Saturday, April 26, 2008

community life...

early friday morning we went walking to a patch of woods situated with the railroad tracks on its north, the grand river on its south, a factory on its east, and the highway on its west. we filled a bucket full of old railroad spikes and other rusty metal for our house mate that couldn't be with us at the time. we were armed with field guides of all sorts - mushrooms, trees, wild edibles, birds, and one zine particularly about morels. we didn't end up finding any morels, but we'll be back out foraging again. it might just be a little too early for them. we need a little more rain. if you'd like to hunt for morels with us sometime this spring let us know. especially if you know anything about it, as we could use the help. we haven't even identified for sure which trees are elm (the mushrooms are often found under dead elms).

thurdsay night, after some delicious tempeh salad, we went over chapter two, titled "in heaven", of the book about the Lords's Prayer we are studying. we don't have the whole thing up for you to read this week, but we'll post a few excerpts here:

"that we pray to God in heaven is a reminder that we become part of a large struggle by praying this prayer. this thing between us and Jesus is not merely personal; it's cosmic. the God whom we have been taught by Jesus to address as 'our Father' is the one who rules the whole cosmos, who speaks in earthquake, wind, and fire. any less of a god wouldn't do us much good. the good that needs doing in this world--good for the poorest of the poor, the sickest of the sick, the most desperate of the desperate--tends to be considerably larger than our mere social activism, charity, or politics. things are cosmically out of hand. evil is not just the nasty little things we do to one another. it's as if evil is organized, massive, subtle, deep, cosmic.
"if Jesus is no more than a helpful moral example, a wise teacher of ethics, an empathetic friend, then why pray at all? what good can even the best moral exemplar do for our ensnarement? after even our best moral efforts, after all our good deeds are done, there is still a great surplus of suffering and pain left over, still too much untouched evil. therefore it makes a great deal of difference whether or not God hears us and acts when we pray. otherwise our prayer is merely autosuggestion, self-therapy, not up to the battle.
"it also makes a difference where God is when we pray. if Jesus resides safely tucked in our hearts, if God is only a wish projection of the very best of human aspiration and experience, then forget it. these little gods are no match for our big problems.
"however, because we call God the Father who is 'in heaven' we are bold to pray for such absurdly extravagant gifts as bread for the world, peace among the nations, healed marriages, cured cancer, rain. we are bold to pray for such gifts because we pray to the Father in heaven, the one who rules.
"our God is placed, located, has an address--heaven...heaven is the name given to God's realm
"our kingdoms are constantly being threatened by God's kingdom. heaven is breaking out all over.
"it may seem odd to you that 'our Father' is located, by the prayer, 'in heaven'. most of us think of ourselves as persons who want to get close to God. that is the god for whom we grope, if we grope for a god at all, a god to whom we can 'get close', 'a friend in need'. this need to make God over into our own image has led some folk to speak of the need to develop 'user friendly churches'. these churches are meant to be so much like the surrounding culture--churches fitted with padded pews whose sanctuaries resemble carpeted bedrooms with basketball gyms attached--that there we are never bumped by anything odd, never challenged by something weird.
"heaven is weird.
"just to pray to a God who is 'in heaven', is a warning against contemporary domestication of God. here is God who is not some pale image of ourselves and our best aspirations. this God doesn't live here in our country, is not housed within our sanctuaries. God the Father rules from heaven. so don't' be confused by some Christian talk about 'a personal relationship with Jesus' as if this were the whole point of the Christian faith--to get cozy and comfy with God.
"of course, some will say heaven is not a place. heaven is an idea, a metaphor, a state of mind. no. when the Lord's Prayer speaks of God, it locates God. God is not some mushy, generalized pantheistic presence always and everywhere, therefore not now and nowhere. God is placed, enfleshed, incarnated through the people of Israel and in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. the God who is thus located is not some ephemeral presence who may have set the whole thing in motion and then slips into eternal elusiveness. paul says that the same Spirit who teaches each of us to cry out, 'Abba! Father!' is much more than merely personal--this is the cry of the whole cosmos itself.

"God chooses to be located within, not aloof from, God's created order in the person of Jesus. the person who purports to find God in every rock, tree, and glade is too often a pantheist who assumes that God is everywhere the same. but if God is everywhere, God is finally nowhere, and the world is empty. Christianity is really much more immanent (God is very close) than pantheism because our God promises to be in real places--jerusalem--and actual faces--Jesus.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Lord's Prayer

Here's what we're studying this week if you can't make it and would like to study along with us:
-to expand it just click the square box on the top right hand corner and if you can't read it still, there's a zoom button (the little + sign).
Read this doc on Scribd: Our Father

Thursday, April 10, 2008

fire burn

Asleep and Listening ~Rumi

Day before yesterday,
fire whispered to the fragrant smoke,

Aloes wood loved me,
because I know how to untie it
and let it loose.

This burning must occur,
or nothing will happen.

Sperm cell disappears into egg.
Then a new beauty appears.

Bread and broth must dissolve
in the stomach before energy comes.
Raw ore gets refined into coins.

It is necessary for you
to experience nonbeing.

Love takes you toward that.
Asleep beside the splashing water,
let it say secrets into you.

Be a sleep and a pure listening
at the same time.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

study links

last week in luke chapter 9 we studied about the call to take up our cross being a call to live a life that is threatening to the "powers" (see the post below "run in such a way, as not without aim"). but this week in chapter 10 we read Jesus telling the disciples that he is sending them out as "lambs in the midst of wolves". so the question is, how are lambs a threat to wolves? we came up with a few ideas in our discussion, but let us know what you think.

here is a link to an excellent article by a woman journalist writing from the midst of apartheid violence in south africa in the 90's. she connects an experience there with the same verses in luke chapter 10 that we were studying. it gives a good concrete example of one possible way those verses could be applied. http://www.journeywithjesus.net/Essays/20070702JJ.shtml


we also watched a video from teacher and historian ray vander laan. the particular lesson we watched was filmed on location in priene, turkey and was titled "the presence of God: a counter cultural community". it showed clearly how just by trying to be faithful to God the early christian communities radically confronted their culture. if you'd like to borrow it and see for yourself just let us know.
i highly recommend checking out any of his stuff. he uses archeology, history, and geography to show a clearer context to our scriptures then most of us already know. this brings out a lot of meanings that would have been obvious to the first hearers of the word, but that can often escape us as we are separated in many ways from the world the bible was formed in. his teaching goes into a lot of the jewish roots of our faith which are extremely important for christians to know. here's a link to the website of his organization where you can find lots of studies of this sort and hopefully grow in your knowledge of our faith:
http://www.followtherabbi.com/Brix?pageID=1458

and one more link here to an article by theologian ched myers that gives another incredible perspective on what it means to be lambs that threaten the wolves in an essay on the revolutionary roots of the pentecostal church and its connections with jazz. he presents a very interesting take on speaking in tongues, and being baptized in the spirit as subversive tactics against the dominant culture.
http://bcm-net.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/Cultural%20Insurgency.pdf

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

keep up the good work

Our friend and partner-in-crime Andy Lewis is currently on a speaking tour of colleges with another friend Tim who lives at the Catholic Worker House in Champaign, IL (for info on the catholic worker movement see: http://www.catholicworker.org/). Among other things they are speaking about christian community and a christian perspective on anarcho-primitivism. Some of their talk is based on recent writing by theologian Ched Meyers (you can download some of his articles here: http://bcm-net.org/wordpress/theological-animation/articles). They will be traveling mostly in Virginia, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Michigan. If you would like more details you can email Andy at antishowers@hotmail.com. They may be at a campus near you. Keep them in your prayers.