Friday, May 27, 2022

Colleagues List, May 29th, 2022

Vol. XVII, No. 30 

Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                          http://colleagueslist.blogspot/.ca                                            http://colleagueslistii.blogspot.com

Current archives listed on this page

GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE 
CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE

Wayne A. Holst, Editor 
My E-Mail Address: waholst@telus.net 

This email is sent only to a voluntary subscriber list. 
If you no longer wish to receive these weekly columns, 
write to me personally at - waholst@telus.net

*****

Dear Friends:

This week I am pleased to introduce "New Testament Women for Progressive Christians (vol. 1)" by Robert Schmidt. This is but the latest of many Schmidt's books that I have been happy to promote.

I hope you will find other material of interest in this issue of Colleagues List as well.

Please note - If a link below seems to be dead, cut and paste it into the address bar at the top of your web page and it should work.

Wayne

*****

SPECIAL ITEM

Book Notice -

NEW TESTAMENT WOMEN
FOR PROGRESSIVE CHRISTIANS
(Vol. 1) by Donald Schmidt
(a six session study guide) 
Wood Lake Publishing, Kelowna. BC.

May, 2022. Paper $14.95 CAD. 
ISBN #978-1-177343-524-4

Publisher's Promo:

Although women often play a crucial role in the most significant events in the Bible, they are typically cast as secondary characters who are less important than the male lead. Or they are are presented as bit players who aren’t even named. Yet these are strong women and we do an injustice to the biblical narrative and a disservice to ourselves if we gloss over them. 

This guide takes an intriguing look at some of the women in the New Testament (a second volume is planned), including Mary the mother of Jesus, Anna and Elizabeth, Mary and Martha, Thecla and Junia, the female disciples (including Mary Magdalene), and women who are healed or set free from their burdens – women who helped shape and were shaped by Jesus and the early Christian community.

Outside of Ephesus, in modern-day Turkey, an intriguing discovery was made in 1906. It was of a cave, and inside was found a painting of a man and a woman. There were two especially significant things about the painting. The first was the identity of the pair; they were Paul and Thecla, a woman of the ancient church and probable travelling companion of St. Paul, at least for part of his ministry. The other significant fact was that Thecla’s eyes had been scratched out, and her hand – raised in the traditional stance to suggest one speaking with authority – had been smudged out.

It is a telling image on a number of fronts, not least of which is the desire of some early vandal to attempt to remove the woman’s ability to see or speak. There has always been in Christianity a concerted effort on the part of men to silence women, to obliterate them, to remove their ability to speak or to act with any kind of authority. Yet when we look at the New Testament we can also clearly see the presence of women with Jesus, that they were integral to his everyday life and ministry. If we look a little harder, we will see that women played significant roles at the centre of the early Christian community, including as preachers and teachers. 

Donald Schmidt -
Author's Bio:

Whenever he can choose what to do, Donald Schmidt likes to spin wool, knit, and weave. In his spare time, he also works in ministry in a variety of settings. He has served parishes in Quebec, New York, Vermont, Washington, and Hawai‘i. He has also worked as an Associate Conference Minister with the United Church of Christ, and is a retired United Methodist minister. Perhaps his favorite ministry has been as an editor and writer of church resources, for worship, education, and church revitalization. He has published 3 books, and has had a few pieces of music appear in various collections around the world. He also loves to travel, finding that visiting anywhere new and different can open us up to learn new things about others and, in the process, ourselves. More recently Donald has served with the United Church of Canada, and was Minister for Worship and Leadership Development at First United Church in Kelowna, British Columbia. He lives in the Okanagan Valley of BC. He is a grandfather of 8, and father of 3. 

--

Author's Words:

There is no such thing as unbiased history. Different people notice different things and the things they notice fit with their understanding of the world.

Sometimes people add things that are clearly meant to lead us one way or another. We may not even notice.

Those who write might not think they are giving a biased story; they are simply reporting what they felt was important. And they want to make sure we understand it the same way.

All this is true about the stories of the New Testament, and in the Bible as a whole. All the writers of these books had their own biases.

The fact that there has always been bias against women since the church's early days is not news. It shows up in both obvious and subtle ways. There are many ways the scriptures clearly demonstrate the denigration of women.

As serious students of the Bible we can take this as a challenge. We need to flesh out the stories of women because we are often given so few details. In other words, we add things to stories all the time and doing this to biblical stories should not upset us.

We have to look beyond the text to see what the biblical writers actually meant. When we do this we are not "changing the Bible" but are being more honest with it.

I am a man. I am a man writing a book about women and obviously I am going to approach this differently than a woman might. But my goal has been to present the stories of women in the New Testament as accurately as possible and invite your to notice, to explore and to celebrate the role of women there. I have tried to lift up stories of women whose lives have helped to shape and form my own life and my own faith journey.

I have had to make choices about what characters to include in this guide and plan to add a second study to involve more women.

In conclusion, I delight always in exploring the Bible - despite its quirks and variances - and in finding there powerful stories that guide me each day.

- edited by Wayne from the Introduction

--

My Thoughts:

I value study groups - of the Bible and otherwise - that involve both male and female members. I also like to co-teach with women as well as men. It is often amazing what a single story, phrase or word, conveys to a woman as a man. In earlier years my studies constituted persons of one gender, but fortunately, that is no longer the case.

As we study together, we realize just how limited our approach to scripture has been when we have maintained (often unknowingly) the male bias of the material we are reading.

I value the work that Robert Schmidt is doing with various bible studies as he reveals (in new ways) novel approaches to understanding the holy scriptures.

As we grow more mature and experienced in life, it is amazing what new insights come to us as we engage the same material we have studied in times past.

As always, I am happy to introduce and promote the latest in Wood Lake Publications studies. 

_____

Buy the book from Amazon.ca

Buy the book from Wood Lake:

*****

COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS

Herb and Paula O'Driscoll
Victoria, BC

Anglican Church of Canada

"Online Launch of the O'Driscoll Forum"

--

Philip Yancey,
Colorado

Philipyancey.com
May 26th, 2022

"Why Go Back?"

--

Mark Whittall,
Ottawa, ON

Sermons and Blog,
May 21st, 2022

"Scrambling to Catch Up"
  
--

Jim Taylor,
Okanagan, BC

Personal Web Log,
May 19th, 2022

"The Wasp Who Lives With Me"

-- 

Ron Rolheiser,
San Antonio, TX

Personal Web Site
May 23rd, 2022

"Naming the Present Moment - Some Metaphors"
  
*****

NET NOTES

POPE FRANCIS TO VISIT CANADA IN JULY
He Will Visit Edmonton, Quebec and Iqaluit

Religion News Service,
May 13th, 2022


--

ROSEMARY RADFORD RUETHER DIES AT 85
Groundbreaking Catholic Feminist Theologian

National Catholic Reporter,
May 24th, 2022


--

LET GRATITUDE SHAPE YOUR TOMORROW
Take Risks Daily in New Ways of Living

Broadview, May 4th, 2022


--

HOW I LEARNED TO LIVE WITH GHOSTS
Insights from Korean Ancestor Worship

Religion News Service,
May 26th, 2022


--

THE FALSE DIVIDE OF SPIRITUAL AND RELIGIOUS
A Divide that Should Really Not Exist
by Sr. Helena Burns

Catholic Register, Toronto
May 20th, 2022


--

WILL THE WCC EXPELL PATRIARCH KIRILL?
The Orthodox are Very Important to Us

Religion News Service
May 3rd, 2022


--
SOUTHERN BAPTIST LEADERS MISTREATED
ABUSE SURVIVORS FOR DECADES
Major Report Now Made Public

Religion News Service
May 22nd, 2022


--

WILLOW CREEK CHURCH CONTINUES TO DECLINE
Post Hybels and Covid-19 Struggles

Religion News Service,
May 19th, 2022


--

WORLD NEEDS GOLDEN RULE'S POSITIVE RAYS
Poster Has Challenged and Inspired Many

Catholic Register, Toronto
May 12th, 2022
 

--

ARCHEOLOGISTS FIND ANCIENT UNDERGROUND CITY
Located in Turkey - Where Christians Hid from Romans

Christian Week
May 19th, 2022



*****

WISDOM OF THE WEEK
Provided by Sojourners and the Bruderhof online:

Faith is a force for good particularly when people are feeling beleaguered and in need of hope.

- Margaret Atwood

--

I was born with the same gift from God we are all born with—the impulse to reach out and lessen the suffering of another human being.

- Anthony Ray Hinton

--

Humility is poverty of spirit and meekness. Humility inspires an attitude of listening and of seeking out those who can give good counsel. Humility welcomes correction. A humble person is not proud or arrogant. Humility is not a denial of my value as a human being but rather seeing myself in relationship to God. Humility results from being in a state of gratitude rather than envy, resentment, or bitterness.

- Jim Forest

--

We have to cross the infinite thickness of time and space – and God has to do it first, because he comes to us first. Of the links between God and man, love is the greatest. It is as great as the distance to be crossed. So that the love may be as great as possible, the distance is as great as possible. That is why evil can extend to the extreme limit beyond which the very possibility of good disappears. Evil is permitted to touch this limit. It sometimes seems as though it overpassed it.

- Simone Weil

--

It is possible even in the contradictions and confusions of this life to keep the center of your being calm and undisturbed. It is possible even in this life to go through one hellish situation after another with strength and confidence of spirit. It is possible to endure physical pain and suffering while the mind and heart are filled with peace and joy. That’s what I mean by being in paradise even while you are still part of this earthly scene of chance and change.

- Howard Hageman

(end)


Friday, May 13, 2022

Colleagues List, May 15th, 2022

 Vol. XVII, No. 29

 Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                          http://colleagueslist.blogspot/.ca                                            http://colleagueslistii.blogspot.com

Current archives listed on this page

GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE 
CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE

Wayne A. Holst, Editor 
My E-Mail Address: waholst@telus.net 

This email is sent only to a voluntary subscriber list. 
If you no longer wish to receive these weekly columns, 
write to me personally at - waholst@telus.net

*****

Dear Friends:

I write a brief meditation on what it means to be connected to soil and lawn at this time of year. Hopefully, this connects with many of you.

Hopefully, you will find other parts of this letter of help to you too.

Please note - If a link below seems to be dead, cut and paste it into the address bar at the top of your web page and it should work.

Wayne

*****

SPECIAL ITEM

A REFLECTION ON THE EARTH AT SPRINGTIME

The following note was sent to the people of St. David's Church, my local Christian community - and I would like to share it with you now...

Dear Friends:

Holy is the soil we walk on,

Holy everything that grows,

Holy all, beneath the surface,

Holy every stream that flows,

May new life emerge within you this spring,

and may you see that it too, is holy.

Blessings from the St. David's staff (all signatures).

--

Marlene and I spend a lot of time and energy preparing our yard and gardens during these weeks of springtime. It is something we cherish, and - while we may not always think about our activities in spiritual terms - that is not far removed from what we actually think and do.

Over the years, Marlene has invested much in her gardens. Before we met and married I yearned to live in a place that had a yard I could mow.

Garden and yard have continued to provide spiritual reserves for us from spring through autumn of each year that we have been together and we have continued doing this for a score of years.

As we grow older, we wonder if we will have the energy to continue our earthly tasks. So far, we have been able to do so.

Perhaps, after reading the poem quoted above, we might be asking the wrong question. It might be wiser for us to ask - are we spiritually strong enough to remain connected to the efforts of garden and yard? If this connection is no longer possible - with what might we replace it?

I thank God for this timely reminder.

Wayne

*****

COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS

Elfrieda Schroeder, Winnipeg, MB.

"April Fool's Month"

https://tinyurl.com/nham7a4y

--

Jim Taylor, Okanagan, BC

"The Gap Between Cause and Correspondence"

https://tinyurl.com/2p8r3tyw

--

Ron Rolheiser, San Antonio, TX

"Spirituality - A Place Where All Believers Can Come Together"

https://tinyurl.com/443xbks8

--

Mark Whittall,  Ottawa, ON.

"The Recognition Problem"

https://tinyurl.com/ycxhh9nf

*****

NET NOTES

REQUIEM FOR UKRAINE

Catholic Register, Toronto, May 6th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/vtrx56d4

--

EASTER HOPE RISES IN UKRAINE

Catholic Register, Toronto, April 28th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2p96hv77

--

RUSSIAN PROTESTANTS PRAY FOR UKRAINE

It is a Dangerous Stance in the Larger Community

Christian Week, Christian Media, April 29th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2p9a7prv

--

WHY IS THE CHURCH FAILING IN THE WEST?

Many Signs Point Downward

Religion News Service, May 10th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/htk9836u

--

ROE VS WADE CAN'T CHANGE CANADA'S LAWS

But U.S. Demise Will Create a "Feast for Lawyers"

Catholic Register, Toronto, May 11th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/mvm9kxt2

--

OBERAMMERGAU PASSION PLAY ENTERS NEW ERA

It is no longer a Capital of Anti-Semitism

Religion News Service, May 9th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/hptc9shh

--

CANADIANS SUPPORTIVE OF HOW GOVERNMENT

IS HANDLING THE CONFLICT IN UKRAINE

Angus Reid Institute, May 9th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2p9yc72t

--

CANTERBURY'S APOLOGY TO CANADA'S INDIGENOUS PEOPLE

Anglican Journal, May 2nd, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/35sh52jk

--

POPE FRANCIS SERVES AS AN EXAMPLE FOR ALL ELDERLY

He Proves that Old People Have Lives Worth Living

Crux, May 11th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/3vpsjrm3

--

TO STOP RUSSIAN MANIPULATION,

FRANCIS MUST MAKE VATICAN STANCE CLEAR 

National Catholic Reporter, May 9th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/fs9s6spk

*****

WISDOM OF THE WEEK

Provided by Sojourners and the Bruderhof online: 

May the God who mothers each of us be a source of life for all who long for hope.

- Emmy Kegler

--

As human beings, we are co-sustainers with the rest of creation to ensure the abundant life for all creation the Creator intended. And God said that is good.

- Randy Woodley

--

If I am afraid to speak the truth, lest I lose affection, or lest the one concerned should say, “You do not understand,” or because I fear to lose my reputation for kindness; if I put my own good name before the other’s highest good, then I know nothing of Calvary love.

- Amy Carmichael

--

We should all be angry. Anger has a long history of bringing about positive change; but, in addition to being angry, I'm also hopeful. Because I believe deeply in the ability of human beings to make and remake themselves for the better.

- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

--

The chief biblical analogy for baptism is not the water that washes but the flood that drowns. Discipleship is more than turning over a new leaf. It is more fitful and disorderly than gradual moral formation. Nothing less than daily, often painful, lifelong death will do. So Paul seems to know not whether to call what happened to him on the Damascus Road “birth” or “death” – it felt like both at the same time.

- William H. Willimon

--

There is often more wisdom to be found at the edges of life than in its middle. Life-threatening illness may shuffle our values like a deck of cards. Sometimes a card that has been on the bottom of the deck for most of our lives turns out to be the top card, the thing that really matters. Having watched people sort their cards and play their hands in the presence of death for many years, I would say that rarely is the top card perfection, or possessions, or even pride. Most often the top card is love.

- Rachel Naomi Remen

--

That a good man may have his back to the wall is no more than we knew already; but that God could have his back to the wall is a boast for all insurgents forever. Christianity is the only religion on earth that has felt that omnipotence made God incomplete. Christianity alone has felt that God, to be wholly God, must have been a rebel as well as a king. Alone of all creeds, Christianity has added courage to the virtues of the Creator. For the only courage worth calling courage must necessarily mean that the soul passes a breaking point – and does not break.


G. K. Chesterton

--

To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything, and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly be broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one...Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements; lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket – safe, dark, motionless, airless – it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. The alternative to tragedy, or at least to the risk of tragedy, is damnation. The only place outside heaven where you can be perfectly safe from all the dangers and perturbations of love is hell.

C.S. Lewis

--


I understand more than that. I understand that God does not wish people to live apart, and therefore he does not reveal to them what each one needs for himself; but he wishes them to live united, and therefore reveals to each of them what is necessary forI knew before that God gave life to humankind and desires that they should live; now  all. I now understand that though it seems to people that they live by care for themselves, in truth it is love alone by which they live. He who has love is in God, and God is in him, for God is love. 

- Leo Tolstoy

--

Every day and every hour, every minute, walk round yourself and watch yourself, and see that your image is a seemly one. You pass by a little child, you pass by with ugly and spiteful words, with wrathful heart; you may not have noticed the child, but he has seen you, and your image, revolting and godless, may remain in his defenseless heart. You don’t know it, but you may have sown an evil seed in him and it may grow, all because you were not careful before the child, because you did not foster in yourself a careful, actively benevolent love. Love is a teacher; but one must know how to acquire it, for it is hard to acquire, it is dearly bought, it is won slowly by long labor. For we must love not only occasionally, for a moment, but forever.

Fyoder Dostoyevsky

(end)




Saturday, April 30, 2022

Colleagues List, May 1st, 2022

Vol. XVII. No. 28 

Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                          http://colleagueslist.blogspot/.ca                                            http://colleagueslistii.blogspot.com

Current archives listed on this page

GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE 
CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE

Wayne A. Holst, Editor 
My E-Mail Address: waholst@telus.net 

This email is sent only to a voluntary subscriber list. 
If you no longer wish to receive these weekly columns, 
write to me personally at - waholst@telus.net

*****

Dear Friends:

My Special Item this week focuses on storytelling, which is both deeply embedded in religious tradition and commonly used in preaching and teaching ministries. Thanks to Wood Lake Publications for this small, but helpful book.

The other pieces in this week's material are a collection of items that I have accumulated during Holy Week and Easter. I hope you find them to be helpful.

Wayne

Please Note - If a link below, seems to be dead, cut and paste it into the address bar at the top of your web page and it should work.

*****

SPECIAL ITEM

Book Notice -

THE POWER OF STORYTELLING IN WORSHIP AND EDUCATION

A Practical Guide, by Jed Griswold

Wood Lake Publishing, Kelowna, BC. 2022.

108 pages. $12.00 CAD paper. $7.50 CAD e-book, $10.00 CAD Kindle

ISBN #978-1-77343-519-0 

(available through Wood Lake and Amazon)

--

Publisher's Promo:

A RESOURCE FOR PASTORS, RELIGIOUS EDUCATORS, TEACHERS, AND PARENTS 

It is difficult to overstate the importance of storytelling. A resource for pastors, religious educators and parents

Think about how Jesus taught. And rabbis. How have Buddhist monks taught children and adults for centuries? How have Hindu swamis taught? And Islamic leaders? 

And Indigenous elders in lands around the globe when it comes to our desire to pass along our values, our spirituality, our faith to the next generation. Or to teach and inspire our own generation. In this small book you will find perhaps the most concise and well-articulated guide to storytelling anywhere. Jed Griswold’s 12 tips for storytelling and his 20 original stories are more than enough to clarify and inspire readers to engage in the art of storytelling. The book's website contains a helpful lesson planning guide. To find it, click the link below to the book itself.

--

Author Information:

Dr. Jed Griswold is an ordained minister in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) tradition and has served several pastorates of different denominations. He has also been a college administrator and professor, teaching in the fields of psychology, sociology, philosophy, and religion and has led many workshops on applying the Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) to educational and religious contexts. He also has a passion for theatre and film – which began with childhood acting and continues today – drawn to the art because stage and film are creative and powerful forms of storytelling. He has written stage scripts and has also appeared in a wide variety of TV pilots, independent films, and feature releases (primarily as an extra), including Goodwill Hunting, Moonrise Kingdom, and Spotlight.

--

My Thoughts:

I have found - during many years of ministry - that a lot of my most important connections with people has been through the stories I have told. When I check the number of hits my Colleagues List issues tally, those with stories and biographical narratives are often the ones that receive a lot of attention. 

Some of our most popular writers appearing here are storytellers. For example - our colleague Herbert O'Driscoll. But there are others.

Thanks to Jeb Griswold, the author of The Power of Storytelling in Worship and Education for providing us with tips and actual stories to work with. Here is a volume that should receive a lot of attention.

This book is not only for clergy. It is also a helpful resource for all who work in the church. The right story at the right time is often what draws people's attention and makes the point.

This book may be small, but it is very helpful.

--

Buy the book from Wood Lake:  https://tinyurl.com/5y8s7f8b

From Amazon.ca:  https://tinyurl.com/2zkjk2uf

*****

COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS

Jim Taylor, Okanagan, BC

Personal Web Log, April 21st, 2022

"Random Thoughts on an Easter Morning"

 https://tinyurl.com/mryct95j

--

Philip Yancey, Colorado

Philipyancey.com,

"Music Amidst the Rubble" April 21st, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/muan83hj

--

Ron Rolheiser, San Antonio, TX

Personal Web Site,

"Fear of Missing Out" April 25th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/bdewc7ef    

--

Mark Whittall, Ottawa, ON

Sermons and Blog, 

"How Dare We?" April 22nd, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/mryct95j

*****

NET NOTES

ACC ARCHBISHOP MARK MACDONALD RESIGNS

He Faces Claims of Sexual Abuse  

Religion News Service, April 20th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2k26wsfv

--

THE FEAR OF PERFECTION HOLDS US BACK

A Reflection by Joan Chittister, 

National Catholic Reporter, April 28th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2p8upakt

--

CHURCH LEADERSHIP FAILURE CAN TEACH US

Five Lessons to be Learned, 

Religion News Service, April 15th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2n6fv7dz

--

METIS PRAISE POPE FRANCIS FOR LISTENING

They Hope for His Visit in Canada This Year

Catholic Register, Toronto, April 27th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2s4jwn8y

--

HOW RUSSIAN CHRISTIANS VIEW THE WAR IN UKRAINE

Only a Few Speak Out Against their Government

Christianity Today, April 22nd, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/4st73dyw

--

POPE FRANCIS CONTINUES TO APPEAL TO PATRIARCH KIRILL

He Advocates for Peace in Ukraine, 

Catholic Register, Toronto, April 25th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/y3u66aes

--

CANADA ACROSS THE RELIGIOUS SPECTRUM

Inter-faith Perspectives During Holy Week

Angus Reid Institute, April 18th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/4d7rybe9

--

ANCIENT ROOTS OF THE EASTER BUNNY TRADITION

A Popular and Continuing Spring Review

Religion News Service, April 14th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2v7t5x8r

--

EASTERN WISDOM FOR WESTERN CHRISTIANS

Rowan Williams Seeks to Free Us Up a Bit

Christian Century, April 21st, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/3fn792yw

*****

WISDOM OF THE WEEK

Provided by Sojourners and the Bruderhof online:

He Is Risen!

Mary and Mary Magdalene loved with such a perfect love that they shed their fear. Empowered by their faith and their encounter with the risen Christ, they ran on to proclaim what they had seen and what they knew to be true. They were among the first to know the truth that John later put into words: “There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear” (1 John 4:18). They challenge us to love and believe. To love Jesus with a perfect love and to believe in the power of his resurrection. Certainly they grieved and experienced their hope flagging during the dark moments surrounding Jesus’ death. But they never lost their faith. It remained a small, steady flame that was fanned to brilliant, bold new life in the light of that Easter dawn.

- Joyce Hollyday

--

Resurrection is everywhere and all around us.

- Timothy McMahan King

--

[T]he divine communicates to us primarily through the language of the natural world. Not to hear the natural world is not to hear the divine.

- Thomas Berry

--

The minute a person whose word means a great deal to others dares to take the open-hearted and courageous way, many others follow.

- Marian Anderson

--

For Christians, knowledge of the past does not just put the present into proper perspective, it orients us to God’s metanarrative. All of our holy days are remembrances of the past that emphasize our hope for the future.

- Elizabeth Stice,

--

Each tree, each ant and person rises and falls beneath an infinite sky; we may flourish on this day or that, but the passage of time will see to our physical annihilation. The virtuosity of life is all the more striking – it might even seem miraculous – when it emerges in a context which also foregrounds its fragility. Here we all are, for a few short minutes – tiny, brittle, ignorant, and unspeakably beautiful.

- Ian Marcus Corbin

--

The great and golden rule of art, as well as of life, is this: that the more distinct, sharp, and wiry the bounding line, the more perfect the work of art, and the less keen and sharp, the greater is the evidence of weak imitation, plagiarism, and bungling. What is it that distinguishes honesty from knavery, but the hard line of rectitude and certainty in the actions and intentions? Leave out this line and you leave out life itself; all is chaos again, and the line of the Almighty must be drawn out upon it before man or beast can exist.

- William Blake

--

It is not only prayer that gives God glory but work. Smiting on an anvil, sawing a beam, whitewashing a wall, driving horses, sweeping, scouring, everything gives God some glory if being in his grace you do it as your duty. To go to communion worthily gives God great glory, but to take food in thankfulness and temperance gives him glory too. To lift up the hands in prayer gives God glory, but a man with a dung fork in his hand, a woman with a slop pail, give him glory too. He is so great that all things give him glory if you mean they should. So then, my brethren, live.

- Gerard Manley Hopkins

(end)

*****

Friday, April 15, 2022

Colleagues List, April 17th, 2022

 Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                          http://colleagueslist.blogspot/.ca                                            http://colleagueslistii.blogspot.com

Current archives listed on this page

GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE 
CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE

EASTER EDITION

Wayne A. Holst, Editor 
My E-Mail Address: waholst@telus.net 

This email is sent only to a voluntary subscriber list. 
If you no longer wish to receive these weekly columns, 
write to me personally at - waholst@telus.net

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Dear Friends:

Welcome to my Easter edition of Colleagues List - or more inclusively - my Holy Week and Easter edition.

Thanks to those who have provided inspiration of various kinds to support this issue. I am grateful to you all.

Wayne

Please Note - If a link below, seems to be dead, cut and paste it into the address bar at the top of your web page and it should work.

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SPECIAL ITEM

FROM HOLY WEEK TO EASTER

A Personal Reflection

Many Christians prefer to see the risen and triumphant Jesus of Easter - rather than the suffering servant of Holy Week. During my reflection and study of the past Lenten season, however, I have come to treasure both seasons of the church year as equally important to my faith.

My thoughts here have been influenced by a book study at our church this past winter. The book was by Parker Palmer and entitled "On the Brink of Everything - Grace, Gravity and Getting Old." Some of the key insights from this venture came to me as I co-taught a ten-week series. If you are interested in reviewing the material we covered, please click -

https://tinyurl.com/2hrhrvhd

Thanks to colleagues Brenda Wallace and Joan Gray for their help and to the many members of the class who participated.

Early in the book I found these words which influenced every session -

"We need to reframe aging as a passage of discovery and engagement, not decline and inaction."

Palmer says that our perspective evolves as we age and our focus can be quite different from one time in life to another. How and what we see at various life stages helps us to see and to tell the truth as we understand it. We need to claim and heed these different perspectives to gain a more complete perspective.

In an early chapter entitled "Getting Real" I discovered the importance of "living my paradoxes" as I face the contradictions about myself and of life as I encounter it. There is much good and bad in my life and in the world around me. I need to embrace and integrate both and not deny each are real and important.

I applied this model while living through the days of Holy Week leading to Easter this year. The result is that I have been coming to accept the entire story of Christ's passion and not only the good things about it.

A simple example should help to make my point.

When I was young I found the crucifix (Christ prostrate on the cross) to be repulsive. My preference was the image of Christ the king, regal and dominating death. I am more appreciative of the crucified Christ today, and am sustained by both images as each one is true.

Hopefully, you have spent some time with the entire passion narrative this year. And hopefully, you will treasure the resurrection story as well.

At this stage of my life, I am grateful for both.

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COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS

"I Have Seen the Lord" - An Easter Message

From the Canadian Leaders of the Lutheran and Anglican Churches

https://tinyurl.com/2p8kr7xp

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Mark Whittall, Ottawa, ON

"A Moment of Grace" - Holy Week

Sermons and Blog, April 1st, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/yv3k24ms

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Ron Rolheiser, San Antonio, TX

"Straining to Hear the Voice of Good Friday"

https://tinyurl.com/4nsw5rnb

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Jim Taylor, Okanagan, BC

Personal Web Log

"Facing Up to Life's Losses" March 31st, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2p8zmfry

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Elfrieda Schroeder, Winnipeg, MB

In Transit Blog

"A Prayer for Peace" April 5th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/mpf5nkj6

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NET NOTES

THREE INDIGENOUS UNITED CHURCH LEADERS COMMENT

They Share Their Thoughts on the Pope's Apology

Broadview, April 1st, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/mucefvma

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APOLOGY IS BUT ONE STEP TO RECONCILIATION

For Indigenous Christians, It Takes Time

Catholic Register, April 7th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/yc8r5jfz

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WALKING IN TWO WORLDS

Being Indigenous and a Church Bishop

Sasktoday, March 24th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/mudvenww

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THE RESURRECTION OF ST. GEORGE IN ENGLAND

Cultural Change and Resistance to It

The Christian Century, April 1st, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/2p8sfj37

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TURKEY STILL TROUBLES CHRISTIANS

In Spite of Drop in Deportations

Christianity Today, April 6th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/5n7c8z43

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IS MORMONISM STILL GROWING?

Five Facts about LDS Growth and Decline

Religion News Service, April 7th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/bdhfb2hu

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WHAT I LEARNED LISTENING TO PEOPLE WHO DISAGREE WITH ME

National Catholic Reporter, April 12th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/bdhh7ej5

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UKRAINE WAR PUTS SOME AMERICAN EVANGELICALS ON DEFENSIVE

They have Traditionally Supported Putin

Religion News Service, April 11th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/whun4755

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INTERFAITH LEADERS GATHER IN UKRAINE TO PRAY FOR PEACE

Led by Archbishop of Canterbury and Others

Religion News Service, April 12th, 2022

https://tinyurl.com/254svfm6

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RELIGION MAKES COMPLEX WAR HARDER TO UNDERSTAND

Long Grievance Between Orthodox Churches in Russia and Ukraine

Catholic Register, Toronto

https://tinyurl.com/ym88pph8

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WISDOM OF THE WEEK

To be a Christian now means
to have the courage
to preach the true teaching of Christ
and not be afraid of it, not be silent out of fear
and preach something easy
that won’t cause problems.
To be a Christian in this hour means
to have the courage that the Holy Spirit gives...
to be valiant soldiers of Christ the King,
to make his teaching prevail,
to reach hearts and proclaim to them
the courage
that one must have to defend God’s law.

- Oscar Romero

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Radical empathy, on the other hand, means putting in the work to educate oneself and to listen with a humble heart to understand another’s experience from their perspective, not as we imagine we would feel.

- Isabel Wilkerson

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My anger can be a force for good. My anger can be creative and imaginative, seeing a better world that doesn’t yet exist. It can fuel a righteous movement toward justice and freedom.

- Austin Channing Brown

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[T]here’s really no such thing as the ‘voiceless’. There are only the deliberately silenced, or the preferably unheard.

- Arundhati Roy

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At some thoughts one stands perplexed – especially at the sight of people’s sin – and wonders whether one should use force or humble love. Always decide to use humble love. If you resolve on that, once and for all, you may subdue the whole world. Loving humility is marvelously strong, the strongest of all things, and there is nothing else like it.

- Fyodor Dostoevsky

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The tongue is our most powerful weapon of manipulation. A frantic stream of words flows from us because we are in a constant process of adjusting our public image. We fear so deeply what we think other people see in us that we talk in order to straighten out their understanding. If I have done some wrong thing (or even some right thing that I think you may misunderstand) and discover that you know about it, I will be very tempted to help you understand my action.

Silence is one of the deepest disciplines of the spirit simply because it puts the stopper on all self-justification. One of the fruits of silence is the freedom to let God be our justifier. We don’t need to straighten others out.

Richard J. Foster

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The reason Lent is so long is that this path to the truth of oneself is long and snagged with thorns, and at the very end one stands alone before the broken body crowned with thorns upon the cross. All alone – with not one illusion or self-delusion to prop one up. Yet not alone, for the Spirit of Holiness, who is also the Spirit of Helpfulness, is beside you and me. Indeed, this Spirit has helped to maneuver you and me down that dark, steep path to this crucial spot.

- Edna Hong

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Being patient is difficult. It is not just waiting until something happens over which we have no control: the arrival of the bus, the end of the rain, the return of a friend, the resolution of a conflict. Patience is not waiting passively until someone else does something. Patience asks us to live the moment to the fullest, to be completely present to the moment, to taste the here and now, to be where we are. When we are impatient, we try to get away from where we are. We behave as if the real thing will happen tomorrow, later, and somewhere else. Be patient and trust that the treasure you are looking for is hidden in the ground on which you stand.

- Henri J.M. Nouwen

--

Anxiety and fear are what we know best in this fantastic century of ours. Wars and rumors of wars. From civilization itself to what seemed the most unalterable values of the past, everything is threatened or already in ruins. We have heard so much tragic news that when the news is good we cannot hear it. But the proclamation of Easter Day is that all is well. And as a Christian, I say this not with the easy optimism of one who has never known a time when all was not well but as one who has faced the cross in all its obscenity as well as in all its glory, who has known one way or another what it is like to live separated from God. In the end, his will, not ours, is done. Love is the victor. Death is not the end. The end is life. His life and our lives through him, in him. Existence has greater depths of beauty, mystery, and benediction than the wildest visionary has ever dared to dream. Christ our Lord has risen.

- Frederick Buechner

(end)

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For Those Interested -

ACTS MINISTRY WINTER STUDIES AT ST.DAVID'S UNITED

Monday Night Book Study - Jan. 17th - Mar. 28th 7-8:30 PM                Zoom (10 weeks)

Book Theme: "On the Brink of Everything" by Parker Palmer

This class ended March 28th.

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Thursday Morning Bible Study - Jan. 20th - Mar. 31st 10-11 AM 
 Zoom (10 weeks)

Bible Theme - Biblical book(s) to be studied this term will be
selected at the first gathering of the class, January 20th.

We studied First Corinthians this term.

This class ended March 31st

If you have questions, contact me at waholst@telus.net

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Colleagues List, July 24th, 2022

  Vol. XVIII. No. 1 Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                            http://colleagueslist.blogspot / .ca           ...