Monday, December 22, 2008

Invoking the Future

In March, I met Tiffany Montavon of Faith@Work (www.faithatwork.com). This wonderful project and magazine are dedicated to helping people explore gifts and callings as we do God's work in our daily lives. Here's a breath-taking poem written for the Summer 2008 issue by Klaus Luthardt.

Invoking the Future

Oh Christ, who are the breath
of God when love is foremost,
Inspired Word, you have come forth
many times; come forth even now
into the heart of God's child,
the human race. Demonstrate
in us the gifts of the spirit,
making the minds, merely bright,
fit instruments of helping and healing,
applying knowledge through love.
Come and be in us, be among us,
great inspiration, breath divine
whose essence makes us new
with every in-breath of our soul,
then emanates from us, exhalation
of your healing through us.
Let us, instruments of your love,
pass on to all we meet, the secret of goodness.
In thought, in word, in deed, let us labor
in the sound of your sacred word.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Live As If...

I'm not sure if that is the exact title of this invitational poem by Marge Piercy. I discovered it in announcements fragments I've been hording this fall from my church, Lake Street Church of Evanston.

Live as if you liked yourself, and it
may happen:
reach out, keep reaching out, keep
bringing in.
This is how we're going to live for a
long time: not always,
for every gardener knows that after the
digging, after the planting,
after the long season of tending and
growth, the harvest comes.

Okay, so maybe this is a little pre-adventish. Fall and harvest themes, after all. It's the living "as if" that touches my feelings about Christ's advent, though. It's the reaching, the digging, the planting. Back to the "waiting and working" advent spirituality I mentioned last week. I do not celebrate an advent or christmas that is merely going through the ritual motions of One birth long ago, like some childish reenactment. I celebrate, wait, and work, because indeed in Divine Nature's rhythms that age-old birth - like planting, digging, tending -- comes and comes and comes again.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

To Repair and Heal the World (tikkun!)

Father Richard Rohr is one of many precious print mentors of mine. His work to lead us in yoking contemplation and action in this world has been a great gift to me. It influenced an advent sermon series I preached a few years back: "Waiting and Working." We wait, yes, for the Hope and Peace that is so beyond us; and we work, too, to fulfill our leadings and live into what we know in the meantime.

The announcement below highlights the opportunity to participate in a telephone conversation on 12/22 with Father Rohr. It's sponsored by Tikkun's Network of Spiritual Progressives Forum (to which I belong). I hope you'll consider calling in!

********************************

It's that time of year again...

For those overwhelmed by the holiday flood of parties, jingles, and rampant consumption, Father Richard Rohr offers his perspective on how we (mis)celebrate religious holidays, and in particular Christmas. Besides critiquing the holiday's modern culture of consumption, Rohr examines the history of Christmas, and how it relates to the holy days of other faiths.

A Franciscan priest and founder of the Center for Action and Contemplation, Father Rohr is a regular columnist for Tikkun, pushing the boundaries of Catholicism, and spirituality in general. If you haven't seen his article in the November/December 2008 issue of Tikkun, click here-and after you've read it, call in to our Tikkun/NSP Phone Forum, Monday December 22nd, 9pm EST/6pm PST.Just call 1 888 346 3950 and ENTER CODE 11978

Tikkun Managing Editor Dave Belden will interview Richard Rohr for twenty minutes, then he'll take questions from YOU!The Tikkun/NSP Phone Forum is meant for current members of the NSP/Tikkun Community and/or current subscribers to Tikkun. If you have not yet joined, you can do so now. Just go to www.spiritualprogressives.org and become a member (with membership comes a free subscription to Tikkun). Or, if you are not yet ready to join, then subscribe to the magazine here. The Tikkun/NSP Phone Forum works much better when you have already read the article in Tikkun before joining the call, and is meant as a gift to our members and subscribers.

MONDAYS, 6 p.m. PST (9 p.m. EST)Upcoming Forums:

Jan 5: An Economy for the 21st Century - David Korten
Jan 12: Coming Out … Again - Idit Klein
Jan 21: Wednesday Inaugrural Special! Just back from DC, Michael Lerner and Peter Gabel on the Obama Inauguration
Jan 26: Engaging Obama's Volunteers - Randy Shaw
Feb 2: Riane Eisler
Feb 16: Bob Pollin

If you missed a forum, you can find podcasts of previous episodes here!

Or click the link below:

Dec. 1: Childhood & Capitalism - Allen Kanner
Dec. 8: Obama's Emotional Intelligence - Peter Dunlap
Dec. 15: Israel/Palestine: Tom Friedman's Myths - Jerome Slater

Please note that in the N/D 2008 print magazine we did not include the access code. Please make a note of it from this email!

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Turning: Words Heard from Within

I will be rushing to my local independent book store next week to get this 1994 book I just learned of. Yes, just a snippet of a poem can move me enough to do so!

Here's an offering that I've been savoring this week from author Claire Blatchford:

The other side of sorrow is joy.
When you can raise your sorrow
above bitterness, above disappointment, above pain,
to the light --
a birth occurs.
In heaven the angels rejoice.
Those who have died are fed.
On earth the very soul is made new.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Light One Candle for This...

I'm thinking about Emmanuel this day. One of my pastors, Larry Greenfield of the American Baptist Churches of Metro Chicago, gave a beautiful introduction to Advent and Christmas at a concert last Saturday. My paraphrase: This is a special time of the year in part because we dedicate ourselves to remember that Emmanuel has come, so that we know "God is always with us."


This morning's quote from my colleague Melissa Malueg reminds me of the same:


Today's Words of Wisdom:"Instead of believing the world is plotting to do you harm, choose to believe the world is plotting to do you good. Instead of seeing every difficult or challenging event as a negative, see it for what it could be – something that is meant to enrich you, empower you, or advance your causes.”-- W. Clement Stone


I commit this Advent to continuing to cultivate a spirituality and community that are fearlessly living in such trust...





Friday, December 12, 2008

Let In Your Child Tonight...

Thanks to a dear friend for passing this on this advent...


From the Liturgy of the Hours – According to the Roman Rite (Catholic Book Publishing Co, NY, 1975) – Appendix IV: Poetry - Northumbrian Sequence IV

Let in the wind,
Let in the rain,
Let in the moors tonight,

The storm beats on my window-pane,
Night stands at my bed-foot,
Let in the pain,
Let in the trees that toss and groan,
Let in the north tonight.
Let in the nameless formless power
That beats upon my door,
Let in the ice, let in the snow,
The banshee howling on the moor,
The bracken-bush on the bleak hillside.
Let in the dead tonight.

Let in the cold,
Let in the wet,
Let in the loneliness,
Let in the quick,
Let in the dead,
Let in the unpeopled skies.

Oh how can virgin fingers weave
A covering for the void,
How can my fearful heart conceive
Gigantic solitude?
How can a house so small contain
A company so great?
Let in the dark,
Let in the dead,
Let in your love tonight.

Let in the snow that numbs the grave,
Let in the acorn-tree,
The mountain stream and mountain stone,
Let in the bitter sea.
Fearful is my virgin heart
And frail my virgin form,
And must I then take pity on
The raging of the storm
That rose up from the great abyss
Before the earth was made,
That pours the stars in cataracts
And shakes this violent world?

Let in the fire,
Let in the power,
Let in the invading might.

Gentle must my fingers be
And pitiful my heart
Since I must bind in human form
A living power so great,
A living impulse great and wild
That cries about my house
With all the violence of desire
Desiring this my peace.

Pitiful my heart must hold
The lonely starts at rest,
Have pity on the raven’s cry,
The torrent and the eagle’s wing,
The icy water of the tarn
And on the biting blast.

Let in the wound,
Let in the pain,
Let in your child tonight.

Kathleen Raine

Thursday, December 11, 2008

How Do We Seek Justice - Good Question For Every Advent Day

This thought-provoking excerpt is from Linnea Nilsen Capshaw of Deep Shift:

..."How do we seek Justice?"

This Advent Season is important as we anticipate the birth of Jesus and as we contemplate this question.Yesterday was the 40th anniversary of Thomas Merton's death.

This excerpt is from Joan Chittister's book, Merton: The Enlightened Heart:

"Merton sowed seeds of contemplation that led to action---an often forgotten but always bedrock spiritual concept. In Jewish spirituality, for instance, two concepts dominate and are intertwined: The one, devekut, translates as "clinging to God" or contemplation; the other, tikkun o'lam, translates "repairing the world" the work of justice.

One without the other---contemplation without justice, clinging to mystery without repairing the real world---is unfinished, the tradition teaches, is dark without light, is grand without great, is soul without body. Contemplation, Merton teaches us, is learning to see the world as God sees the world. The contemplative sees the world through the eyes of God and the real contemplative is driven to respond according to the mind of God for it. Clinging to God, in other words, generates the passion it takes to repair the world."

These Jewish concepts and the Christian concepts Merton discusses are similar to a challenging New Testament scripture passages: Faith without works is dead (James 2:17). Just as clinging to God without working for justice is unfinished, so too our faith without works is dead. After participating in 12 EMC Tour stops this year, I cannot stop thinking about the question in the song, "How do we seek Justice?", knowing that it requires contemplation and action, clinging and works.

The book, To Do Justice: A Guide for Progressive Christians, by Peters and Hinson-Hasty, provides some instruction and ideas on how to seek justice, to repair the world. Here are some quotes that are inspiring me as I begin reading:

"The mission of the church in the public forum is to continue the work of healing, restoration, and reconciliation within God's creation.In this book we articulate a vision for how churches can be engaged with public life in ways that help address social problems in our world. Along the way we share with you critical social analysis of these same problems. We ground our suggestions for action in a theology that challenges Christians to love their neighbors by addressing their concrete material needs and by transforming the structures in our society that prevent them from making ends meet and flourishing in the way that God hopes for all creation.Living as Christians in a pluralistic world requires that we work together with other people of faith and the larger community to address the social problems that hinder people from living lives of fullness and integrity."

As you wait this year to celebrate the birth of Jesus, I hope you take time to contemplate, cling to God, so you may see where you are called to work with others for justice, to repair the world.

Deep peace and joy to you,
Linnea

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Some More on Hope and Work

This is another terrific example of the work of hope: white people dedicated to self-understanding and understanding of systemic racial privilege. I've know Melanie Morrison for fifteen years. She is an incredible dedicated, gifted "ally for change." Check out Allies for Change at the link below, as well as the Leaven Center, a retreat center for all kinds of spirituality and social justice trainings.

Melanie S. Morrison, Director
Allies for Change
http://www.alliesforchange.org/
517-230-6727

Doing Our Own Work: A Seminar for Anti-Racist White People
February 13-16, 2009 and March 27-30, 2009 at The Leaven Center

For 15 consecutive years, Doing Our Own Work has a provided a unique context for white people who seek to deepen their commitment to confronting and challenging white racism. Offering more than 40 hours of “class time,” Doing Our Own Work equips white people with the analysis, skills, and tools needed to be more effective anti-racist allies with people of color and to help bring about institutional change. People from communities all across North America have taken part in this intensive seminar. Here is what some of those participants say about the experience:

“Doing Our Own Work is life-changing. It has affected my choice of where to live, what do with my life, where my priorities lie, everything.”

“After attending Doing Our Own Work, I am much more willing to take risks as a white person when working alongside of, and in solidarity with, people of color.”

“Doing Our Own Work gave me a broader and deeper knowledge of anti-racism, white privilege, my people’s history, and the way oppression functions.”

If you are a white person who is ready and eager to do some deep, soul-stretching, and exhilarating work with other white anti-racist allies, Doing Our Own Work is the place for you!
The Doing Our Own Work seminar is designed as a supplement to, not a substitute for, contexts where people of diverse races and ethnicities discuss and strategize together how racism can be challenged. Utilizing input from the leaders, reading assignments, videos, group discussion, and structured exercises, we will explore the following topics and issues:

Individual racism, institutional racism, and cultural racism
White privilege and unearned advantage
Claiming and shaping an anti-racist identity
How to be an effective anti-racist ally
Discerning our spiritual resources for change
Practicing the skills of interrupting racism
Strategies for institutional change

Providing more than 40 hours of "class time," the seminar utilizes an action/reflection method of learning: our study and reflection will be grounded in anti-racist action and our action will be strengthened and refined by reflection, study, and conversation. The action/reflection components of this seminar will include:

Identification by each participant of a "sphere of influence" or constituency that will serve as her/his focus during the seminar;

Assessment of where and how racism is present in this constituency;

Development of an action plan and time table that identifies ways that the participant can work, in collaboration with others, to challenge white racism and strengthen anti-racist commitment in her/his constituency;

Checking in with the group to receive feedback and encouragement and to amend the action plan where appropriate;

Keeping a journal of daily experiences, insights, concerns, and questions regarding racism and anti-racism.

The facilitators are committed to working with the participants to create a respectful and truth-telling environment where we may bring our whole selves to this vitally important work.
This event is gender inclusive.

Leaders: Melanie Morrison and Aaron Wilson-AhlstromTime: Friday, 7 pm – Monday, 1 pm . Attendance at both extended weekends is required.Cost: $675 ($100 deposit and $575 balance due. The balance may be paid in installments extending beyond the close of the seminar). The cost includes program, resource materials, lodging, and meals for two extended weekends.

Melanie Morrison is Director of Allies for Change and a seasoned anti-oppression educator and activist with 20 years experience designing and facilitating transformational group process. Melanie is passionate about working with individuals and organizations to better understand the connections between systemic oppressions and to nurture collaborative action and authentic relationship across differences such as race, age, gender, abilities, and sexual orientation. She believes it is possible to grow ever more aware of the depth and complexity of injustice without surrendering our capacity for compassion, joy, and hope. She has led numerous anti-racism seminars and workshops. This will be her 15th year of facilitating the Doing Our Own Work seminar.

Aaron Wilson-Ahlstrom is a teacher who is passionate about the role of schools in working for social justice. He works for the Henry Ford Learning Institute, a non-profit that is developing a network of small, innovative charter schools based on the Henry Ford Academy in Dearborn, Michigan. Aaron believes that racism is present everywhere and, while it does not oppress white people, it does damage them by making white people complicit in the oppression of people of color. He sees anti-racism work as critically important if white people are regain their collective humanity. In addition to being a facilitator of Doing Our Own Work, Aaron is a community training partner with the Michigan State University Extension multicultural awareness program.

The Leaven Center in Lyons, Michigan is midway between Lansing and Grand Rapids. The main floor of the Lodge and Guest House are barrier-free. The center is located on 25 beautiful acres of land and the meeting room in the Lodge faces the Grand River.

You may register online with a credit card or download a registration form at The Leaven Center web site: www.leaven.org. For more information about The Leaven Center or to inquire about partial scholarships, call 989-855-2606 or email leavencenter@leaven.org.

Living Within Our Means

I'm off today to a gathering that promises to unite many who care about peace, hope, and the wise work that cultivates them. Check out the Parliament of World Religion's Chicago event:

Living Within Our Means: The Wisdom of Our Traditions for a Changing World.

Blessed be!

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Spiritual Literacy - The WORK of Hope

Check out Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat's bestselling book Spiritual Literacy, an unprecedented collection of "aha!" passages by teachers of all spiritual traditions that reveal the sacred meanings in today's world. There's also a 6-set DVD collection putting the beautiful passages to music and stunning visuals. Visit: http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/spiritualliteracy/.

My musings this week about hope, connection and gratitude lead me one step further. Such a landscape (and the tireless journey of walking it) is no cakewalk. These are no liberal touchy-feely buzz words. I can't experience the surges of hope, the whispers of hope, or the sturdy carrying on of hope unless I do some work. That work includes attention, and all the habits that cultivate it. That work includes literacy -- about my Self, my tradition and culture, and the deep understanding of others' values and experiences. Perhaps that's why this incredible Spiritual Literacy Project has touched me so this week. I HOPE you'll check it out.

Friday, December 5, 2008

What Stirs Hope Today?

Why might hope be stirring in me today, this sixth day of Advent?

... because I got an email from David Plouff announcing that our new President is inviting us to host house meetings across the land, to continue the work of shaping what WE together can do to bring change to this land and our collective spirit.

... because my dear friend, after a long and winding journey toward ordination, has encountered the Holy Spirit in Baptist colleagues and potential mentors, and has found this day affirmation, trust, respect.

... because a long, leisurely dinner with another restored me so very much, and reminded my SENSES what a treasure my/our time is.

... because so many care about making a difference, and I choose to watch and work with them while I pray for those who can't yet care.

Hope is not wishful thinking, because wishful thinking lacks evidence. Hope is a force that counts as evidence those things which despair does not. They might be mundane, dismissed, or even threatening to the forces of oppression:

-- small things, like house meetings
-- staying power on a winding journey, and those who give it due honor
-- delightful conversation (including, among other things, "Conversations with God")
-- the internet's ability to introduce me to inspiring, visionary work around the world

As I write this, I am mindful that there is some deep connection between hope and gratitude, or at least the attention that leads potentially to gratitude. If hope arises, if it wells up within us instead of landing upon us, perhaps it is because even in the coldest, most desolate places there is yet a seedling of gratitude. Hope rises despite the odds (and some powers and principalities and their stories). Hope rises because a felt connection (gratitude) is made between need and God's vast resources of potential.

Blessed be!

Thursday, December 4, 2008

HOPE in "Renewal" (Interfaith Documentary on Green Endeavors)

This documentary sounds INCREDIBLE. Just what I needed for this, the fifth day of advent. There is so much that can stir our hope, if we just notice. If we just spread the word... Thanks to the Plainviews e-newsletter and reviewer Sarah Masters for this:

Renewal

Across the U.S., there is a growing interfaith call for environmental activism. Veteran filmmakers Marty Ostrow and Terry Kay Rockefeller, in their recently released documentary Renewal, have captured the efforts of numerous religious communities to “preserve what they see as God's creation.”

The producers film Muslims, Christians, Buddhists and Jews, among others, actively tackling a range of environmental issues from sustainable farming to mountaintop removal.
Ostrow and Rockefeller create eight vignettes, or short documentaries that can be viewed separately in this 90-minute film, that focus on groups ranging from Going Green, a movement that teaches congregations how to become more environmentally aware, to Food for Faith, which connects city dwellers in different religious communities with sustainable farming efforts.

Ostrow and Rockefeller have also launched The Renewal Project, which is dedicated to creation of alliances between secular and religious groups, and the filmmakers have put out a call for everyone from chaplains to local governments to join what they call The Renewal Circle. Members of The Renewal Circle will receive advance copies of the film Renewal to help spread the word, along with suggestions on how best to use the film as a teaching tool. To find out more about The Renewal Circle, go to http://renewalproject.net/join/.
____________________________
Completed: 2007Running Time: 90 MinutesProducers: Marty Ostrow and Terry Kay Rockefeller
If you are interested in purchasing this film, you can do so at http://www.renewalproject.net/dvd.

Sarah Masters is the Managing Director of the Hartley Film Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to production, cultivation, support and distribution of the best documentaries on world religions and spirituality.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Why Shouldn't We

These words (below) and music were written by Mary Chapin Carpenter and can be heard on her exquisite album The Calling. They remind me of the Divine Inheritance I believe to be all of ours, an inheritance of hope, connection and compassion. Yes, I know so many things get in the way of feeling hope, of trusting and resting in hope... but with MCC I choose to believe that there is tremendous hope deep within us, always keeping us going.

Perhaps instead of considering Christ to be the object of our hope, Christians would be more faithful to embrace life in him with gratitude for his timeless ability to stir up our living well of hope, to raise us up in the power to dwell in its nourishing springs. That would indeed be an advent of a New Creation.

Why shouldn't we?


We believe in things that we cannot see
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we
Hands that heal can set a chained man free
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we

We believe in peace within every heart
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we
Burning brightly, brightly in the dark
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we

Chorus:
So come on darling feel your spirits rise
Come on children open up your eyes
God is all around
Buddha's at the gate
Allah hears your prayers
It's not too late

And we believe in things that will give us hope
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we
Let your voice be heard, celebrate your vote
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we

Chorus

We believe in things that make us all the same
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we
Love belongs to all in deed and name
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we
And we believe in things that can't be done
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we
Lift up your heart, put down your gun
Why shouldn't we, why shouldn't we

We believe in things
We're told that we cannot change
Why shouldn't we
We had heroes once, and we will again
Why shouldn't we
So come on darling
Come on children
God is all around,
Buddha's at the gate
Allah hears our prayers
It's not too late

Chorus

Why shouldn't we
Why shouldn't we
Why shouldn't we
Why shouldn't we
Why shouldn't we

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

The Impossible Will Take a While...

A friend of mine reminded me today of this great book, which I won't get to THIS advent. But, wow, check out the website at http://www.paulloeb.org/newimp/impindex.htm. Here's a little teaser:

From Paul Rogat Loeb, author of Soul of a Citizen, comes a collection of fifty moving essays from Maya Angelou, Marian Wright Edelman, Jim Hightower, Jonathan Kozol, Tony Kushner, Nelson Mandela, Alice Walker, Cornel West and others who explore the path of community involvement that leads beyond despair to compassion and hope, inspiring us all to work for a better world.

My friend's church is using it in an adult ed discussion group, and says it's working beautifully. No wonder it resonates; we need not only hope but reminders of what hope is and is NOT. It looks like these essays flesh out a hope that is about vision and staying power, resilience and communal habits of anticipation-in-action. Watch for details in the winter; it may turn up in a LWM series in Easter season...

Monday, December 1, 2008

Yearnings - A Great Book for Advent

I am savoring Rabbi Irwin Kula's book Yearnings: Embracing the Sacred Messiness of Life for the third time in as many years. It's a terrific mix of reflections on Hebrew Bible characters, Jewish wisdom traditions and contemporary life.

(I first read it a few years back as a part of my fall discipline of reading Hebrew Bible stories, wisdom and prophetic literature (in and beyond the Protestant canon) as well as contemporary Jewish authors. Through this study discipline, I prepare myself for advent by immersing myself in the social and religious experiences of my faith ancestors, at least those who lived in the few centuries before Christ's birth. I am reminded of the key themes and characters, as well as the pride and pains of the Jewish people who so yearned for the kingdom of God, and the Messiah who would inaugurate it. This year, I've re-read Daniel, Sirach and will read Isaiah next...)

Anyway, here are a few lines from early in Kula's book:

"Keep two pieces of paper in your pockets at all times. One that says 'I am a speck of dust.' And, the other, 'The world was created for me.'" -- Rabbi Bunim of P'shiskha

"These traditions are meant to be lived, yet much of ther wisdom is buried under centuries of dogma...the need to be right is winning out over the search."

"The quest for self is the contemporary search for God."

"Jewish wisdom encourages us to be sacred skeptics. Many think skepticism is paralyzing, hopeless, cynical; but it's the opposite. Skepticism inspires us to know more. Skepticism can be revelatory. When we both hold and question our truths we become lifelong learners rather than absolute knowers... not seduced by certainty, we can be open to the truth."

"All new understandings take time to emerge and blossom. The word "Israel" means "wrestling with God." In other words, discovering again and again the truth, reality, God -- whatever we chose to call it -- stretches and deepens our lives and enlivens and expands our moral universe. New truths may challenge us or make us uncomfortable for a while but they always bring us to the next level of understanding. After all, there is no final arrival in life, but rather a series of arrivals..."

Why does Kula's book touch me so? I think because it humanizes our faith journeys - individually and collectively -- in ways that I and so many others need. He writes about our yearnings for truth, meaning, the way, love, creation, happiness and transcendence. In looking to scriptures and his own messy, beautiful life, Kula guides us in the task of taking our own places within the Searching Story (that's my capitalization there). Along the way, there's so much beauty, fragility, gift, brokenness, mystery and providence. And grace. It's a Graced Searching Story. That's where I want to be when I greet the good news of the Anointed One I welcome in Advent...