Well, after all that worry and fuss, preaching for the preachers at the preaching conference wasn't so bad. In fact, I actually had fun. It helped that about halfway during the sermon, the presenter/preaching professor Craig Satterlee gave me a "thumbs up" from the back of the room. He told me later that the line that won him over was: "When the people came out to see what had happened, they may have noticed the healing of the former demoniac, but what they really saw was the dead pigs."
The preaching evaluation was just four questions:
1.) Did you hear the gospel?
2.) What was it?
3.) Any commendations?
4.) Any recommendations?
Our presenter Craig said this is a great way to evaluate sermons in groups of clergy (synod clergy gathering theme, anyone) and is also good to do with members of the congregation (anyone want to do this when I get back?)
The feedback was helpful. People told me they heard gospel and were able to articulate it in a way that generally matched my intent. People gave me kind praise on my delivery, craft of the sermon, good use of story-telling, sense of humor and tying the ending/beginning together.
People gave me good feedback, primarily to SLOW DOWN (ah, the bane of my existence. One of my college friends always said I should be an auctioneer). Another piece of feedback was avoid using "scholarly" language when it's a word you wouldn't use in normal conversation and to watch how much I moderated the pitch of my voice (too much for some and they couldn't catch all the words).
It was an incredibly helpful, affirming and humbling experience. I'm grateful.
I'm also getting some great insights into preaching and things to do in the congregation for when I come back. Today, for the first time since I went on sabbatical four weeks ago, I heard an idea about something to do with lay people in a congregation and thought, "Wow, how great! I'm excited to get back to Central and try it!" I think this means I'm getting some rest.
Musings on faith and life from an Alaska Lutheran pastor.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Monday, January 30, 2012
Preaching to the Choir
I'm in Issaquah, Washington, attending the Byberg Preaching Conference, as I've done most years of my ordained ministry. It's often on the Oregon Coast, so this Seattle-area switch was nice because it cut down my travel time. Instead of a red-eye, I got to sleep in our own bed last night and leave early this morning.
Our guest speaker this year is Craig Satterlee, who teaches preaching at LSTC (Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago). Part of the gig is that attendees are preaching to each other in small groups and then evaluating others. I was asked to go first. I'm preaching at morning worship tomorrow, 9 am. Craig will evaluate my sermon as template for how we are to evaluate others. It's an understatement to say this is intimidating.
My assigned text is Mark 5:1-20, the story of Jesus healing the Geresene demoniac. It appears in Matthew and Luke, but only Luke's version makes it into the lectionary. It's been fun to wrestle with this text the past week. I keep thinking about the ways God meets us, interrupts us, heals us and how we are invited to respond.
I practiced this sermon for Erik last night. I told him I'm preaching it for pastors, so I've written it with my audience in mind. He said I was preaching to the choir, which I guess I am. But, as with so many sermons, it's also the one I need to hear.
I had one version when I came here this morning, and just now I've tweaked it and now it's a different version. Craig told us during plenary today that sometimes you just have to surrender on Saturday night (or Monday night in my case). The sermon is what it is and God can use it and me.
So, here it is. I'll let you know what the preachers say.
Sermon 1.31.12
Byberg Preaching Conference
Mark 5:1-20
Mercy, grace and peace to you from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.
The Inupiat Eskimo people make their homes on the windy coastline of the Bering Sea in Northwest Alaska as they have done for more than 10,000 years. About 100 years ago, Lutheran pastors came to the area and now several of the tiny, mostly Alaska Native villages have ELCA churches and members proud to be Lutheran. If you visit the modest homes of one of these Alaska Native Lutheran families, well, you won't be alone. The doors of homes in the village are revolving, almost literally, with a constant flow in and out of elders, moms, dads, teens, kids and dogs. People generally do not call, knock or text when they are coming over. They just come over. Life, from the eyes of an outsider, seems like constant, messy disruption. When a visitor drops by and inadvertently disrupts dinner, an elder makes room at the already crowded table, tells you to pull up a creaky folding chair and offers you a bowl of reindeer stew. No matter that three children in precariously heavy diapers are crawling under the table, someone is talking too loudly on the phone in the other room and more visitors flow in and out during the meal. No matter the disruption, everyone is welcome and everyone is family here.
Many of us may not take well to interruptions and disruptions in our lives. For example, I don't know about you, but when I'm away from the parish, I try not to tell people what I do for a living. I try to slide by anonymously at social events or on the airplane, rather than answer probing questions or hear church horror stories. Sometimes, I just don't want to be disturbed. I was trying to be anonymous earlier this month at a week-long yoga retreat out of state. I lasted about two days, until someone asked the dreaded question: What do you do for a living? Sigh. During the course of the week, people offered me all manner of stories about growing up in church, leaving church, being ambivalent about church and/or God, or being wronged by the church (I.e: the person whose mom had a six-year affair with the priest).
Jesus can be so disruptive, in general, and in today's gospel account from Mark, in specific; and sometimes we just don't want to be disturbed. Even when we are living out our vocational calls as ministers, spouses, parents, friends, employees, volunteers and colleagues, we each have our routines, patterns, favorite prejudices and ideas about how the world works and our role in it. It's maddening when Jesus comes and throws our schemes off balance.
This story from Mark's gospel is found also in Matthew and Luke, though only Luke's appears in our lectionary. Mark's version is surprisingly longer than the other two evangelists' stories. Mark, who usually rushes through his narrative a driving urgency, slows down and gives 20 verses with lavish descriptions of the Geresene demoniac and the events that unfold.
The story of the Geresene demoniac takes place across the sea in a Gentile territory. Mark describes the demoniac as a wild man who cannot be contained by chains. He lives in a cemetery and howls all night, bruising himself with stones. When the demoniac approaches Jesus, the demons beg Jesus to leave them alone and not to torment them. The demons know who Jesus is and recognize his power. The demons realize they are in the presence of Jesus, the Son of the Most High God. This kind of power and goodness and light is just too much for them. Perhaps we react the same way. The goodness and mercy of God calls attention to our own misery and bondage. The light that we celebrate in this season of Epiphany also reveals the truth about our own brokenness. The light of Christ reveals our tendency to turn away from goodness and to cling to whatever we've always done or whatever we think will give solace. The light illuminates both the goodness of God and our insistence upon separating ourselves from it and from the person God created us to be.
The light that is Christ Jesus will not leave the demoniac to the demons. Jesus casts the demons into a herd of swine, who rush down a hill and drown in the sea. The swineherds, who have just lost their livelihoods, rush into city and nearby country to tell the people.
When the people come out to see what happened, the former demoniac is sitting there, clothed and in his right mind. The people may notice the healed man, but what they really see is the dead pigs. They see that Jesus has robbed the swineherds of their income. They see that Jesus has brought to the center what they had purposefully cast to the margins. They see that Jesus has totally disturbed their social and economic values. They see that Jesus has disrupted everything. They are afraid. They ask him to leave and so he does.
If I were those people, I'd be afraid, too. And sometimes I am. Maybe you are, too. I'm afraid God wants to disturb me. I'm afraid God wants people to know who I am so that Jesus can use me. I'm afraid that I might have to pay more attention to those on the margins or change my social and economic values. I'm afraid God will disturb and change my life. I'm afraid God will ask for everything I have.
Here's the thing, though. Jesus didn't hate the people in the land of the Geresenes. He didn't come to torture them, to disturb them for the sake of disruption. He came to liberate them as he did the man with the demon. Jesus' disturbing presence is a loving hand that longs to move us to freedom. Jesus transformed the former demoniac into the person that God intended. That man becomes a witness, telling people in the Decapolis what Jesus did, and how Jesus changed his life. Those who heard the story were amazed. Perhaps so was the former demoniac. For the people in the land of the Geresenes, though, the fear was too great and the cost of allowing Jesus to disrupt their lives was too high.
But no cost was too high for God, who allowed the ultimate disruption by giving his own Son for the sake of the world. The message of Jesus crucified and risen shows us that God will not stop loving us and will not stop disrupting us for the sake of liberation, wholeness and life as God intended. This God cannot be controlled; God can only be followed and trusted beyond all else.
Toward the end of the yoga retreat, a young woman approached me. She was a Christian, an adult convert, and said she was worried about being a Christian and practicing yoga. Further, she wanted to go back to school and get a degree in biology but was concerned about evolution and creation. What should she do? I admit, I didn't want to be disturbed. But we talked for a while and it was holy ground. I went back to my room, overwhelmed with a deep sense of God's presence, love and sense of humor.
There's a song from the Iona worshiping community in Scotland that starts with this line: “God bless us and disturb us.” Such is ministry and such is life: a tangle of blessings and disruptions. God bless us and disturb us. We can trust that both are true and good and bring us life in its fullest sense, a life that includes people who don't knock, revolving doors, creaky chairs and reindeer stews. A life where everyone fits at the table, where everyone is welcome and where everyone is family.
Amen.
Our guest speaker this year is Craig Satterlee, who teaches preaching at LSTC (Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago). Part of the gig is that attendees are preaching to each other in small groups and then evaluating others. I was asked to go first. I'm preaching at morning worship tomorrow, 9 am. Craig will evaluate my sermon as template for how we are to evaluate others. It's an understatement to say this is intimidating.
My assigned text is Mark 5:1-20, the story of Jesus healing the Geresene demoniac. It appears in Matthew and Luke, but only Luke's version makes it into the lectionary. It's been fun to wrestle with this text the past week. I keep thinking about the ways God meets us, interrupts us, heals us and how we are invited to respond.
I practiced this sermon for Erik last night. I told him I'm preaching it for pastors, so I've written it with my audience in mind. He said I was preaching to the choir, which I guess I am. But, as with so many sermons, it's also the one I need to hear.
I had one version when I came here this morning, and just now I've tweaked it and now it's a different version. Craig told us during plenary today that sometimes you just have to surrender on Saturday night (or Monday night in my case). The sermon is what it is and God can use it and me.
So, here it is. I'll let you know what the preachers say.
Sermon 1.31.12
Byberg Preaching Conference
Mark 5:1-20
Mercy, grace and peace to you from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.
The Inupiat Eskimo people make their homes on the windy coastline of the Bering Sea in Northwest Alaska as they have done for more than 10,000 years. About 100 years ago, Lutheran pastors came to the area and now several of the tiny, mostly Alaska Native villages have ELCA churches and members proud to be Lutheran. If you visit the modest homes of one of these Alaska Native Lutheran families, well, you won't be alone. The doors of homes in the village are revolving, almost literally, with a constant flow in and out of elders, moms, dads, teens, kids and dogs. People generally do not call, knock or text when they are coming over. They just come over. Life, from the eyes of an outsider, seems like constant, messy disruption. When a visitor drops by and inadvertently disrupts dinner, an elder makes room at the already crowded table, tells you to pull up a creaky folding chair and offers you a bowl of reindeer stew. No matter that three children in precariously heavy diapers are crawling under the table, someone is talking too loudly on the phone in the other room and more visitors flow in and out during the meal. No matter the disruption, everyone is welcome and everyone is family here.
Many of us may not take well to interruptions and disruptions in our lives. For example, I don't know about you, but when I'm away from the parish, I try not to tell people what I do for a living. I try to slide by anonymously at social events or on the airplane, rather than answer probing questions or hear church horror stories. Sometimes, I just don't want to be disturbed. I was trying to be anonymous earlier this month at a week-long yoga retreat out of state. I lasted about two days, until someone asked the dreaded question: What do you do for a living? Sigh. During the course of the week, people offered me all manner of stories about growing up in church, leaving church, being ambivalent about church and/or God, or being wronged by the church (I.e: the person whose mom had a six-year affair with the priest).
Jesus can be so disruptive, in general, and in today's gospel account from Mark, in specific; and sometimes we just don't want to be disturbed. Even when we are living out our vocational calls as ministers, spouses, parents, friends, employees, volunteers and colleagues, we each have our routines, patterns, favorite prejudices and ideas about how the world works and our role in it. It's maddening when Jesus comes and throws our schemes off balance.
This story from Mark's gospel is found also in Matthew and Luke, though only Luke's appears in our lectionary. Mark's version is surprisingly longer than the other two evangelists' stories. Mark, who usually rushes through his narrative a driving urgency, slows down and gives 20 verses with lavish descriptions of the Geresene demoniac and the events that unfold.
The story of the Geresene demoniac takes place across the sea in a Gentile territory. Mark describes the demoniac as a wild man who cannot be contained by chains. He lives in a cemetery and howls all night, bruising himself with stones. When the demoniac approaches Jesus, the demons beg Jesus to leave them alone and not to torment them. The demons know who Jesus is and recognize his power. The demons realize they are in the presence of Jesus, the Son of the Most High God. This kind of power and goodness and light is just too much for them. Perhaps we react the same way. The goodness and mercy of God calls attention to our own misery and bondage. The light that we celebrate in this season of Epiphany also reveals the truth about our own brokenness. The light of Christ reveals our tendency to turn away from goodness and to cling to whatever we've always done or whatever we think will give solace. The light illuminates both the goodness of God and our insistence upon separating ourselves from it and from the person God created us to be.
The light that is Christ Jesus will not leave the demoniac to the demons. Jesus casts the demons into a herd of swine, who rush down a hill and drown in the sea. The swineherds, who have just lost their livelihoods, rush into city and nearby country to tell the people.
When the people come out to see what happened, the former demoniac is sitting there, clothed and in his right mind. The people may notice the healed man, but what they really see is the dead pigs. They see that Jesus has robbed the swineherds of their income. They see that Jesus has brought to the center what they had purposefully cast to the margins. They see that Jesus has totally disturbed their social and economic values. They see that Jesus has disrupted everything. They are afraid. They ask him to leave and so he does.
If I were those people, I'd be afraid, too. And sometimes I am. Maybe you are, too. I'm afraid God wants to disturb me. I'm afraid God wants people to know who I am so that Jesus can use me. I'm afraid that I might have to pay more attention to those on the margins or change my social and economic values. I'm afraid God will disturb and change my life. I'm afraid God will ask for everything I have.
Here's the thing, though. Jesus didn't hate the people in the land of the Geresenes. He didn't come to torture them, to disturb them for the sake of disruption. He came to liberate them as he did the man with the demon. Jesus' disturbing presence is a loving hand that longs to move us to freedom. Jesus transformed the former demoniac into the person that God intended. That man becomes a witness, telling people in the Decapolis what Jesus did, and how Jesus changed his life. Those who heard the story were amazed. Perhaps so was the former demoniac. For the people in the land of the Geresenes, though, the fear was too great and the cost of allowing Jesus to disrupt their lives was too high.
But no cost was too high for God, who allowed the ultimate disruption by giving his own Son for the sake of the world. The message of Jesus crucified and risen shows us that God will not stop loving us and will not stop disrupting us for the sake of liberation, wholeness and life as God intended. This God cannot be controlled; God can only be followed and trusted beyond all else.
Toward the end of the yoga retreat, a young woman approached me. She was a Christian, an adult convert, and said she was worried about being a Christian and practicing yoga. Further, she wanted to go back to school and get a degree in biology but was concerned about evolution and creation. What should she do? I admit, I didn't want to be disturbed. But we talked for a while and it was holy ground. I went back to my room, overwhelmed with a deep sense of God's presence, love and sense of humor.
There's a song from the Iona worshiping community in Scotland that starts with this line: “God bless us and disturb us.” Such is ministry and such is life: a tangle of blessings and disruptions. God bless us and disturb us. We can trust that both are true and good and bring us life in its fullest sense, a life that includes people who don't knock, revolving doors, creaky chairs and reindeer stews. A life where everyone fits at the table, where everyone is welcome and where everyone is family.
Amen.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Hawaii: A few photos and thoughts
From 75F and sunny to 4F and not-so-sunny, I'm back in Anchorage. It's good to be home and sleep in my comfy bed. I miss the warmth, though, and the daily yoga and fresh meals so amply laid before me.
I returned Monday the 23rd and enjoyed a couple of quiet days by myself, as Erik went to the slope for a short assignment while I was away. He returns tonight.
Reunited with my laptop, I thought I'd post a few pictures.
To the left is Pr. Dave Kieffer, of Christ Lutheran, Mililani (Oahu). He took the time to tell me the story of his call to Mililani, explaining how the doors just opened and things just worked out (the sign of a call!) I also appreciated his enthusiasm for the projector they use in worship. I'm excited to try this at Central.
On the Big Island of Hawaii, I met Pr. Larry Hand, Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity, Kona. Larry was welcoming and helpful. I honored that he asked me to preach on Sunday, Jan. 15, since he's only been at this call for about six months. I had a long conversation with Larry about how a pastor gets to know a congregation and how to figure out personal and professional boundaries as a pastor. The people at LCHT were so very kind and welcoming; I was blessed to be among them.
Then, of course, the yoga retreat at Kalani Oceanside retreat center, outside of Pahoa on the Hilo side of the island. Folks told me that this is how all of Hawaii looked before the high-rises and over-developed beaches. The Pahoa area is full of windy roads, locally-owned restaurants, and of course, the beautiful grounds of Kalani retreat center. I did a lot of yoga, of course, but I also attended a hula dancing class at Kalani. I learned how to dance the "seaweed" dance, a beautiful hula that reminded me of the Eskimo dancing I've seen in Brevig Mission. The other hulas I saw told stories of nature, of the land and sea, similar to the Alaska Native dances.
I traveled some around the area, too, visiting Volcanoes National Park, a local state park with a lava rock shoreline and a local fruit farm, owned by a fellow yoga student. I saw and tasted fruits I've never tried before: jackfruit, starfruit, rambutans and passionfruit.
When the retreat was over, I felt like I slowed down, slept well, and took time to be with people without rushing. I lost about two pounds, which I'd previously gained during the stressful and junk-food rich season of Christmas.
At the yoga retreat, I was, perhaps, overly anxious about navigating the waters of getting to know people while having to deal with their issues of religion and the church. In the end, I remembered that whatever I do and wherever I go, my primary identity is a baptized child of God.
Back home, I'm resting and (surprisingly) working on another sermon. I'm traveling Jan. 30-Feb. 1 to Everett, WA, for the annual Byberg Preaching Conference. The theme this year is a sort of "preaching lab," where several of us preach and the others critique. More on the assigned text and this sermon in another post!
Friday, January 20, 2012
Light on the yoga sutras
Here at the yoga retreat, we spend a fair amount of time standing on our heads and twisting into pretzels, but we also learn about yoga philosophy. This isn't new to me. I took a class that included a survey of Hinduism in seminary. I studied the Bhagavad Gita and the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali when I trained to become a yoga teacher in 2007. The principles are very interesting and, while originally rooted in the Hindu faith, contain some greater truths.
I remember that it was a bit threatening to me, at first. I wondered if it was okay to dive so deeply into the pantheon of Hindu gods and participate in chanting that included names of their deities. As I've moved through my yoga "career," though, I've found more similarities (and understood the differences) in the two faiths and I'm at peace with being a yoga practitioner and a Lutheran Christian.
Many of my colleagues here at this yoga retreat have no such qualms; as mentioned in the last blog post, many are agnostic or atheist. It hadn't occurred to me that there might be some Christians.
I was sitting at lunch today when a woman about my age sat down next to me. We'd exchanged pleasant conversations earlier in the week but I didn't know her well.
After saying hi, she asked if she could ask a personal question. I said yes. She asked me: "As a Christian, do you ever have a problem with the yoga philosophy and chanting?" I was curious and said, "Why do you ask?" Turns out she's an adult convert to Christianity and has been attending a Four Square church, which I'm guessing is more "conservative" than the average Lutheran church. She had some qualms about yoga philosophy and Christianity.
So I told her my story and told her that over the years I've learned to use the lens of Jesus Christ (hermeneutic!) when I try to apply yoga philosophy to my own life. For example, yoga philosophy speaks of the Ishvara within, which means that something of the divine is inside us. I believe that is true but I call it the Holy Spirit. Other parts of the yoga philosophy don't directly relate to God but how to live. The first yoga sutra speaks about calming the fluctuations of the mind (can't argue with that) as a way to get in touch with the divine within (again, can't argue with that).
I told her that when I hear stories of Shiva and Vishnu and the other deities, I treat them as good stories, like myths, that I might glean a lesson from but don't have to treat literally.
She confessed that she was thinking about going back to school to study biology but was concerned about creation and evolution. Thankfully we just did a study on this at Central last year, so I was prepared!
I told her that I believe in God and evolution. I believe God gave us minds to study science but that all scientists bump up against mystery, which many identify as God.
I talked about the worldview of the people who wrote the Bible (they thought earth was flat on sitting on four posts above a primordial sea) and explained that Lutherans don't believe in a literal interpretation of Scripture.
Here is where we diverged, for she believes in 6 day creation. I didn't talk her out of it; I just listened, though I did offer to get the name of the book we used in Central's study on the topic.
In the end, the conversation turned back to the fact that, as far as we knew, there weren't many Christians here. I told her it was okay, because we can be a witness that Christians are "normal people" and that we can live our faith just by being who we are. Then she thanked me and said, "Your light shines bright." It's a lovely compliment, Christian or not.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Faith stories
It's day four of this yoga retreat in paradise here on the Big Island. There's lots of yoga, ocean views, fresh fruit and time at the pool. I'm doing some reading, too; I'm working on "The Pastor," a memoir by Eugene Peterson (who wrote The Message Bible paraphrase) where he talks about his life and sense of call. It fits in perfectly with my sabbatical theme and I'm enjoying it.
I got to thinking about what to write on this blog this week. I haven't had any more huge Holy Spirit insights, nor am I ready to write a review of Peterson's book (since I'm not finished).
I thought to myself last night: If only I had something new to say about faith stories. Then while I was walking on a garden path alone with sky full of stars overhead, I realized I do have something to say.
Ever since people found out I'm a pastor I've heard a bunch of faith stories. I didn't think to call them that at the time, but that's what people have been telling me all week. It just hadn't occurred to me that they were sacred. But they are, even the tough ones.
I won't give names to my stories and the people who told me them are from all over the nation. None of these stories was solicited by me. I just sat down at breakfast, lunch or dinner and when someone asked me what I did and I told them, this is what they said. They told me their faith stories.
One woman told me she was raised baptist. She even worked for awhile as a youth leader at her church. She gradually begin to question her faith and there was no room in her tradition for those questions. She left the church and no longer believes in God. In fact, she said, every time our yoga teacher mentions "God," she cringes.
A woman told me she was raised Jewish. Almost all of the people on her father's side died at the hands of Hitler. She's a secular Jew now, she says, though she celebrates all the holidays. "They tried to kill us, we survived, let's eat," she said, a phrase that apparently applies to any holiday. She holds an annual Hanukkah party and one year it got so big that she had to hold it in a nearby Lutheran church. The pastor welcomed her in. She said it meant so much to her and that it honored her family members who died, because it was a symbol of unity and respect.
Two other women also were raised Jewish but are secular now. One said her religion was yoga. Another said she liked going out for Chinese on Christmas Day because it was the only restaurant open.
A woman who grew up in a small non-denominational church asked me a number of questions about ministry. She said she thought it was interesting because as she was growing up she had always wanted to be a missionary, but life took a different turn.
There are a few others, but those are the ones that stick with me. Those are their faith stories, told to me with honesty and openness. It reminds me to stay open to the stories yet to come.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Fitting in
After only a two-week hiatus from Lutheran worship, I was truly comforted by getting back to "my people" at the Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity in Kona. I preached there and lead an adult education forum this past Sunday.
After bopping around Oahu and the Big Island for 3 days by myself, it was like coming home. And it was church the way it speaks to me: liturgy, confession, lectionary, hymns I know, and, best of all, holy communion. My soul said "ahh."
The people of LCHT were gracious and supportive. I received a beautiful lei of orchids to wear and people hugged me like family and thanked me for coming. What's more, there were some Alaskans there! For you Central folks, I ran into Herbert and Kathryn Eckmann, Milf and Eleanor Knutson (well, former Alaskans) and Jonathan Ward. It was good fun to see my people.
So, awash in a Lutheran glow, I headed across the island into not-quite-as-familiar territory. I drove to the Hilo side of the island, dropped off the rental car and met up with fellow yogis taking the shuttle to the Kalani retreat center, about 45 minutes drive away.
The Hilo side is the rainy side and it down-poured along the way. When I arrived, I was surprised at the accomodations. I had expected a resort (based on the price charged and the glowing reviews from acquaintances). What I found instead (still nice, just not what I expected) was a more rustic camp which reminds me of a cross between the Bible camp I worked at in college (EWALU, Strawberry Point, Iowa) and what I imagine Holden Village to be.
The retreat center is a campus in a jungle. The accommodations are very simple, the buildings are older and the trails are muddy and rooted. The focus here is on organic food, sustainability, recycling and community (which I love). It's a spiritual community, which I love too, but I was missing my Lutheran connections already. There really is something special about gathering with fellow Christians. Still, I reminded myself about the spiritual practice of letting go and being open to the experience. One of my sabbatical goals is to allow myself to be surprised.
We are one of several retreat groups meeting here, doing yoga twice a day with plenty of free time in the afternoon to explore and relax. It is beautiful here and I feel myself slowing down.
I'm still a pastor, though, and most people don't know it. When I'm in situations like that, I have some anxiety about how I'll be outed.
So, I was sitting at dinner tonight with a fellow Alaskan who I'd just met. We were on our way to a yoga philosophy class that evening. He mentioned some "philosophy" that he discussed recently while he was "stoned," (his vocabulary). I smiled politely. There was a pause in the conversation and then he said, "So what do you do for a living?"
I smiled just as politely and said I was a Lutheran pastor. I always wonder if this will be a conversation stopper but it was a starter with this one. He was a former Catholic and asked me all kinds of questions about Lutherans, the Reformation and the like. I noticed more than one person at the table leaning in to listen.
It felt good, you know, to just be me.
Saturday, January 14, 2012
The Aloha Spirit
I've just returned from lunch and a drive with Larry Hand (pastor at Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity, Kona) and his lovely wife Janine. This is the second day I've spent the afternoon among fellow preachers and it's good to be back with my people.
I'm in paradise here, of course, but I'm terribly homesick for my husband and I'm not keeping as much of a sabbath pace as I'd envisioned for myself.
I flew into Honolulu Thursday night, got a car, drove to a small motel on Waikiki and settled in for the night. The next day I hiked the Diamond Head Crater, strolled along Waikiki, had lunch near Pearl Harbor, drove to Mililani for an afternoon with Pastor Dave Keiffer at Christ Lutheran Mililani. Then I drove back to the airport, dropped off the car, flew to Kona, drove to the hotel and then had dinner at 10 pm at a lovely seaside restaurant. No wonder I'm tired.
So Pastor Dave was the first of my sabbatical pastor visits. He welcomed me warmly and told me the story of his congregation's partnership with a local pre-school and how he saw God's hand in his call there in Mililani.
We talked a bit about faith stories (Pastor Dave did them as part of stewardship once) and then talked at length about the projector they have mounted on their ceiling and the computer "command station" that runs it. Central people take note: this is slick, easy and professional-looking. I think I'm in love (with the projector). Can we get this done this year? Please?
We also talked some about the culture of Hawaii v. Alaska. There are the similarities I expected (feeling cut-off from the rest of the states, friends becoming family) but also differences. Pastor Dave told me (this was later echoed by Larry) that Hawaii has a fairly religious climate. People go to church and there's a culture of acceptance about it. I'm interested in these differences, especially since I read once that if you're a church-goer who moves to the Pacific Northwest you are likely to go to church less; if you're a non-church-goer who moves to Georgia, you're likely to attend worship more. Place matters.
I think of this a lot in our secular and spiritual-non-religious context of Alaska. Apparently, Hawaii is a different situation. I'm not quite sure how this impacts ministry here but I'm curious.
So, today after a more relaxing morning (slept in, run along a paved trail overlooking the beach, farmers market shopping), I met Pastor Larry and Janine for lunch. They, too, were warm and inviting. I felt particularly grateful that they took so much time to talk with me, drive me around the area a bit and show me around the church. On our drive we saw several ancient Hawaiian religious sites as well as beautiful ocean vistas. We also saw the best places to surf, Larry's past time.
When I asked Larry about my sabbatical themes, faith in daily life, vocation, role of church in modern world, I appreciated how he took the conversation in the direction of discipleship. We talked about Kierkegaard's comment that many admire Christ but not so many wish to follow What does it mean to follow Christ? Leaders in churches must model this for others. This would be a good thing to discuss as a congregation.
Larry had spent 12 years doing interim ministry in one of the Pennsylvania synods. He said that when he went into a new parish, he spent time with them reviewing their history, their stories. They made time lines together that showed the significant events in the life of the congregation and then people added their own experiences with the church and other notable events in the community. By taking the long look, people were able to see how their story fit into the congregation's story, he said, and gave folks a way forward. I also appreciated his comments about how during Bible study we can see how our story fits into God's story. This takes practice!
I'm trying to wind down now, and will look for a place for dinner shortly. I was, in part, so grateful for Larry and Janine's presence today at lunch because I'm weary of eating alone. I've never liked it and I've done it much more on this sabbatical than since I was married.
Tomorrow I preach and lead adult education at the church here in Kona, then it's off to Hilo and the yoga retreat, where I expect the real relaxation to begin.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Lessons learned (so far)
I'm leaving for Hawaii in a few hours, the first of three big travels on sabbatical. The snow falling outside reminds me how starved for sunshine and warmth we all are this time of year (though the skiing has been great).
As I get ready to go, I've been reflecting on what I've learned or thought about so far, in a sabbatical only 11 days old.
1.) I'm nicer. You might think a pastor is always nice. Hardly. In my normal life, I rush around a lot and often don't make time to listen or talk to people, especially when I'm not at church. I noticed in the gym this week that I'm moving slower, holding doors open, asking people how they are doing and actually listening. Last week I spent about 5 minutes answering a woman who asked how to pick out the right running shoe. I'm nicer when I'm moving slower.
2.) I was tired. I don't mean physically, though I have been getting a lot more sleep. I mean I'm emotionally-mentally-spiritually-professionally tired. This is how I know: I was surfing Trinity Presbyterian's website last week before I worshipped there Sunday. It's a great website and I was really excited about some of their wording, ideas and themes. I thought: "Hey, we could incorporate some of their ideas and programming at Central, it would be awesome!" Then I thought about all the work it would take and I promptly wanted to go back to bed and sleep.
3). Don't work. Really. While working on the sermon for the folks at Kona this weekend was energizing, I made another choice this week that wasn't. I attended the AFACT action (public meeting) on Denali KidCare on Monday. I had worked very, very hard on the prep for this meeting but I didn't get to see the Promised Land of actually carrying out it. I wanted to watch the other leaders succeed, though. They did a great job. However, I left feeling frustrated, angry and hopeless. Not at the AFACT folks but at many who testified on the issue and at a state government that (in my opinion) ignores the needs of the working poor and justifies it with a "thin veneer of moral argument," to quote a friend who shall remain nameless. I'm mad and I got hooked and it feels like I had to start over again with the sabbatical rest.
4). I'm a better wife. I've had more time with my husband and I love it. I've been able to take on a few more domestic duties and I've made dinner for him several times. It's nice to be able to give more of myself to our relationship. I'm also nicer, see point one.
It's a good start. I look forward to what I'll learn in Hawaii. I'm not taking a laptop, so I'll only post here when I have access to a public computer. Time to slow down.
As I get ready to go, I've been reflecting on what I've learned or thought about so far, in a sabbatical only 11 days old.
1.) I'm nicer. You might think a pastor is always nice. Hardly. In my normal life, I rush around a lot and often don't make time to listen or talk to people, especially when I'm not at church. I noticed in the gym this week that I'm moving slower, holding doors open, asking people how they are doing and actually listening. Last week I spent about 5 minutes answering a woman who asked how to pick out the right running shoe. I'm nicer when I'm moving slower.
2.) I was tired. I don't mean physically, though I have been getting a lot more sleep. I mean I'm emotionally-mentally-spiritually-professionally tired. This is how I know: I was surfing Trinity Presbyterian's website last week before I worshipped there Sunday. It's a great website and I was really excited about some of their wording, ideas and themes. I thought: "Hey, we could incorporate some of their ideas and programming at Central, it would be awesome!" Then I thought about all the work it would take and I promptly wanted to go back to bed and sleep.
3). Don't work. Really. While working on the sermon for the folks at Kona this weekend was energizing, I made another choice this week that wasn't. I attended the AFACT action (public meeting) on Denali KidCare on Monday. I had worked very, very hard on the prep for this meeting but I didn't get to see the Promised Land of actually carrying out it. I wanted to watch the other leaders succeed, though. They did a great job. However, I left feeling frustrated, angry and hopeless. Not at the AFACT folks but at many who testified on the issue and at a state government that (in my opinion) ignores the needs of the working poor and justifies it with a "thin veneer of moral argument," to quote a friend who shall remain nameless. I'm mad and I got hooked and it feels like I had to start over again with the sabbatical rest.
4). I'm a better wife. I've had more time with my husband and I love it. I've been able to take on a few more domestic duties and I've made dinner for him several times. It's nice to be able to give more of myself to our relationship. I'm also nicer, see point one.
It's a good start. I look forward to what I'll learn in Hawaii. I'm not taking a laptop, so I'll only post here when I have access to a public computer. Time to slow down.
Monday, January 09, 2012
A pastor walks into a church...
After spending most Sundays of the past six years standing in front of the church (which doesn't terrify me), I finally had a chance to walk in from the back (which apparently does terrify me).
I chose to attend Trinity Presbyterian in Anchorage on my first Sunday off on sabbatical. I chose Trinity because I'd heard great things about their creativity in worship and music. Also, a friend recommended it (he wasn't there on Sunday, though!) I checked out their website, which was terrific, and got excited to worship with these folks.
But then I had to walk in the door. I went alone and I didn't know anyone and I was intimidated. Though I was welcomed warmly at the door, I sprinted to the bathroom. Why was this so hard?
I didn't see anyone I knew and felt dumb just standing there by myself, so I got a bulletin (another friendly usher) and sat down about halfway on the left. I was early. As people slowly flocked it, I became more terrified that I was going to be in the front, because everyone sat behind me. I felt a palpable relief when a family of three finally sat down a few pews in front.
Now feeling better, I turned my attention away from my self-consciousness and to the place. I haven't been in many Presbyterian churches so I can't say what's normal. But I noticed that there was a cross at the back of the chancel area with a few small stained-glass windows. I also noticed a very small altar along front/right side with purple banners. Purple? The star of the stage was the band, front and center, with keyboard, guitar, drums and two vocalists. There were also three screens up front, which showed song lyrics and images throughout the service.
As I looked around me, the people were mostly white, apparently middle-class. There were elders, middle-aged folks, young families and quite a few children. Many people were in jeans; I might have been overdressed in my business casual clothes.
The band was good, but I didn't know most of the songs. Apparently I wasn't alone because many people didn't sing the first two songs. I didn't either, because though the words were up front, I struggled with the tune. Now I see why many folks at Central insist that the opening hymn be familiar. I felt dumb just standing there!
After the opening songs, we sat down for a children's sermon. The theme for the day was "Freedom," and the woman giving the children's sermon (not the pastor) talked to the kids about self-control. Then the kids went off to "Kid's Church."
Then Pastor Tom Letts appeared, dressed in a purple shirt and tan pants, no vestments or stole. (By the way, most of the leaders were in purple. What lectionary calendar is this? Lutherans are in the green season).
Pastor Tom led us in silent prayer and we sang another song. Then he preached on "Freedom," which is the first in a sermon series called "The Magnificent Seven." He used Galatians 5:1-14 as a primary text. Images and words appeared on the screen as he preached and the deliver was extemporaneous. He made a great deal of eye contact and moved around.
The main theme was, of course, freedom. He talked about finding freedom from guilt, self and fear. We saw a clip of "Braveheart," where William Wallace takes a stand against the British. He finished the sermon with two "absolute truths," which were: make a stand (don' t run away from fear, pain and guilt) and never make a stand alone. To emphasize this point, he asked everyone to stand and move into a tight group in the center where we stayed for the rest of the service. Again, I felt a bit uncomfortable but I think I wasn't the only one. We stayed there for another song (I'll Fly Away-- well done), offering, announcements and a closing blessing.
After worship, I went to the banner in the narthex that said: "7 minute party," where I learned from the bulletin that new people were supposed to go to meet a member and get a goody-bag. I received a small bag with chocolates and brochures about Trinity. See photo to the left.
Then I ran into the mother of a good friend and visited with her. Finally, I met Pastor Tom and "outed" myself as a fellow clergy (and a fellow Lilly Endowment recipient - Tom leaves for sabbatical in April). I felt much more comfortable after the service, though I think it was because I was able to find people to talk with.
As for the service itself, I found the theology very consistent with a Lutheran understanding of God's grace that comes undeserved. A seminary professor once said, "Did Jesus have to die for you to preach this sermon?" Jesus did have to die for Tom's sermon and it had a good take-home message.
As a good Lutheran, though, I missed the liturgy. I also missed having a more complete reading of scripture. There was only one scripture reading instead of the slate of lectionary texts I've come to appreciate. There was also no mention of the Baptism of Jesus (the festival for Jan. 8) or the liturgical season of Epiphany. And while the praise band did a good job, it isn't my favorite music. I had the sense that this style of worship is a bit "performance-based" rather than participatory.
I also really missed the Eucharist. I asked someone after the service about it and learned communion is distributed the first Sunday of every month. I felt incomplete as I left worship.
I'm not sure if the differences I noted are Presbyterian or Trinity specific. Even though some parts of the service came up short (for me), I appreciate what Trinity is doing. The people were friendly and welcoming (not scary as I'd feared) and the theology is mainline and gospel-centered. We need more of this kind of Christian voice in Anchorage!
Friday, January 06, 2012
We come bearing gifts
Today is Epiphany, the end of the Christmas season and a date that commemorates the Magi's visit to the Christ child. In honor of the day, I took down our small Christmas tree, put away the Christmas cards and then cleaned the house for good measure.
I really like this season in the church year, since the texts are ones that celebrate the light of Christ and the way Christ is revealed (made manifest!) in our world. Of course I won't actually be in church all of the time, but part of my sabbatical is on how we see Christ in our world.
I also like this season because in Alaska, a little more light each week makes a big difference. I've already noticed that it's not pitch dark anymore at 5 pm and the light creeps in a little earlier each morning.
I saw my spiritual director yesterday. She's a lovely woman who listens well and offers well-timed insights. She asked me what I took away from yesterday's session. I told her it was all about gifts.
I've spent so much time thinking about and being amazed by what a gift this sabbatical is to me. I feel so thankful, so blessed, so fortunate, so gifted. She reminded me that as I travel, I will be a gift to others. In fact, that's really the entire point of being gifted in the first place. It may sound funny, but that had not occurred to me in connection with the sabbatical.
On this Epiphany day, that's my meditation. I have received so many gifts. I will (somehow, God-willing) be a gift to others.
I really like this season in the church year, since the texts are ones that celebrate the light of Christ and the way Christ is revealed (made manifest!) in our world. Of course I won't actually be in church all of the time, but part of my sabbatical is on how we see Christ in our world.
I also like this season because in Alaska, a little more light each week makes a big difference. I've already noticed that it's not pitch dark anymore at 5 pm and the light creeps in a little earlier each morning.
I saw my spiritual director yesterday. She's a lovely woman who listens well and offers well-timed insights. She asked me what I took away from yesterday's session. I told her it was all about gifts.
I've spent so much time thinking about and being amazed by what a gift this sabbatical is to me. I feel so thankful, so blessed, so fortunate, so gifted. She reminded me that as I travel, I will be a gift to others. In fact, that's really the entire point of being gifted in the first place. It may sound funny, but that had not occurred to me in connection with the sabbatical.
On this Epiphany day, that's my meditation. I have received so many gifts. I will (somehow, God-willing) be a gift to others.
Thursday, January 05, 2012
It's your call
After a long lunch with a dear friend, I'm spending Day 4 of my sabbatical working on a sermon.
This sounds wrong, of course. And I thought at first it would be but things have a way of working out.
I'm preaching Sunday, Jan. 15 at Trinity Lutheran in Kona, Hawaii. My intention was merely to worship with this congregation, since I'll be on the Big Island for a week for a yoga retreat and they are the only ELCA congregation on the whole island.
When I emailed the pastor to invite him to lunch and give him a heads up on my visit, he immediately invited me to preach. I hesitated. This is supposed to be my sabbatical, people! But I said yes because it's my default value.
Then this week I started working on the sermon. And wouldn't you know it? The text invites me deeper into some of the very questions I took this sabbatical to ponder.
The text is from John 1:43-51, where Jesus calls Phillip and Nathanael to be disciples. Phillip, apparently, was an easy sell, but Nathanael not so much. Nathanael asks a skeptics question, "Can anything good come out of Nazareth?" Instead of chiding him for his doubts, Phillip simply response, "Come and see."
Then, Nathanael meets Jesus and is impressed that Jesus recognized him from before. Nathanael responds by praising Jesus and following him. Later in John's gospel, this same disciple will witness the resurrected Jesus on the beach.
This story is part of Nathanael's faith journey (we can only guess at the rest) and is his call story. That's exactly what I'm reflecting on during sabbatical: faith stories and call stories. Phillip became a way that God's grace was revealed to Nathanael on his faith journey.
My premise is that getting in touch with our faith story can equip us to share our faith others and to invite them to "come and see," whether we use words or not. For believers, we are such because someone told us. How else could we know?
What do you think? Who shared their faith with you? How did they do it?
PS: Thanks to http://freechristimages.org/biblestories/jesus_calls_his_first_disciples.htm for the beautiful painting above.
Tuesday, January 03, 2012
Today is the first day...
Today is the first day of the rest of my sabbatical.
It was supposed to be yesterday but I went into the office (no one else was there!) to clean out my email and clean up my desk. It's a tedious task but it sure felt better. My husband made me promise that if I did go in yesterday that I would not go back until April. He's right, of course, but it feel strange to be sitting here at home typing instead of in my office. Perhaps I'll get used to it.
For those who missed it, the sabbatical sending and blessing happened at the end of worship Sunday, Jan. 1. The service was led by the college students and young adults at Central, but I presided at the communion table.
The college youth shared a skit about Simeon and Anna visiting the infant Jesus in the temple (from Luke 2) and Youth and Family Minister Luis Ochoa shared a faith story. Luis talked about how he felt God's presence this past summer when his sister-in-law died suddenly and his wife struggled with a difficult pregnancy.
During the sabbatical blessing, members of my mutual ministry committee and the incoming/outgoing church council presidents led the liturgy. There was also a call and response reading with the congregation. We promised to pray for one another. I gave Central a candle to light during services when I am gone and I took an identical (smaller) one and it's sitting in our house.
After worship and many hugs as people left the sanctuary, we gathered in the narthex for brunch.
It's hard to describe my feelings. I'm so overwhelmed with gratitude for the support Central has shown me. I miss people already! Yet this feels like the right thing to do at the right time, a sort of "kairos" moment, to borrow a theological phrase.
One of the books I read to prepare for sabbatical said that pastors should expect to be surprised by what happens on sabbatical. The point is that you can't prepare for the experiences and insights you might gain. So, on this first day of the rest of my sabbatical, I'm starting to slow down and wonder how and where God might surprise me.
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