disciplesX.com life + culture + faith + art + blog posts

4Mar/080

Advocacy Days This Weekend.

Just a reminder for those folks out there who believe being a Christian means walking with and supporting efforts to bring justice, equality, and compassion into our society, Ecumenical Advocacy Days is this weekend. I've gone two years in a row, and I will miss it if Eunice and I move away from DC. It's just a great opportunity to be a part of the emerging conversations about advocacy and what churches, organizations, and Christians are lifting up.

You can find out about the event here: http://www.advocacydays.org/

In addition, the Disciples and UCC are having a combined event:

On Saturday, March 8th, at 7.45 pm, at the Hilton Alexandria Mark Center in Alexandria, VA (in the Arbors Room), there will be a special event for Disciples and UCC from across the nation. The main speaker will be Dr. Michael Kinnamon, General Secretary of the National Council of Churches. Other speakers include: Rev. Michael Paige from Michigan Park and Rev. Noemi Mena from National City. All local Disciples and UCC are invited to this free event. Light food and drink will be provided. An offering will be taken. Please RSVP to DAWN at dawnccca@comcast.net.

This special event is part of the annual Ecumenical Advocacy Days for Peace with Justice (March 7 - 10, 2008). To register for this conference and/or to get directions to the Hilton Alexandria Mark Center, please visit www.advocacydays.org. Help spread the word!

I'd love to see you out, but if you can't or if you are on the other side of the continent, I'll probably do another podcast of the event, maybe even some video.

  • Share/Bookmark
6Sep/070

The Office and God

On Saturday, September 8, from 3-5 PM, our region's Connections worship gathering is happening at North Chevy Chase Christian Church (8814 Kensington Parkway, Chevy Chase, MD). We are starting a series focusing on the hit NBC TV show "The Office". We'll use it as a way talk about life, work, relationships, words, purpose, and so on. It should be fun. Each discussion time includes fresh cappuccino and fair trade coffee and is followed by a time of worship - song, prayer, and communion.

Anyway, I wanted to make sure I invited readers of my blog to it this time - it's going to be real interesting and a lot of fun.

Michael Scott, for me, is one of the funniest characters on TV. I wrote on the Facebook group for Connections that he is like a trainwreck - he says the worst thing at the worst moment and we (the viewers) get to see it coming in slow motion. We cannot turn away. At times, it makes us squirm in our seats, and at other times, we can't help but just laugh.

But yet, for the character, there is this deep care and concern that manages to break through at times - ultimately, Michael Scott cares about his employees and wants to do the right thing. It's just he seems mostly misguided and sometimes sidetracked by his own immaturity and pride. But there are times when he does seem to wise up a bit and deal with an issue in a constructive way, and when that happens, everyone takes notice. It really does mean something.

I think that is what we will be looking for as we begin this series at Connections, and then maybe to ask each other how we can get that goodness within each of us to rise up and make a difference for someone more often.

Here is our worship guide. I'm listing it below just so anyone who is curious can see what we are up to. Note: Some of these are half-formed ideas.

Connections Worship Guide (9/5)

3:00 PM
- delicious fair trade coffee/cappucino (Eunice)
- spanish tortilla (Beth)

3:20 PM
The Office Episode (Season One)
"Downsizing"
We'll watch the "Downsizing" episode from season one, which really deals with the breakdown of relationships. You have Dwight trying to get Jim to form an alliance, you got Jim and Pam working together to trick Dwight, you got Michael Scott (the boss) totally mishandling office relations by trying to throw an unnecessary party to boost moral, and so on. It's chock full of dishonesty, avoidance, well-meaning intentions gone awry, division, hearing what you want to hear, lack of reality, and so on.

4:00 PM
Discussion Time

Scripture Readings:
Matthew 6:19-23
During Jesus' first sermon, called the Sermon on the Mount, in Matthew, he begins a section on the piety (lived out faith) that God rewards, and he talks about the internal things, deep down, that define you.

Matthew 12:33-37
After casting out a demon, Jesus is confronted by Pharisees, who claims he uses evil to do good. He responds about the words from your mouths. There is something at stake in what you say and how you say it.

Matthew 18:15-20
In Jesus' fourth sermon in Matthew, he switches gears and gives instruction about the church (ekklesia), an important theme in Matthew. This section talks about how to deal with conflicts with each other. If the conflict cannot be resolved, you are to treat your offending brother or sister like "a Gentile and a tax collector" - which means as an object of mission. In other words, relationships should be different since we are Christians.

We will discuss how each of these words from Jesus might offer light to the characters of the show and to our own lives... And finally, what are we going to do about it?

4:30 PM
Worship Time

Opening Song/Lighting of the Candles
"Everyone Wants to Know Love" (tentative)

Psalm Reading
Psalm 139
(with slideshow in the background)

Time of Prayer and Reflection
Prayer Stations (reflecting relationship, honesty, words, etc.)

Prayer Songs
"Bless Be the Tie that Binds"
"Jesus Remember Me"

Communion
Laura Arico leads it

Closing Prayer
St. Francis' Prayer (make me an instrument of thy peace)

End.

Communion Idea:
Let's do the divide by 2:
Two people cut the piece of bread in half and offer it to others.
Then those two cut the piece of bread in half and offer it to others.
Until everyone has bread. Then we dip into the cup.

Ideas for Prayer Stations:
Some of these are CRAZY.
- A hand mirror and you write lipstick on it... hold it up to your face, and use the lipstick to write a heart over your mouth... A strange way to pray.. but perhaps a way to meditate and ask God to use your lips for good, not evil?
- Friendship bracelets???
- Signs of relationships to touch, hold, and use in our prayer... perhaps rings, necklaces, bracelets, etc, etc... any other ideas?
- Maybe a prayer quilt on the floor, made out of different patches.. that we may sit on and pray for the wholeness of the world
- A truth wall.. to write things of truth, love, and honesty on.. ??

  • Share/Bookmark
30Aug/071

just what is emerging?

I wanted to share a couple of interesting quotes and thoughts today, little things that have been swirling around in my head and heart.

Jesus tells us about the parable of the mustard seed. (Matthew 13:31-35) It's one of those simple but deceptive verses of the Gospel of Matthew which challenge believers to consider the nature and purpose of the kingdom of God. For example, read what Shane Claiborne had to say about this parable in the Irresistible Revolution.

Matthew strategically places the mustard seed parable in the middle of a story about gardening in which Jesus commands people not to tear up the weeds from the garden but to let the wheat and weeds grow together (Matt. 13:24-30, 36-43). Then he tells his listeners that the kingdom of God is like mustard, which grows like a wild bush (Matt. 13:31-35). I once heard a farmer say it is like kudzu (a wild vine that grows everywhere), and a city preacher compared it to the wild weeds that grow out of the abandoned houses and crack the sidewalks. The mustard seed's growth would have been familiar to first-century Jews and its symbolic meaning unmistakably clear. It may have even been growing in the wild around them as Jesus spoke.

Jews valued order and had very strict rules about how to keep a tidy garden, and one of the secrets was to keep out mustard. It was notorious for invading the well-trimmed veggies and other plants and for quickly taking over the entire garden. (Kind of like yeast works its way through dough... hmm.) Then they'd be left with only mustard! Jewish law even forbade planting mustard in the garden. When those first-century peasants heard Jesus' images, they would have giggled, or maybe they would have told him to hush before he got killed. Here he is using this infamous plant to describe God's kingdom subtly taking over the world.

This is a bottom up revolution, an "annoying" revolution. It's a kingdom that spreads with determination and perseverance. It adapts to its surroundings - it changes as the landscape and climate changes.

Perhaps this most readily fits with the Christian faith as Daniel Migliore states in his book, Faith Seeking Understanding: "The changing, ambiguous, and often precarious world poses ever new questions for faith, and many answers that sufficed yesterday are no longer compelling today." Migliore writes: "Authentic faith is no sedative for world-weary souls, no satchel full of ready answers to the deepest questions of life. Instead, faith in God revealed in Jesus Christ sets an inquiry in motion, fights the inclination to accept things as they are, and continually calls in question unexamined assumptions about God, our world, and ourselves."

In both of these quotes, the images given of the kingdom of God and a faithful life suggest a "bubbling up", a movement that adapts to its surroundings, seeking and growing in new ways in a changing, difficult world. It is a slow revolution - a revolution of little things, of persistence and small questions leading to a deeper understanding of the joy of following Christ. But it is also annoying, ever pushing and challenging our boundaries.

In a sense, this is some element of the life of a follower of Christ and a community of Christians that I hope continues to emerge. I suppose my next question is - what would a church look like if it was ever seeking, ever allowing the questions of God and life to bubble up? What would it look like to be a follower that seeks to be a part of that irresistible revolution that sneaks its way into you bit by bit? What would it do to our world if Christians again focused on doing the little things that changed lives and share the love of God?

  • Share/Bookmark
6Jun/070

19 out of 27

For 19 out of the last 27 days, I've been traveling, across the world and right around the areas I call home.

On May 10, I left for Spain to explore facets of the culture, arts, and spirituality of that old European country. It was quite an experience - from Madrid, Toledo, Leon, Salamanca, Granda, and Barcelona. I witnessed soaring cathedrals, major universities, museums full of wondrous artworks, pilgrim trails, mighty peaks, blue skies, crowded cities, waving palm trees, rolling farmland, and on and on. I had the opportunity to hear from religious leaders, followers of the mystical way, economists, local artists, friends, fellow travelers, and locals. The rich palette of what I tasted, touched, and saw remains with me, stirring about below the surface of my mind and memory.

On May 27, after a few days back from Spain, I traveled with 10 other young adults down to Houma, LA to work on homes and projects among communities hit by Hurricane Katrina and Rita. Another cultural experience that went deeper in some ways - deeper in our interaction with those who we had come to serve and connect to. Still, there were surprising connections, like walking through the French Quarter of New Orleans and into the Cathedral and feeling like I've been there before. (I guess I hadn't realized that New Orleans was once the capital of the Spanish province of Luisiana.)

As much as one experience was educational and broadening (Spain), the other was grounded in faith and beyond mere words (Gulf Coast).

I'm glad to be home though.

  • Share/Bookmark