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The Prophetic Witness of Clarence Kinzler (1935-2023)

Tribute at the Memorial Service of Clarence J. Kinzler “The boy is more important than the rule.”    The prophetic witness of Clarence “Cla...

Friday, November 17, 2023

“The boy is more important than the rule.” --The prophetic witness of Clarence “Clari” Kinzler (1935-2023)

 

The boy is more important than the rule.”

The prophetic witness of Clarence “Clari” Kinzler (1935-2023)


By Rev. Michael J. Christensen, Ph.D.1


I visited my mentor and friend, Clari Kinzler, a week before he died on October 15, 2023.

Knowing his heart was weak, I asked him about his health. He didn’t want to talk about his

health. He wanted to talk about his church. His heart was burdened about the future of the

Church of the Nazarene, and he wanted to do something. Call the General Superintendents?

Write a bunch of letters? Tell his story of the challenges back when he was a District

Superintendent? He wanted to strategize with me as we used to do, for such a time as this…

His wife Sue poured us a glass of cold water…



Beyond strategizing with my friend, I had the chance to tell Clari what he had meant to me over

the years. I thanked him for his years of pastoral mentoring, for co-officiating at Rebecca's and my wedding, for loaning us his cabin in McCall for week heavy discernment and decision-making, for being at my father’s beside a day or two before he passed.


Clari told me revealing stories, some of which I had heard before. Like the time in college when

he got in trouble for breaking a campus rule. Instead of expelling him, the College President

offered grace: “The boy is more important than the rule.”


Clari’s father died when the boy was only five.  Growing up in Nampa, Clari became an athlete

and felt a call to the ministry. He went to seminary in KC to learn how to preach and pastor a

local church. He was better at basketball than most, but not as good a preacher as others, and

he didn’t fit the norm. Discouraged, he needed some fatherly advice. Maybe he wasn’t called to

be a pastor?


The President of NTS at the time was the same Dr. D.T. Corlett (1952-1966)—formerly

president of NNU—who Clari knew and respected growing up. When he heard that Clari was

considering dropping out, Dr. Corlett came to visit him: “Son, take courage. You have gifts and

graces. You are called and chosen… I don’t want you to drop out; I want you to be who you are in Christ.”


Greatly encouraged, Clari persevered, graduated, became the founding pastor of the Shawnee

(KS) Mission Church of the Nazarene. He preached grace and gratitude as pastor of Arlington

Avenue Church of the Nazarene in Riverside, CA, and then as Senior Pastor of Nampa (ID)

College Church. In 1984 he became District Superintendent of the Northern California District

where he served for 17 years. He served on the Board of Regents at NNU while pastoring

College Church and on the Board of Trustees for PLNU while serving in Northern California. In

1992, Point Loma Nazarene University conferred on him the honorary degree, Doctor of

Divinity.


In retirement, Clari served various interim roles including Senior Pastor of San Diego First

Church of the Nazarene, President of the Nazarene Strengths Institute, District Superintendent of the Northwest Oklahoma District, and pastor of the McCall (ID) Church of the Nazarene. In 2009, Clari was honored as the first recipient of NNU’s Wesley Order of Servant Leader’s award.


Golden Gate Community and the Oak Street House


As the founding Pastor/Director of Golden Gate Community (an Urban Mission of the Church of

the Nazarene) in the Haight Ashbury neighborhood of SF, Clari Kinzler was my District

Superintendent. I was "one of his boys”, as he used to call us, “one of his guys/girls in the inner

city.”


Young and brash at 30, I remember trying to ‘splain to my new DS (straight outta Nampa) that

there was a difference between a local church and a mission center. 


Quoting Robert Schuller: “A mission center for JC puts the needs of the unsaved a notch or two above the needs of the saved.”


“That’s why Golden Gate Community only has 30 church members,” I tried to explain, “but we

have over 1,000 registered community members on our responsibility list—poor, homeless,

addicted, mentally ill, door people, van people, street people—all who visit our Oak Street

House for coffee and bagels, hospitality and social services every week or month.”


Clari challenged me: “So, Michael, can you do both? Grow the church and direct the mission?

That would be a Win/Win.” (Clari liked to use sports metaphors when strategizing about the

church in the city). “Both may not be possible,” I said, “but we’ll try.”


To draw a distinction: A mission center can accept and include folks who don’t look like, talk

like, dress like, think like, or act like most church people. A local Nazarene church is expected to

uphold certain standards of belief and practice and require adherence to be a member. Putting the needs of the unsaved a notch or two above the needs of the saved, a mission station for Jesus Christ can love, accept, forgive, bless, and include people just as they are—each of us

uniquely on a spiritual journey, in the process of becoming all that God’s wants us to be.


Clari appreciated the distinction between a local church and an urban mission. He looked at the

cigarette butts on the front porch of the Oak Street House and the empty bottles on the street.

And he said: “When I come back, I want to see this place packed with all kinds of people … and

if I don’t see cigarette butts and bottles outside the church doors… then I’ll know that you’re not

doing your job!”


That’s all I needed to hear to trust my District Superintendent. He was not going to make us

require more to join our church than Jesus required to join his. The gospel of love, acceptance,

and forgiveness—with a commitment to become all that God wants us to be—would be enough.

And meeting people’s basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter—in Jesus’s name—could be

our priority. Clari had a broad view of the Church’s mission in the world, and an expansive

vision for cross-cultural ministry in the cities.


AIDS in the City


When HIV/AIDS plagued the city of SF in the 1980s, Clari was with us on the front lines of the

crisis. Though controversial, he supported Golden Gate Community’s ministry to people with

AIDS, as well as our ministry in the gay community in SF.


I preached a gospel of radical grace and inclusive love for all God’s children. Some local pastors

and denominational leaders objected to my “soft and liberal” theology and practice and called

for church discipline. The General Superintendent in jurisdiction required me to change my

view of homosexuality to conform to the statement in the Nazarene Manual. But Clari protected

me, interpreted me to others, loved, affirmed, and even joined me at times in calling for changes

in church polity. 


Rather than bringing me up on charges, asking me to file my credentials, or withdraw church support, my District Superintendent was a pastors’ pastor. Even when I knew I had to leave the church of my birth, and join the Methodists, he kept me “dually aligned” for as long as he could…and blessed me on my way. Clari followed the example of John Wesley who said to those with whom he disagreed: “If your heart is right, as my heart is right, then give me your hand.”


That’s how he saw his job as District Pastor. Extend the right hand of fellowship. Protect the

shepherds. Guide the sheep. When they’re hurt, lift them up. If they’re wrong, gently admonish.

In essentials, unity. In non-essentials, liberty. In all things charity.”


Strategically, Clari preferred working behind the scenes, indirectly dealing with a problem. He

tended to talk around the edges of a conflict or controversial issue rather than shinning a direct

spotlight on it. He wanted to avoid an 'end-run' and get a 'win/win' if at all possible.


I remember once--after I had preached and written something too controversial for the

church—he wanted me to tone it down. He took me to lunch and wrote down a win/win

strategy on a table napkin. He drew four boxes in a quadrant and suggested: 

  • Box #1 is stuff you can preach, teach, publish for all to hear, come what may. 
  • Box #2 is hard stuff to share with just the people who have your best interests in mind—your friends and family and close community. 
  • Box #3 is your private beliefs and doubts best kept to yourself. 
  • And Box 4 is stuff you might want to re-think and re-consider. Before speaking or writing something, ask what box of the quadrant it belongs in.

He used other sports metaphors on me to change my course of action or to tone down the

rhetoric. “Let the game come to you,” he often said. “Don’t go out of your way to stir things up…

or call too much attention to yourself. If you let the game come to you, then you can act and say

what you gotta say. At the right time and the right way.”


The Game Came to Clari


The time came for Clari to say the right thing at the right time and in the right way--clearly and

directly to his church. Over time he had earned the respect of Nazarene General Superintendents and church theologians. In 1992, they invited him to give a keynote address to the Eight Theology Conference for the USA/Canada Church of the Nazarene in Kansas City. The game had come to him.


His paper on “Articulating and Living Christian Holiness in a Pluralistic World” asked hard

questions: Who is my enemy? Who is my neighbor? Who is the one I so often exclude? The

Mormon family in Nampa? The gay son in San Francisco? Those living and dying with AIDS? 


He applied the Nazarene doctrine of Holiness to how we actually treat people who are outsiders,

who have different beliefs and practices and identities than what we consider acceptable.


For example, in his paper Clari shared the moment when his attitude toward homosexuals in

the church began to change. It was at an AIDS Healing and Communion Service at a gay church

in San Franscisco on Thanksgiving Sunday. Led by two seminarians--Jim Mutulski, pastor of Metropolitan Community Church (the gay church in town) and my wife Rebecca Laird (seeking ordination in the Church of the Nazarene). Together, they stood at the front of the sanctuary to welcome--whosoever will-- come to the altar for communion and healing. And Clari and Sue were there!


Here's how Clari described it 30+ years ago in his 1992 address to the leaders and theologians

of the Church of the Nazarene:


“Crazy wild kids! [Michael and Rebecca Laird Christensen]. They invited me to go along with

them [to the gay church]. Sure, sure: we’ll all lose our credentials together! I didn’t answer

them for several weeks. But, more or less kicking and screaming, I decided to join them. My

wife, Sue, felt that she would like to go also.


“We entered the church early and sat near the front. The sanctuary that seated several hundred

became packed with people from the gay and lesbian community. The song service was led by a

tremendous musician who had the congregation singing with great exuberance. They told me

60% of the congregation had AIDS. I looked around. Here were same-sex married couples who

had been together for many years. There were the young 18–24-year-olds who were in the gay

or lesbian lifestyle… I asked the Lord why I was there. The still small voice of Jesus answered:

‘If I were in bodily form in San Francisco tonight, I would be exactly where you are.’ “


And then something dramatic, unexpected, and life-changing occurred at the gay church:


“They introduced the Golden Gate team, and then asked the District Superintendent of the

Northern California Church of the Nazarene to please stand. When Sue and I stood, the crowd

went crazy. They clapped and clapped until they clapped me to tears. They knew where the

Church of the Nazarene stood on their practice of homosexuality, but that someone would value

them as human beings and step across the dividing walls, was hope to them… 


My heart was broken as I saw young men, mere boys, jamming the middle isle, waiting for someone to pray for them a prayer for healing.” [And as I remember, some of them fell into the arms of Sue and Rebecca who stood there with communion elements to welcomed them home.]


“I’m not sure that everyone would agree that we belong in the gay-lesbian arena, Clari said,

“but, if we are strong enough to trust the validity of our experience with God, we really have no

choice but to be there with our powerful [Wesleyan] model of ‘wholeness.’


“It’s not easy, but we in leadership must give permission and blessing to these bright young

people who have been raised in our parsonages and in our homes… 


Please, dear holiness church that I love: let’s not let our negative sectors dePine our mission and set our perimeters…”


And Clari concluded his talk by saying that some of the people the church excludes are not just

our neighbors but our own sons and daughters.


My Last Visit with Clari at Grace Assisted Care


Clari reminded me of this transformative event in his life when I visited him at Grace Assisted

Care just a week before he died. Clearly, the opportunity to address the theologians and leaders

of his church and tell this story was one of the highlights of his life and ministry.


“After I read my paper and delivered my soul,” he told me, “there was a long, long silence.

Nobody said a word. I wondered if I had crossed a line...


Then, Finally, from the back of the room, Nazarene Seminary Professor Kenneth Grider gave a shout: ‘Yeah! THAT’S MY BOY!’ And then the room warmed up, and they applauded what I had to say.”


Whether Dr. Grider was thinking of his own son, who was gay; or thought that Clari was like a

son to him, who can say? But Clarihttps://www.northwindinstitute.org/advances’s message were as clear as day: Love the excluded other as if they were your own son or daughter.


By standing up and showing courage, supporting urban ministries of compassion, advocating

for people with AIDS, withholding moral judgement in favor of acceptance, and speaking the

truth in love… even if your voice shakes…you're doing the right thing. 


By doing the right thing in a difficult and ambiguous situation, Clarence Kinzler, I predict, will have a powerful prophetic influence on the Church of the Nazarene.  


My elder by 20 years, he mentored me like a son or daughter. But what I want to say today about Clari is what Dr. Grider said of him back in the day: “Yeah! That’s my boy!”  He’s my

man. My beloved mentor and friend.


And I’m also grateful that Clari’s mentor back in the day didn’t expel him from college after he

broke a campus rule. But instead, channeled grace: “The boy is more important than the rule.”


May the Church of the Nazarene live up to the values of its prophetic leaders.


Clarence Kinzler chose to be buried in the same grave plot as his father. May

you rest in peace, beloved Clari. And with your father, rise in glory!


Tribute delivered at funeral service of Clarence Kinzler, Nampa College Church of the Nazarene, November 3, 2023

Former President of NNU Dr. D. T. Corlett’s maxim.


Monday, September 4, 2023

‘Equipping the Saints’ for a New Reformation


Northwind Seminary shares its mission and passion for
‘equipping the Saints’ for a New Reformation
By Michael J. Christensen, Ph.D.

Ecclesia semper reformanda is a common Latin phrase used by church reformers to remind the people of God that “the church must always be about reforming”). The early Jesus Movement and Apostolic Church, the Imperial Church of the Holy Roman Empire, the Protestant Reformation, and Roman Catholic Counter Reformation, all had their day and role to play in the growth of the Christian tradition. At least three “Great Awakenings” in the history of American Christianity served to renew the Church at critical times.  The “Great Emergence” of new church forms and fresh expressions of ecclesia at the turn of the third Millennium of Christianity served to prepare the way for a Global Church—no longer centered in Europe or America, but growing in the global south, Asia, and Africa.  What next ‘new thing’ will the Spirit of God do in the world? What new ways and forms will characterize the next Church? (See Phyllis Tickle, The Great Emergence: How Christianity Is Changing and Why (2008)


Behold, I am doing a new thing; do you not perceive it? --Isaiah 43:19 


Northwind Theological Seminary emerged in 2019-2020 from a vision and calling to support and equip local pastors, bi-vocational ministers, second career clergy, lay leaders, and life-long learners seeking a theological degree and/or an alternative pathway to ordination in their own faith tradition during a time of great change and upheaval in the Church and culture.


The name of our seminary--Northwind--points to the breath of God and the dynamic movement of the Spirit to orient the compass of our lives to true North. Symbolically, northernness is an orientation in life, a quality of character, an image and metaphor in theology and ministry, the first of the four Cardinal points of the circle to which all others are related. For C. S. Lewis and other great writers, the way to God lies to the North.


As an ecumenical, online seminary attracting students from across the spectrum, our mission is to offer quality, affordable, online and hybrid degree programs in Theology, Semiotics, Specialized Ministry, Spiritual Formation, Faith-Based Community Development, and Biblical Studies. We study together within a ‘Big Tent’ that is broadly Christian, biblically-based, and postmodern in approach to contextualized ministry.  


Northwind affirms a both/and approach to theological education.  We affirm the great classical Creeds of the Christian tradition as well as the prophetic radical edge of what it means to follow Jesus today in a postmodern, post-Christian, traumatized world. As Richard Rohr reminds us: “The prophets of old were both radicals and traditionalists. With penetrating insight and wisdom, they saw into the heart of their own tradition and called the people of God to embrace a new day. We shouldn’t be surprised if we find ourselves falling in love with our tradition and wanting to radically change the way things are.”


Rooted in the Wesleyan-Methodist tradition, with tree leaves and branches extending into many faith traditions, Northwind nurtures new expressions of Christian faith and practice, new ways of being the Church in mission.  Our deep desire is to equip a new generation of faithful disciples and ministerial leaders for just and innovative ministry for a new era. 

 

“I believe that Christianity is in need of a new reformation,” writes Adam Hamilton, pastor of the 15,000+ member United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Kansas.  “The fundamentalism of the last century is waning. And the liberalism of the last fifty years” has failed to reform the Church. “The new reformation will be led by people who are able to see the gray in a world of black and white.” (Adam Hamilton, Seeing Gray in a World of Black and White (2008), p. xvii)

United Methodist theologian Elaine Heath believes “we are still at the forefront of a new Reformation, one that is freeing the Christian faith from the sinful structures of patriarchy and classism, and exploitive forms of mission and evangelism.”  In her inaugural lecture at Northwind Seminary in 2021, Dr. Heath identified five marks of the New Reformation, including: healing the wounds of Christendom inflicted by racism, sexism, elitism, and all the other isms.  The new Reformation, she says, “is all about the emergence of a generous, hospitable, equitable form of Christian practice that heals the wounds of the world.” (Elaine Heath, Inaugural Lecture on the "Five Marks of the NextChurch of the New Reformation" at Northwind Seminary, September 24, 2021)

We are in the middle of this new Re-formation, according to Robert J. Duncan, Founding President of Northwind Seminary.   “The Church is moving from the modern to a postmodern world, fueled by digital media and innovative uses of new technology. We have an opportunity to redeem the technology of the global culture and use it for ministry in the digital age.  For Wesleyans, electronic circuit riding in the twenty-first century is the new form of evangelism and mission.” Robert J. Duncan Jr., “Circuit Riding in the Twenty-First Century” in Equipping the Saints: Mobilizing Laity for Ministry, Michael J. Christensen with Carl E. Savage, eds (2000), p. 142)



Northwind Professor Leonard Sweet identifies an important parallel between the modern and the postmodern Reformations: “If the technology that fueled the Protestant Reformation was the printing press, and the product was ‘The Book,’ the technology that is fueling the Postmodern Reformation is the microprocessor and the product is ‘The Net.’”(Leonard Sweet, SoulTsunami (1999), p.32)

As a Christian futurist, Professor Sweet adds:  “The NextChurch has two next challenges: getting clear and clearing out.”  Getting clear about who Jesus is and clearing out spiritual deformities that dis-order the church’s structural life and dis-able mission.”  In the process, “the role of pastoral leadership is dramatically shifting from representative to participatory models” in the priesthood of believers. (Leonard Sweet, Foreword, in Equipping the Saints: Mobilizing Laity for Ministry, Michael J. Christensen with Carl E. Savage, eds (2000), p. 7-8)


“A new Reformation of the Laity has already occurred,” according to Dr. Michael J. Christensen, Founding Academic Dean of Northwind Seminary.  “What remains of the revolution is whether the clergy or whether the laity will be abolished in favor of ‘one body with many parts.’ If all Christians are ministers, all believers priests, then the mere layman is nonexistent, and the clerical order gone.  In the New Reformation of the Laity, the people of God are rising up in opposition to clerical privilege, episcopal power, and ecclesial exclusivity in ministry.”   (Michael J. Christensen, Equipping the Saints: Mobilizing Laity for Ministry, Michael J. Christensen with Carl E. Savage, eds (2000), p. 166)


Northwind Professor Thomas Jay Oord sees light at the end of the revolution. “The future is open and yet to be determined. We’re all in process.” As we walk in God’s light we are becoming all that God has called us to be.  Tom Oord envisions an “open future” in which our everloving and relational God “guides us, inspires, nurtures, nudges, and coaxes us” into greater creativity and wholeness. Those who embrace this human and divine freedom ”step outside confining categories, able to explore a way that reflects their experience of reality.  Many feel invigorated. God seems more like a companion. Life seems expansive. Reality becomes a pulsing, living movement into possibilities.” (Thomas Jay Oord, Open and Relational Theology: An Introduction to Life-Changing Ideas (2021), pp. 28, 45)


The New Reformation requires a new 'notions' of church and approaches to ministry. according to Dr. Carl Savage, Dean of Degree Programs of Northwind Seminary.  “Ministry in a postmodern world requires that we have a layered approach and portrait of our ministerial context. We are trying to grasp the ‘what is,’ the present in that context, and to understand how that moment is defined by its past and/or its future.” (Carl Savage & William Presnell, Narrative Research in Ministry,(2006), p. 31)



Here at Northwind, our hope and vision are for a new awakening, a spiritual renewal, and a revolution of the heart among followers of Jesus and people of good faith; this in order to engage what the Bible calls “principalities and powers of this present .” And to dismantle oppressive structures and systems of domination, and clear out spiritual deformities and dysfunctions of racism, sexism, and exclusion in the Church—with God’s help.  And at the same time, learn how to build together what Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. envisioned as the Beloved Community of peace with justice on earth as in heaven.

Northwind Theological Seminary
is now a contextualization partner of Kairos University.  We gladly join the other contextualization partners in the global network for the shared mission of making disciples, equipping the saints, and preparing ministerial  leaders for a new Reformation– the “New Thing” God is doing in the world (Isa. 43:19).


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