Church. But shall our faith falter? Will our fortitude fail? We may not be called
to answer the problem the same way Osler answered his call, but we are called
to rise to the challenge. We are called to believe that God will give us the
tools to meet those challenges. And we have that one thing that Osler and so
many others before and since have had, the Good News of God in Christ. The means of proclamation will vary from age
and place, but the hope of Salvation is sure, and our God is faithful as we
proclaim the words of life to a hurting world.
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