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March 2019
- 8 participants
- 7 discussions
3/28/19, Progressing Spirit: Lauren Van Ham: Super Natural Sacraments of Spring; Spong Revisited
by Ellie Stock 28 Mar '19
by Ellie Stock 28 Mar '19
28 Mar '19
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!important;line-height:150% !important;} }@media screen and (max-width:480px){ #yiv0884313230 #yiv0884313230templateBody .yiv0884313230mcnTextContent, #yiv0884313230 #yiv0884313230templateBody .yiv0884313230mcnTextContent p{ font-size:14px !important;line-height:150% !important;} }@media screen and (max-width:480px){ #yiv0884313230 #yiv0884313230templateFooter .yiv0884313230mcnTextContent, #yiv0884313230 #yiv0884313230templateFooter .yiv0884313230mcnTextContent p{ font-size:12px !important;line-height:150% !important;} } This week (in the Northern hemisphere), we are celebrating the Spring Equinox.
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Super Natural Sacraments of Spring
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| Essay by Lauren Van Ham
March 28, 2019A few weeks ago, in her compelling Progressing Spirit article “Lost in Translation,” Rev. Gretta Vosper challenged us to look honestly at both the attrition of church attendance and community engagement. Carefully, Rev. Vosper detailed how the theological scholarship happening in the late 60s lead to a giant unpacking of the previously held practice of putting our belief in a supernatural divine being. She pointed to the confluence of this growing awareness happening parallel to “the American Dream,” which instructed every individual to play (& win) for themselves … and to feed a growth-dependent economy. It is in this space – a sense of no longer needing religious practices, combined with a pressure to “arrive” materialistically – where Gretta urged us to reflect upon our current seesaw. In short, our species has ascribed to a story that when we are not measuring up (house, job, car, clothes, etc.), our reflex is to quickly cry out, making petitions to the supernatural supreme being for an intervention or bail out. In this story, there are Either-Or poles: the appearance of success, or the perception of “try harder,” “pray harder.”It’s a story of extremes, and our natural instincts have fed this story really well. Quite readily, our species rallies at the chance to climb, to consume, to conquer. Of course, we embody many other characteristics, too, like caring, contemplating, collaborating.The progressive Christian practice, I believe, is founded on my (our) willingness to listen for and co-create the new story. And let me be clear about this word, “new.” I don’t mean the next bright and shiny object that allows me to toss the frayed one into the landfill. I mean “new,” as in emerging, fertile, and arriving with a willingness to acknowledge what has been before now. I mean “new,” as in the evolution of our universe, reminding us of how love and adaptation, in partnership, have birthed us into this present moment… and that we are all still birthing.This week (in the Northern hemisphere), we are celebrating the Spring Equinox. It is one of only two times in the calendar year when things sit in perfect balance… and for merely an instant! At every other time of the year, we are turning through times of transition, arriving and departing, creating and destroying our way to one pole (Winter Solstice), or the other (Summer Solstice). We humans have been taught that categories are clever and convenient. Spirituality and science are forever reminding us, though, that this tendency is only helpful to a point, and that the real game begins when we embrace what is more true: fluidity, movement, adaptation.The story of our Universe shows us that Either-Or isn’t how things really happen (thank Goodness). I find this incredibly instructive when, all around me, I’m seeing the systems I’ve come to rely upon going through undeniable changes. I want, very much, to “fix” the social systems. I want, very much, to heal the land, water and air. I want, very much, to mend and repair the trust that has been broken by the things we do on both sides of the seesaw. This is our progressive Christian path, is it not? To engage in, as Rev. Vosper clearly stated, “the core challenges of a vibrant Christianity – justice and compassion.”When I catch myself living the current Either-Or story (a daily phenomenon), it’s a radical act for me to imagine other versions of the story. Yes, new stories! Whether capitalism embraces them or not, technologies already exist to implement renewable energy infrastructure that reverses global warming. Whether our moral compass embraces them or not, principles and practices have been developed to guide decisions on behalf of all species that will uphold equality, safety, bio-diversity, and life for generations to come. Humans are so capable of brilliance that the science part is easy. Humans are so vulnerable that the spirituality is scrutinized. Seesaw.In his book, The Great Shift: Encountering God in Biblical Times, James L. Kugel observes that, in the Bible, when God speaks to people, they are “surprised, but not exactly bowled over.” Kugel suggests that the premodern self was, “semipermeable.” In other words, people didn’t experience their beings and bodies as fixed or separate from, but instead continuous with the natural world. Kugel also suggests that, not only were we more permeable, but that the Deity was experienced in ways that were far less abstract – at times even visible, accessible.As “premodern” beings, we understood that what we were seeking was not supernatural but Super Natural. Visible. Accessible. Cosmology tells us that 96% of the known universe is comprised of invisible energy. As inseparable parts of the known universe, this means that 4% of who we understand ourselves to be manifests as our physical being, while the remaining 96% is invisible energy. In this light, we are invited to perceive the Holy running through us, surrounding us and coursing throughout the activities of our daily round. The Super Natural isn’t the experience reserved for the most devout. The Super Natural is the experience that is accessible in each moment (visibly and invisibly) as we discern a right relationship with the beauty and complexity before us, and within us. Stunningly simple, and so easy to miss.Have we, in our highly sophisticated, peer-review vetted, post-modern arrogance made the magnitude of the Super Natural more difficult than it actually is? Yes. And it’s messy.The word sacrament is Latin and means “a sign of the sacred.” Enter, Spring! Cold mornings and warm afternoons, daffodils tenaciously appearing in newly fallen snow, mud and slush and flooded basements. This season is a mish-mash of ever-extending daylight hours alongside dramatic storms that flood river beds and paste delicate tree blossoms to the sidewalk. Springtime’s sacraments.The story of life cycles on Earth show us the both-and, push-pull, laboring that is needed to bring the winter into spring. It happens with struggle. The ice doesn’t “leave,” it transforms. It’s Super Natural. May our spiritual practice, then, be to embody our premodern permeability, allowing ourselves to be porous enough to entertain the new story. Let’s partake of this season’s sacraments as a reminder to bring the frayed stories into the present moment, and then let’s engage in the push-pull, calling upon the Super Natural to infuse our actions for justice and compassion, adaptation and love.~ Lauren Van Ham
Read online hereAbout the Author
Born and raised beneath the big sky of the Midwest, Lauren holds degrees from Carnegie Mellon University, Naropa University and The Chaplaincy Institute. Following her ordination in 1999, Lauren served as an interfaith chaplain in both healthcare (adolescent psychiatry and palliative care), and corporate settings (organizational development and employee wellness). Her passion and training in the fine arts, spirituality and Earth’s teachings has supported her specialization in eco-ministry, grief & loss, and sacred activism. Lauren’s work with Green Sangha (a Bay Area-based non-profit) is featured in Renewal, a documentary celebrating the efforts of environmental activism taking place in religious America. Her essay, “Way of the Eco-Chaplain,” appears in the collection, Ways of the Spirit: Voices of Women. Lauren tends a private spiritual direction practice and serves as Dean for The Chaplaincy Institute in Berkeley, CA. |
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Question & Answer
Q: By Laura
Recently my grandmother passed away very suddenly from an illness. I cared for her as she died, and my doctor now thinks I have PTSD. I’ve been experiencing crippling panic attacks about dying. I wish that I could say that I am a person of faith. I was raised in the Church but I don’t know what proof there is to believe. Listening to an NPR article about the vastness of the universe, thinking about my grandmother, or even thinking about the fact that my baby is 5 years old and I don’t know why the time passes so stupidly fast. I guess I was just hoping that you had something comforting to tell me.
A: By Rev. Roger Wolsey
Dear Laura,First of all let me say that I’m so sorry about your loss. By the time you receive this response (due to our publishing schedule) it will have been several weeks since her death. How I respond to a person during acute crisis, and several weeks after - differs. So, I feel a bit freer to wax theological with you at this point. As a progressive Christian, who understands what that means in the way that I do, I tend to have a view on these matters that is close to how many of our Jewish friends do, i.e., that the main focus of faith is on the here and now – and it’s okay to be agnostic about whatever may happen next (heaven, the afterlife, etc). I don’t follow Jesus in order to go to Heaven later, I do it for the sake of experiencing wholeness/healing/well-being here and now, trusting that whatever happens when I die will take care of itself.
According to the Gospels, Jesus believed in an afterlife, along with the Pharisees – as opposed to the Sadducees. He conveyed teachings about it to provide comfort and assurance to his disciples. To be honest, I’ve often not been sure about the existence of Heaven - it’s not been central to my faith at any rate - but I recently had the privilege of conducting a memorial service for a trans person who had taken his life. This fellow’s mother had a hard time with his transition from being her daughter to being her son. Two days after his death, she went to visit her very aged mother in an Alzheimer’s unit at a nursing home where she has been residing the past 5 years. For the past 4 years or so, this man’s grandmother wasn’t herself and was not able to interact well with family members who visited her – rarely even recognizing them. When his mother went to visit her mother “to tell her about” her “daughter’s” death she was expecting to pretty much be talking to herself – as her mother has largely not been present or communicable in the past year. But soon after she started talking, her aged mother exclaimed in a burst of lucidity, “He visited me last night! He came to me and he’s beautiful! I mean really beautiful! He wants us all to know that he’s okay, he’s doing well, and he’ll be waiting for us!” And then, just like that, this aged grandmother fell back into her default mode of not being present or responsive.
Laura, all I can say is that I felt goosebumps as I heard this. I felt the truth of it – in my bones. Even though I’m a pastor, I have times of doubt and uncertainty, even about the existence of God – “God, are you really there or am I just talking to myself?” Hearing this story bolstered both my faith in God (in the panentheistic way that I do)– and in the reality of life/something/presence beyond what we know here and now. I was also reminded of how, when I was younger, I “felt” my grandfather visit me one night a few weeks after he died. I felt resonance. I re-membered.
I can’t explain it. And that’s okay. Unlike the liberal Christianity that progressive Christianity evolved from, there’s less of a need for us to be able to “explain” things. We can just hear them, feel them, and know. I realize that this sort of phenomenon/experience may seem subjective and capricious. As with all things, your mileage may vary. But, I pray that somehow even some portion of the essence of what that grieving mother shared with me might be sensed by you.~ Rev. Roger Wolsey
Read and share online hereAbout the Author
Rev. Roger Wolsey is an ordained United Methodist pastor who directs the Wesley Foundation at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and is author of Kissing Fish: christianity for people who don’t like christianity; The Kissing Fish Facebook page; Roger’s Blog on Patheos “The Holy Kiss |
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| This Rabbi On That Rabbi
A modern Portland, Oregon rabbi explains Jesus’s messages in a 6-Part Video Series. View this exclusive video content below.
Part 6 - Easter
This morning, while walking to a local bakery that makes Passover matzah for me, I dialed my friend Christopher on the East coast.
As soon as he picked up, I sing-songed to him, "Kristos Anesti" – "Χριστός ἀνέστη!"
Chris responded, his voice warm with delight, “Alithos Anesti" – "Ἀληθῶς ἀνέστη!”
Translated into English, my line means “Christ is Risen!”
What Chris said is “Truly, He is Risen!" or "He Has Risen, indeed!"
Chris, still tickled by my annual phone call, continued, “You know, not just anybody gets a rabbi to call him and wish him Easter greetings in Greek.”
I countered, also playfully, “Not everyone, let alone not every non-Jew, wants to talk with a rabbi about God.”
I continued, quickly, “Not everyone understands what ‘God is risen’ means.”
I made the fast, conscious switch, moving the conversation from a personal talk about God to something a bit more academic. Talking about God in one’s life is not something a lot of people are comfortable doing – so it’s safer to talk about God and religion as abstract concepts.
Chris and I had a lovely, jovial, conversation about the words, about how instead of saying, “He is risen,” kids today might say, “He is riz.”
How I understand this
I am not a fan of gendered language to describe the divine, as I find it limits my conceptualization of the divine. To me, defining God as anything limits what is, by definition, beyond definition. And gender, especially as a binary concept, unfortunately, does this.
Here is how I hear the interchange:
"God is alive."
"Yes, of course, God is."
That's what Easter is about. The story of Jesus’s resurrection is a story about living with hope, knowing that no matter how much is lost, love and hope (and faith) will remain. (Note: in my mind, it behooves us to make a distinction between resurrection – which can happen to an idea, an ideal, like love and hope – and resuscitation, which is bringing a body back to life.)
To put the words “God is alive” and “Yes, of course, God is” in non-theological language, the call and response sounds like this:
"I have chosen to live in a world, and I know that I live in a world in which the miraculous exists, a world in which I see the power of love and hope and joy, a world in which I know there are more important things for me to pursue than self. I know that I am connected and I feel connected."
"Yes, of course, I do, too."
A lot of people conflate religious fundamentalists with us rational, intelligent folk who feel spiritually connected and occasionally use religious language (like the words ‘God’ or ‘Jesus’) to express our lives.
The words don't matter.
What matters is the feeling.
No minister or Christian who has said to me, "He is risen" was trying to convert me to Christianity. Nor were they trying to tell me that Jesus is the only way to salvation. They were, on their biggest holy day of the year, sharing with me, in the religious language of their culture "the good news" of Jesus’s resurrection. What they were trying to tell me is that they want to look me in the eye and share with me the notion that life is meaningful, important, beautiful, and holy.
And they want to know if I believe that, too!
That is why this rabbi is glad to say, “Indeed, He is risen.”
I’m not taking Jesus to be my personal Lord and savior – whatever you might imagine that phrase to mean. I’m simply using language – their language – to affirm what my tradition teaches me. That I have been liberated from Egypt.
Were it that Jews were to say to each other – “I was a slave to narrowness, but God liberated me,” and one’s fellow were to respond, “Indeed, indeed, I too, sister; I too, brother!” – that is what these words mean.
To anyone who asks me, "Do you see this life as miraculous?" I am glad to tell them that I do.
To Christopher, I will bear witness to the wonder that he and his family have borne witness to for centuries – Kristos Anesti. Yes, Christopher, I believe that our loved ones, that God, that ideas and that ideal exists, that these things are real and beyond concepts of life and death. Yes, yes, Christopher, Alithos Anesti."
To all who see that God transcends, I say, yes, yes, holiness abounds.
God bless.
~ Rabbi Brian
Rabbi Brian is the C.E.O. of Religion-Outside-The-Box, an internet-based, non-denominational congregation nourishing spiritual hunger. Find out more about newsletter, podcasts, videos, and other good ROTB.org is doing for thousands every week.
This Rabbi on That Rabbi is a co-production of Religion-Outside-The-Box and Progressing Spirit. You may purchase the series here. |
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Bishop John Shelby Spong Revisited
The Second Fundamental:
The Literal Accuracy of the Virgin Birth
Essay by Bishop John Shelby Spong
April 11, 2007The story of Jesus’ birth has now been celebrated in pageants, Christmas cards and in hymns for almost two thousand years. The characters in this drama like Mary, Joseph, the Christ Child, the Shepherds and the Wise Men are familiar icons even in our secular society. The star in the East, Bethlehem, the manger and the angelic chorus elicit in almost all western people immediate mental images. Unknowingly we have also, most of the time quite unconsciously, expanded the details of this story so wondrously that we are shocked to discover that many of the things that we have always assumed are in the Bible are not there at all. For example, in the biblical story there is no mention that the Wise Men were three in number or that they rode on camels. The story has no donkey being led by Joseph on which the expectant Mary rode side saddle to Bethlehem. There is no search for a room in the inn, no innkeeper and no stable. There are no animals mentioned since there is no stable, which means that there were no cattle lowing, no sheep baaing, no night wind to say,” Do you see what I see?” All of these details have grown in our imagination as we have acted them out in pageants and sung about them in carols.Were the infancy narratives, which are found only in Matthew and Luke, but not in Paul, Mark or John, written to record the actual events that occurred on the night in which Jesus was born? There is no doubt that the answer to this question among biblical scholars is “Of course not!” All birth stories are by their very nature mythological. They are attempts to interpret retroactively the moment when a great person was born. A life has to become great before mythical details begin to gather about the moment of his or her birth. These details always seek to find signs of future greatness in that person’s infancy, but history they are not. To demonstrate that one has only to look at the assumptions made by the biblical birth narratives.Click here to read full essay.~ John Shelby Spong |
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Announcements
Congratulations to Deshna Ubeda
Newly Ordained Interfaith Minister
All of us here at ProgressiveChristianity.org and Progressing Spirit are proud to wish congratulations to our Director Deshna Ubeda who was ordained on Saturday March 23rd in Berkeley, CA by The Chaplaincy Institute as an Interfaith Minister.
Deshna is Director of ProgressiveChristianity.org and Progressing Spirit, where she has worked since 2006. She is an author, international speaker, and a visionary. She is a lead author and editor on the children’s curriculum: A Joyful Path, Spiritual Curriculum. She co-authored the novel, Missing Mothers. She is the Executive Producer of Embrace Festival.
Please click here to send your congratulations to Deshna. |
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March 2019
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Soon to be released. There is a pre-publication coupon code that is good for a 30% discount on online orders.
I missed getting the info back from the publisher in time to make the Journey Reflection posting of the linked blog about the book.
http://rejourney.blogspot.com/2019/03/thomas-berry-biography.html
Order Online and save 30 %
Columbia University Press
CUP.Columbia.edu
Enter code: CUP30 for 30% discount
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314/19, Progressing Spirit: Wilding Christianity, an Interview with Rev. Matt Syrdal, Church of the Lost Walls; Spong revisited
by Ellie Stock 14 Mar '19
by Ellie Stock 14 Mar '19
14 Mar '19
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!important;line-height:150% !important;} }@media screen and (max-width:480px){ #yiv4423558792 #yiv4423558792templateBody .yiv4423558792mcnTextContent, #yiv4423558792 #yiv4423558792templateBody .yiv4423558792mcnTextContent p{ font-size:14px !important;line-height:150% !important;} }@media screen and (max-width:480px){ #yiv4423558792 #yiv4423558792templateFooter .yiv4423558792mcnTextContent, #yiv4423558792 #yiv4423558792templateFooter .yiv4423558792mcnTextContent p{ font-size:12px !important;line-height:150% !important;} } Matt seeks to re-wild what it means to be human.
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Re-Wilding Christianity, an Interview with Rev. Matt Syrdal, Church of the Lost Walls
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| Interview by Deshna Ubeda
March 14, 2019I recently had the opportunity to speak with Rev. Matt Syrdal about his theological journey and his quest to re-wild Christianity. Matt is an ordained pastor in the Presbyterian church (USA), founder and lead guide of WilderSoul and Church of Lost Walls, and co-founder of Seminary of the Wild. Matt speaks at conferences and guides immersive nature-based experiences around the country. In his years of studying ancient Christian Rites of Initiation, world religions, anthropology, rites-of-passage and eco- psychology Matt seeks to re-wild what it means to be human. His work weaves in myth and ceremony in nature as a way for people to enter into conversation with the storied world of which they are a part.I am excited about this movement bringing Christianity home to Mother Earth and Her mysterious ways. Long before Industry and Empire, mystics found God in nature and Her creatures. Teachers walked the roads and used the elements to demonstrate the sacred Life we have been blessed to be born into. It is time for Christianity to heal its ancient wounds, to seek forgiveness from the Land and from the people who are indigenous to the Land. It is time to rebirth a mythology and story that is aligned with the mystical and brave theology of Christ Consciousness that Jesus experienced and taught. Jesus didn’t teach the Way in buildings and institutions. He taught on the Land. Indeed, his teachings were deeply interconnected to the Earth and Her creatures.We are made of this Earth. We will return to Earth. Indigenous peoples and the Mystics have been worshipping God in the Wild since the beginning of time. Christianity was greatly wounded and nearly destroyed when it was used as a tool to separate people from the Land and from the Sacred Feminine. Healing must take place where the wounds are. The Holy Wild is the liminal space where the Divine can be felt, heard, seen, and spoken to. I am delighted to share this interview with you. May we all step into the Holy Wild to find the sacred around us and within.Deshna: I think I am most interested in your theological journey, your story. What has shifted, when, and why? Matt: Throughout my life I have been most influenced by the Christ tradition. While it has been an ambivalent relationship at times, it continues to hold a peculiar awe and wonder—like a strange gravitational pull. I am not talking about the church, but the paradox and mystery of Christ. Growing up I spent my childhood Sundays at a small mainline Presbyterian church in Lake Forest Park, not far from downtown Seattle. When I was twenty-three years old I had a mystical experience—an awakening—and I told almost no one for about fifteen years. Looking back, this was a kind of “molting,” a shedding of a skin that was no longer mine. This new way of being in the world created a seismic shift from my largely egocentric and anthropocentric faith to really a sort of cosmo-centric worldview. An enlarging of consciousness occurred, disrupting the very foundations of my life and identity, what I would call an “eco-awakening.” Traditionally, in various cultures, this kind of awakening would be viewed and witnessed by the elders as a confirmation of the completion of the tasks of one’s first adulthood – entering into the second half of life. Yet I didn’t have the tools, the framework, the community or the wholeness, to really understand or fully live into what was happening in my life. The next several years were very disorienting and dismantling, and I turned to mystical Christianity in search of understanding, grounding and wisdom.This marked the beginning of a new stage in my life, a period of wandering deeply into the world. Like Abram who left his father’s house and gods, who left all he knew, I spiritually wandered for over fifteen years. Looking back, I was searching to initiate myself into a new life path that made sense of my experiences, searching to find a new people to which I belonged, elders to confer some new identity upon me that I did not understand. I worked overseas for seven months in West Africa and northern Europe, and upon my return, enrolled in seminary in Southern California to explore and respond to a deep and mysterious longing. I visited hermitages and monastic communities, practiced contemplative prayer and meditation and studied the mystics.About a year into ordained ministry I realized that something was missing. There was a profound longing and grief that I was experiencing that I could find no way to explore within the framework even of the mystical tradition. While the gifts of the contemplative practices were a resource, I felt like I was closed off from some unknown terrain.Through some readings of Richard Rohr I stumbled across Bill Plotkin’s book Soulcraft. It was a view of nature and the soul I had never encountered before. The practices and stories I read were troubling and strangely alluring, and I felt as if I had found strange treasure, hidden right where it had never occurred to me to look for it. I attended the “Nature and the Human Soul” Conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico that very fall. Over a thousand gathered from all walks of life: ex-Catholics, disillusioned Christians, and spiritual seekers. In this auspicious gathering of seekers, I carried with me two particular dreams that had been recurring since childhood. I met one of the Soulcraft apprentices who offered to do dreamwork with me during the conference. Later during the conference I enacted one particular childhood dream out on the land. My connection with a mysterious and sacred power of the place, of the land itself, cracked me open like a deep well of wild grief, that eventually gave way to an ecstatic joy. It was my first entrée into the realm of soul, a realm of psychospiritual reality that up to that point I had no experience of or framework for, and it wasn’t until years later, through Biblical study and theological and anthropological exploration, that I realized it was a common experience for many traditional and animistic peoples throughout history, including the Hebrew prophets and Jesus himself.I realized that something in my life and psyche had shifted, had in fact completed in my life. I was entering into a new alluring and dangerous terrain for which I had no map. This was the missing half of my spiritual life, a call of the depths of the world itself, something radically different than I had experienced through the Christian contemplative tradition. A year later, I embarked on a fourteen-day wilderness fast near Lone Cone peak in the wilds of the San Juan mountains which was a four-day ceremony of psychospiritual death and seeking vision. In the wooded backcountry on my solo-fast, I discovered an image that began an ongoing conversation with my deepest purpose in life. What I will share is simply that I knew I must bridge—re-bind—the sacred wisdom of the natural world with the institutional church, and that I must become an agent of decomposition for old images and dying structures. A year later, I began training to become a nature-based human development guide through Animas Valley Institute’s Wild Mind program, and have been integrating my training into ministry ever since.Deshna: Do you consider yourself a Christian? Progressive Christian? Emergent or Evangelical? Or something outside of the boxes?Matt: Usually people don’t know what to make of me. I think we all stick labels on ourselves and others in an attempt to find what tribe we belong to. That said, the Church’s understanding of what Christianity, or a Christian, actually is, is not nearly large enough. Cultural and theological definitions of Christianity are still tribalistic—as are our political world-views in the West—and they are anthropocentric. I find this sadly true for the whole Evangelical and Progressive spectrum. I see the spiritual path as, in many ways, related to what Jung called the journey of individuation. We are here to really become an individual in the truest and deepest sense of the word. In our culture we talk a lot about having spiritual experience in our culture, but perhaps we could also say we are Spirit having a human experience. Ken Wilber talks about the difference between “waking up” which can be the powerfully enlightening experiences of the non-dual or the Spirit, and “growing up” which is the necessary pain and struggle of embodying an expanding worldview consciously in our ordinary lives. “Growing up” has to do with completing the necessary tasks of our development and individuation for the benefit of the community. Someone who knows precisely what is their gift they are invited to bring forth into the world and embody for the blessing of their people and the evolution of human culture in a living world.For me, this is the meaning of Jesus’ parabolic teaching to “take up your cross.” This growing consciousness—or awakening—to God, Self and world is a great struggle and a kind of necessary suffering to birth what Jesus called the kingdom of god. I see Jesus as an embodiment of this process of incarnating god throughout the Created order, an exemplar of discipleship in its most radical essence. That being said, I think we see the Jesus we want to see. We box up Jesus into neat compartments that fit our preconceived worldview. We project our fantasies of who we need Jesus to be in our lives based on the stage of development we are currently in. All this is really prologue to my answer, which would be really “none of the above.” I care deeply for the Christ tradition, but I cannot personally identify any longer with what in my view Western Christianity or religion has become in this age. My personal framework for Jesus is not just the Cosmic Christ, but the Indigenous One—the Wild Christ of the Earth.Deshna: I love the image of Jesus as Indigenous and Cosmic Christ. Because really, he was also a bridge between the sacred wisdom of the Land and the intellectualized theology of his time. Have you read Bishop Spong and do you resonate with his theology? Any other authors or leaders that you greatly resonate with?Matt: I have read some of Bishop Spong’s work and enjoy his perspective. The authors and spiritual leaders that have most influenced and shaped me over the last seven years or so are: Ilia Delio, Teilhard De Chardin, Meister Eckhart, Black Elk, Cynthia Bourgealt, Thomas Keating, Ken Wilber, Richard Rohr, Thomas Berry, Brian Swimme, David Abram, and Bill Plotkin, who is my primary mentor in the SAIP program at Animas Valley Institute.Deshna: What has been the motivation for creating a new kind of sacred community- if you would call it that – and can you tell me more about re-wilding in a theological and faith community container?Matt: My primary motivation has been a sense of call, that came through my own psycho-spiritual descent, to rewild the church and our dying cultural narratives that are contributing to the violent exploitation of the planet. Through deep spiritual practices in authentic community, individuals can relearn to listen to the sacred conversation in nature, reconnect deeply with the natural world, cultivate wholeness and Self-healing, and begin to discover their deepest purpose in unique service both to the human world and, to what David Abram calls the “more-than-human” world. We have lost this more earthy and ‘wild’ vision of Christ, a sage and sacred healer who retreated to the wild edges to receive wisdom and guidance, who quested and fasted in preparation for his work, who spoke truth to power, who restored balance between the wild and the domesticated human world overrun by empire.The basic premise of “re-wilding,” which has become a cultural meme, is to allow the land to return to its original, uncultivated state, before humans began to shape and develop the land. It refers also to the need to reintroduce apex predators back into ecosystems to revitalize the capacity for self-organization of a particular bioregion. This basic premise points to the undomesticated wisdom of wild nature and the fragility of the self-organizing intelligence of the web of life. We forget that God breathed life into the whole Creation, not just humans, and that the natural world is living and possesses a kind of intelligence and language of its own. Humans were endowed with and given unique stewardship of this mysterious ‘life-light’ in which the cosmos participates—self-reflexive consciousness. However, we modern humans have become severed— or exiled— from a relationship with the wild world rooted in participation, partnership, and kinship (Eden) in which ancient, indigenous peoples once enjoyed and thrived. If humans will have any role (or existence) in the future of the Earth, our religious institutions, our political and social structures must address and reflect this new reality. The hour is already late.Church of Lost Walls is a living expression of church seeking to journey beyond our walls into wild, enchanting thresholds where nature, spirituality, and life meet in deep Conversation and sacred community for the cultivation of greater wholeness and service to the world. We are not normal church happening outside; our dream is to participate in and partner with creation through learning, worship, meditation and prayer. Through nature-based practices that draw upon the wisdom of sacred narratives and older traditions, we seek to cultivate nature connection and personal wholeness to inspire and guide one another into a culturally creative vision of life within our expanding circles of community, culture, the wild earth, and the great mystery we call God.I am a part of various mycelial networks of emerging movements happening around the country and world right now. The Wild Church Network is a recent cultural response to this longing to rewild the vision of the Church and Western culture. It is in some ways a transplant from the Forest Church movement in the United Kingdom. But what seems to be missing is not just new forms of religious expression, or spiritual practices in nature, and changing our basic life ways regarding consumption of resources, but a rewilding of the mind and the Self. Living in alignment with the life-enhancing wisdom of the Creation, the big book of Nature requires a learning community and practices and processes for cultivating the treasures hidden in the field of our inner nature, the True Self.Seminary of the Wild consists of nature-based experiential immersions and a wholistic training program for people in the Christ tradition who are drawn toward their own deeper relationship with Earth and Self, and also feel called to lead others into a deeper, transformative, and sacred relationship with Self, society, Church, Earth, and the divine. This training program is offered for those who long for a more soul-infused life and who yearn to find ways to re-connect to the natural world as a person of faith during a time of deep cultural and ecological unraveling. Our dream is to develop a community, a school of sorts, that will assist uniquely in the work of ecological awakening and reformation.There are four primary ‘pillars’ or tasks that Seminary of the Wild addresses: A re-enchantment of the natural and wild world towards a radical re-visioning of our deep belonging to the Earth, reconnecting our senses, bodies, emotions, and imagination with the land and earth processes. The second is a re-wilding of the Christian story, exploring the nature-based function of myth in order to deconstruct the historical barriers and processes of domestication, including the theological distortions that have tamed and suppressed the earth-based vision of the Christ. Third is a re-claiming of one’s own prophetic voice as a social visionary during this age of ecological reformation. And finally, a guided and supported process of wild discipleship, expanding one’s capacity to connect directly with the Holy and follow the radical call of Christ as agents of cultural transformation.Deshna: Well, I could seriously talk with you for hours about this!Matt: Yes, likewise.Deshna: Thank you for sharing your vision, your work, and your brave theology with me today and with our readership! If there is any hope for Christianity, in my opinion, it will involve offering deep repair of the damages the institution of Christianity has inflicted on culture, the land, the people, the feminine and certainly to the Wild. The sooner we can re-align this religion with its mystic and earth-centered roots the better, and I suspect that we will need to include a new sacred myth which teaches radical equality among all earth’s creatures and a reverent honoring of the land. Thank you for being someone who is lighting the way!~ Deshna Ubeda
Read online here
Deshna Ubeda is Director of ProgressiveChristianity.org and Progressing Spirit, where she has worked since 2006. She is an author, international speaker, and a visionary. She is will be ordained as an Interfaith Minister by The Chaplaincy Institute in March 2019. She is a lead author and editor on the children’s curriculum: A Joyful Path, Spiritual Curriculum. She co-authored the novel, Missing Mothers. She is the Executive Producer of Embrace Festival. |
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Question & Answer
Q: By Ian M.
The right-wing media has been making a big “gotcha” deal out of the claim that Nancy Pelosi’s “favorite Bible verse” isn’t even in the Bible. What’s the story here?
A: By Rev. David M. Felten
Dear Ian,Well, the story is that politically conservative pundits and news sources are engaging in the age-old practice of “misdirection” – and you’re right to suggest that it feels like a “gotcha” moment. It’s as though no one wants to miss out on accusing the Speaker of some nefarious and self-serving revision of the Bible – and as long as the right-wing media can gin-up the righteous fury of the sanctimonious Bible-thumpers, the base is distracted from the ways the system continues to be tilted in favor of the rich and privileged classes.So let’s start off by being clear: the oft-quoted passage that Speaker Pelosi attributes to the Bible is NOT, in fact, a direct quote from the Bible. But here are a couple of things to keep in mind:1) She’s not the first person to misquote or mistakenly attribute an aphorism to the Bible. Pious anti-LGBTQ+ advocates are want to attribute “Hate the sin, love the sinner” to the Bible (not in there). John Wesley’s “Cleanliness is next to Godliness” will sometimes get credit for being in the Bible (it’s not), as does Ben Franklin’s take on the ancient Greek aphorism, “God helps those who help themselves” (when the Bible is actually pretty clear that the exact opposite is true). And who doesn’t love Jules Winnfield’s menacing ad-lib on an Ezekiel-esqe diatribe in Pulp Fiction? “The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men!” (sadly, not in there).
2) BUT, when you come right down to it, the sentiment of the passage Pelosi often repeats is actually pretty darn Biblical (if not an exact quote).
The quote itself, “To minister to the needs of God’s creation is an act of worship. To ignore those needs is to dishonor the God who made us,” sounds a lot like Proverbs 14.31, especially in the “Living Bible” paraphrase (Anyone who oppresses the poor is insulting God who made them. To help the poor is to honor God.) and the “Common English Bible” (Those who exploit the powerless anger their maker, while those who are kind to the poor honor God.) Pelosi has actually expanded the focus of the verse from “the poor” to all of creation – not a bad thought in these days of accelerating Climate Change.
But Fundamentalists, be they political or theological, just can’t see the forest for the trees. A professor at Northern Baptist Theological Seminary, Claude Mariottini, declared the verse, "fictional," and claimed, “There is nothing that even approximates that." So much for grace (or taking the Bible seriously as poetry).
So, despite Pelosi’s passage embodying profoundly Biblical values, critics just can’t help themselves. Anything they think will sully the reputation of the opposition is fair game – even if the very mean-spirited “gotcha” kind of conduct betrays the Biblical principles they claim to defend.Not to put too fine a point on it, Sarahbeth Caplin at “The Friendly Atheist,” writes,“the FOX News crowd is blasting [Pelosi] for quoting “fake” verses, as if she’s a bad Catholic. Even if she screwed up the verse, the sentiment is undoubtedly biblical. Compare that to the Republicans who quote the Bible all the time while ignoring everything Jesus said.Pelosi has admitted that she can’t find the quote anywhere in the Bible, but she keeps looking. Frankly, I wish more people would spend time poring over the Bible to find verses that challenge humanity to do better.~ Rev. David M. Felten
Read and share online here.
About the Author
Rev. David M. Felten is a full-time pastor at The Fountains, a United Methodist Church in Fountain Hills, Arizona. David and fellow United Methodist Pastor, Jeff Procter-Murphy, are the creators of the DVD-based discussion series for Progressive Christians, “Living the Questions”.A co-founder of the Arizona Foundation for Contemporary Theology and also a founding member of No Longer Silent: Clergy for Justice, David is an outspoken voice for LGBTQ rights both in the church and in the community at large. David is active in the Desert Southwest Conference of the United Methodist Church and tries to stay connected to his roots as a musician. You’ll find him playing saxophones in a variety of settings, including appearances with the Fountain Hills Saxophone Quartet. David and his wife Laura have three children. |
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Bishop John Shelby Spong Revisited
The First of the Five "Fundamentals:"
The Bible is the Inerrant Word of God!
Essay by Bishop John Shelby Spong
March 28, 2007
“God wrote it! I believe it! That does it!” Those words adorned the bumper of a car I saw in the deep South. “This is the word of the Lord!” That is a liturgical phrase heard after the scriptures are read in many Christian churches. “The Bible says!” “It’s in the Bible!” Those are phrases frequently heard in religious debate. When these phrases are introduced there is a sense that this is the last word and that no higher appeal to truth can be cited. The “inerrant word of God” has, however, supported throughout history a wide variety of completely discredited practices. The Bible was quoted to claim that kings rule by divine right, that the earth is the center of the universe around which the sun rotates, that slavery, segregation and apartheid are legitimate and moral social institutions, that women must be kept in second class positions, that evolution is wrong and that homosexuality is a condition condemned by God.
In each of these cultural debates the Bible has lost! Despite these constant defeats the tenacity of this irrational and patently absurd idea is still asserted. It is therefore not surprising to discover that the claim of inerrancy for the scriptures as the “Word of God” would be the first line drawn in the sand when the beleaguered conservative Protestants struck back against the modern world in the early 1900’s. They seemed not to be aware that this claim reflects both an almost total ignorance of biblical scholarship and has been the source of enormous human evil over the years of Christian history. Behind every burned heretic, at the heart of every debilitating human prejudice that has ever plagued the Western World, the justifying claim of biblical inerrancy can still be heard. If that claim is an essential ingredient in Christianity, then surely the Christian God is destined to join Marduk, Baal and the gods of the Olympus in the museums of human history in an exhibit of “Dead Deities.” The fact that even today in 2007 religious leaders like Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Albert Mohler and a host of lesser known lights can still utter this claim without a gullible public being convulsed with laughter at its absurdity is proof of the tenacity of religious superstition and of the enduring human, but nonetheless neurotic, need for certainty.Attacks on a fundamentalist view of the Bible as the literal word of God are still interpreted in conservative religious circles as if they are attacks on the Bible itself, on God, on Christianity and even on religion.
The television screens and radio airwaves are still filled by those who believe that this claim continues to possess some shred of credibility. It doesn’t! And that needs to be said loudly and consistently not just by those who are religious critics, but by those of us who are Christians, who worship God regularly, who treasure the Bible and who find in the Bible truths that we do not care to sacrifice or lose. So I plan in this column to examine this first principle of the “Five Fundamentals” that the Bible is “the inerrant word of God.”Click here to read full essay. ~ John Shelby Spong |
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Announcements
Introducing the Last 7 Words of Christ Our Black Mother – A Lenten Series with Christena Cleveland
Some of the most beautiful feminist interpretations of the cross see it as a birthing center rather cosmic punishment. As a woman, this resonates with me. Because Christ’s tomb is also a womb, I’m eager to go beyond theologies of suffering and survival to also examine the theologies of life, flourishing, strength, meaning-making, and #blackgirlmagic that stem from black women’s experiences and perspectives.
I’m inviting you in to my theological process. Beginning on Ash Wednesday (March 6) and concluding on Good Friday (April 19), each week I will publish a photo and brief reflection on each of Christ’s 7 Last Words on the Cross.
READ ON ...
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Enjoy catching up with what is happening
in ICAs across the globe....
Global Buzz Report: March 2019
Click above or copy and paste this
URL into your browser's address bar
http://globalbuzz.icai-archives.org/7dayreport-19/2019-03-01.php
And: read the latest
ICAI Winds & Waves Magazine
brought to you now on Medium.com
See here: https://medium.com/winds-and-waves
ICAI Communications
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Tomorrow is Ash Wednesday, the day when Catholics and other Christians throughout the world mark the start of the Lenten season in preparation for Easter.
This Lent, whatever your faith tradition, we invite you to join ISN and voices from the Jesuit and greater Catholic network as we consider the structures, systems, and barriers that need to be broken in order to build a more just world.
During Lent, how can we break the barriers that keep us from the justice we seek?
Jim Wiegel
“That which consumes me is not man, nor the earth, nor the heavens, but the flame which consumes man, earth, and sky." Nikos Kazantzakis
401 North Beverly Way,Tolleson, Arizona 85353
623-363-3277
jfwiegel(a)yahoo.com
www.partnersinparticipation.com
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thank you jonathan, charles lingo
-----Original Message-----
From: Jonathan Barker via Dialogue <dialogue(a)lists.wedgeblade.net>
To: oe(a)lists.wedgeblade.net <oe(a)lists.wedgeblade.net>
Cc: Jonathan Barker <jkjmbarker(a)bigpond.com>; ICA Dialogue Listserv <dialogue(a)lists.wedgeblade.net>
Sent: Wed, Mar 6, 2019 12:13 am
Subject: Re: [Dialogue] [Oe List ...] Something else for Lent
Dear Colleagues - the following app for Lent has been devised by the Uniting Church in Australia’s Environmental Action Group (South Australia) of which I am a member. I commend it to you all - Jonathan Barker
Just Earth’ App
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The Environmental Action Group, has launched the ‘Just Earth’ App- a journey of faith with creation. It is beautiful to look at, a reading with inspiring reflection and prayer for each day and perfect quotes from learned people across generations. Easy to use, and a fantastic resource for anytime of the day. Check it out and download.
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Android:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details…
Apple:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/just-earth/id1451886485…
On 6 Mar 2019, at 9:58 am, David Dunn via OE <oe(a)lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
I appreciate Jim’s jog.
Here’s a link to Church of the Holy Family (Aurora, CO) Facebook page and information about a justice-related Lent weekend workshop: The Psalms for Justice-Seekers and Peace-Makers
https://www.facebook.com/events/367279437337468/
We’ll see if this event provides any context or guidance in the direction of rooting out any "structures, systems, and barriers that need to be broken in order to build a more just world.” I’m pleased to be able to bring that context to this workshop.
David
On Mar 5, 2019, at 3:42 PM, James Wiegel via Dialogue <dialogue(a)lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
Tomorrow is Ash Wednesday, the day when Catholics and other Christians throughout the world mark the start of the Lenten season in preparation for Easter.
This Lent, whatever your faith tradition, we invite you to join ISN and voices from the Jesuit and greater Catholic network as we consider the structures, systems, and barriers that need to be broken in order to build a more just world. During Lent, how can we break the barriers that keep us from the justice we seek?
—
"Mystery, possibility, and the power to choose"
David Dunn
740 S Alton Way 9B
Denver, CO 80247
720-314-5991
dmdunn1(a)gmail.com
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OE mailing list
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http://lists.wedgeblade.net/listinfo.cgi/oe-wedgeblade.net
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http://lists.wedgeblade.net/listinfo.cgi/dialogue-wedgeblade.net
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