Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Announcing Soul Studio on Earth Day



April 22 is “Earth Day,” so as always, the whole world celebrates my birthday.

But this year I turned the big “6.0.” So I’m reflecting on life more than usual.  I’m grateful for your birthday wishes, but what I’m most grateful for is life itself.

I was born on a Tuesday, four weeks (to the day) after the March on Montgomery arrived on the capital steps led by Martin Luther King, Jr. I once went to visit that spot where MLK made his speech, “How Long? Not Long,” exactly 60 years (and 4 weeks) ago. I went just after Obama became president, pondering how far we’ve come in one lifetime. Of course, in some ways we’ve regressed since then, but I am still hopeful.

Soon I will be finishing 36 years of pastoral ministry, having served 8 churches (all of whom grew spiritually and 6 of whom grew numerically while I was there, and 5 of whom are still “United,” I’m happy to say). I’ve done 86 weddings, 168 funerals,  364 baptisms, and exactly 500 professions of faith. I kept record of each and every name.

But I’m not retiring. I’m redirecting my ministry because I really need to be more available to attend to my elderly Dad, help my daughter raise our new grandchild, and care for my wife in this new season. I look forward to the adventure of being a chaplain at Fair Haven and, on the side, launching “Soul Studio,” a ministry of writing, music, and spiritual formation.

The Holy Spirit never quits, I love to say. I am being called to a new adventure, for a new season of life, and for a new period of history.

The best is yet to come.

Monday, April 21, 2025

The Resurrection Was Controversial!


It's clear in the book of Acts that the DNA of the early church was built on three ideas that got them in lots of "good trouble."

They spoke truth to power with the assertion that "Jesus is Lord." They confronted prejudice with the radical inclusion of gentiles. And last, but not least, they fanned the flame of religious controversy with the conviction that Jesus rose from the dead.

Why was the resurrection peculiarly controversial? Because Jesus came along during a pre-existing religious argument. Pharisees believed in the afterlife (the "resurrection of the dead") and Sadducees did not. I often joke that "that's why they were 'sad, you see'."

They tried at times to pull Jesus into their religious argument. And they continued to do so with Peter and the early church, even chasing Christians around from place to place to shut the movement down. Once you see it, you can't "unsee" all this in the book of Acts.

Let the power of the resurrection be more than personal devotions for you. Fathom how much "good trouble" it brought the early church that we believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Still today, no matter what the world brings, that's where our hope comes from. Our God who raised Jesus from the dead can make all things new.

Friday, April 4, 2025

Restoring Funding for Birmingham Civil Rights Institute

I wrote my letter in supoort of restoring funding for the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. I urge you to write yours.


Dear Governor Ivey,

Grace and peace to you.

It is my understanding that your proposed new budget does not include any funding for the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. I am writing to urge you to reconsider.

The news that it has been completely cut comes on the heels of national efforts to suppress conversations about race and the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement. These conversations are essential to understanding who we are and how far we’ve come. The timing of this could not be more sobering.

As a white man who grew up in the south, I do not find the truth of our past to be threatening. I find it challenging and empowering. We need to keep the truth alive.

The stories that line the walls of the Birmingham
Civil Rights Institute are not abstract. They are Alabama history. They are American history, not a whitewashed version but real history.

I am deeply concerned about what removing this funding represents. It appears to be part of a larger extremist effort to undo decades of bipartisan investment in telling Alabama’s story in full—not just the parts that are comfortable, but also the hard truths of segregation, resistance, and the propensity to overcome.

I believe in protecting civil rights history. I believe the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute matters. I believe truth matters. If we don’t know our history, we’re doomed to repeat it, as they say. But just as importantly, if we don’t know our history, we rob ourselves of the opportunity for gratitude.

Please restore funding for the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute.

Sincerely,

Rev. Dr. Steve West
Senior Pastor, Jacksonville First United Methodist Church
Jacksonville, Alabama