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<DIV><FONT size=3 face=Arial>It was good to hear of the encounters of
the Cocks and other colleagues with Gordon Cosby. For those who have been
inspired by him and/or the Church of the Savior in Washington, D.C. - here's
most of an account of Gordon's last days and the story-telling gathering held
last night, the night of his death. It is Rev. Jim Wallis who writes this
- the founder and CEO of Sojourners (magazine and community in
D.C.).</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial>Janice Ulangca</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV>
<P>Gordon Cosby taught us how to live by the gospel and, in these last years and
months, he also showed us how to die. In one of my many visits near the end of
his life, Gordon said to me in his deep graveling voice, “I am enjoying dying.”
What a gospel thing to say. From the first time I heard Gordon preach, to the
last sermon he did a few years ago, I have never heard the gospel and its
meaning more clearly articulated than from Gordon Cosby.</P>
<P>Well into his 90s, and living in Christ House with the homeless men he always
served, Gordon was less able to continue to do the all things he had done all
day, every day, for so many people and over so many years. “All I can really do
is pray now,” Gordon said to me, “but I have so much time now to pray!” </P>
<P>During a long Lenten fast a few of us undertook in 2011 to draw national
attention to the vulnerability of the poor in Washington’s budget debates,
Gordon told me he had constructed a special “Jesus Prayer” for my fasting and
prayed it 100 times a day! Knowing that Gordon Cosby was praying for me that
many times each day left me with such a sense of undergirding and sustenance,
even without any food, for all those weeks. His prayers literally lifted me.</P>
<P>And when it came to fundamental questions about the vocation of Sojourners —
or my own vocation — there was never anyone I wanted to talk with more than
Gordon. Last night, as so many people packed into the Potter’s House, the first
Christian “coffeehouse” in the nation where Gordon had lunch or coffee every day
with literally thousands of people; it was absolutely amazing how many people’s
<EM>vocations</EM> Gordon Cosby had fundamentally impacted. The stories went on
and on.</P>
<P>Transformed lives of both the poor and the affluent because of him, pastors
founding churches and ministries because of him, marriages kept going because of
him, communities forming and new missions starting because of him, individuals
changing both their lives and the world because of him. A pastor said how
disappointed he was to tell Gordon that their new little church had only 15
people to start. “Wow,” replied Gordon, “Fifteen people is amazing!”</P>
<P>Another pastor told his story of how Gordon had inspired and sustained him in
forming a church for the homeless in the suburbs of Washington. “Gordon took
such a genuine interest in me,” he said. But looking around the room and having
listened to all the other stories of just the people who had gathered quickly on
the night of Gordon’s death, the pastor then said, “I don’t know how one person
could take such a genuine interest in so many people!’</P>
<P>Gordon Cosby never needed or wanted to be out front or become a famous public
figure. He could have spoken across the country, and was often invited to do so.
But he instead decided that his own vocation was to stay with a relatively small
group of people trying to “be the church” in Washington, D.C.: the Church of the
Savior, which has produced more missions and ministries, especially with the
poor, than any church I know of anywhere in the country — even the huge mega
churches who capture all the fame. He never wrote a book, went on television,
talked to presidents, planted more churches, built national movements, or
traveled around the world. He just inspired everybody else to do all those
things and much more. And the world came to him.</P>
<P>Last night we all gathered to tell stories about how Gordon had changed our
lives: the poor and middle class; the former alcoholics and the former wealthy
(both because of Jesus); clergy and ministry leaders; founders of projects that
have touched the lives of thousands; activists and contemplatives; political
players in Washington, D.C.; those with southern American accents and those with
African accents; blacks and whites who found themselves in a church together in
a city where that didn’t happen in 1950, when the Church of the Savior was born.
All said, in different ways, Gordon always asked them about how their “spiritual
life” was going.</P>
<P>While American churches were divided between those who stressed evangelism
and those who focused on social action, the Church of the Savior spoke of “the
inward and outward journey” of deepening our lives in Christ and then letting
Christ take us out into the world on one creative mission after another.</P>
<P>I was blessed to be at Gordon’s bedside the night before he died and with
Mary alongside him — still loving one another after 70 years of marriage. I felt
like I was standing there with countless thousands of people who would want to
say how much Gordon loved them and how much they loved this man of God. As one
person said last night, “You knew he loved like Christ, and he made you want to
love like Christ too.”</P>
<P>Gordon was suffering no pain when he died. He just made the decision to rest
in peace — the peace of Christ. Thanks be to God for the life of Gordon Cosby.
</P>
<P><EM><STRONG>Jim Wallis</STRONG> is</EM><EM> CEO of </EM><A
href="http://go.sojo.net/site/R?i=XMSpxr4hXOLSp08M9bCO1g"
target=_blank><EM>Sojourners</EM></A><EM>. His forthcoming book, </EM>On God's
Side: What Religion Forgets and Politics Hasn’t Learned about Serving the Common
Good<EM>, is set to release in April.</EM></P>
<P>You can connect to the full account at <A
href="http://go.sojo.net/site/MessageViewer?em_id=26783.0&dlv_id=30381">http://go.sojo.net/site/MessageViewer?em_id=26783.0&dlv_id=30381</A></P></DIV></BODY></HTML>